Subj : Juno Waves To : Roger Nelson From : Paul Quinn Date : Thu Sep 08 2016 08:54:56 Hi! Roger, On 09/07/2016 07:42 AM, you wrote: PQ>> I have seen one. RN> It is overcast here most of the time, so I don't get to see anything RN> worthwhile except from pictures on the 'net. I'd like for this rain RN> to go northwest where it will do some good, as in putting out forest RN> fires. Even on a clear day here, a ship travelling at Mach 6 would RN> only produce a glimpse for anyone happening to look in the right RN> direction. It would be like a radar blip. It's basically the same here, being in the sub-tropics and close to the east coast. A lot of our weather is generated either off of the Pacific ocean or the hot/dry bush to our west. So, roughly 50% of the time it's either hot & wet or hot & dusty/smokey. OTOH there are times in late autumn or early spring where the weather is postcard perfect. Cool & dry and the viewing goes to infinity, seemingly. It was just such an occasion when I saw what could only have been an Aurora-type craft, though I did think for a while I had seen an atmosphere-skipping satellite/space debris during a re-entry (I did read of an instance of such at about that time, a month or so later). I should fess up & say that I didn't see the actual craft. It was much too high, and very fast moving ('gone in 30 seconds'). What I saw was the characteristic 'wake' of an Aurora. They don't make typical contrails. (This is something I've since seen on a doco flick of some sort.) It confirmed what I observed; as if the sky and sea were inverted, and the craft was making a speedy wake through the water. Cheers, Paul. --- Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:31.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/31.4.0 * Origin: Quinn's Rock vBox - sunny side up on the bookcase (3:640/1384) .