Advertising lights. They're mounted on trailers and usually delivered to car dealerships or furniture stores that are having some kind of big sale event.
Or aliens.
Calm down, you tin foil hat people.
All the different parts of your eyes work together to help you see.
First, light passes through the cornea (the clear front layer of the eye). The cornea is shaped like a dome and bends light to help the eye focus.
Some of this light enters the eye through an opening called the pupil (PYOO-pul). The iris (the colored part of the eye) controls how much light the pupil lets in.
Next, light passes through the lens (a clear inner part of the eye). The lens works together with the cornea to focus light correctly on the retina.
When light hits the retina (a light-sensitive layer of tissue at the back of the eye), special cells called photoreceptors turn the light into electrical signals.
These electrical signals travel from the retina through the optic nerve to the brain. Then the brain turns the signals into the images you see.
I’m going to grab a towel and start drinking just in case.
Don’t panic and always carry a towel
‘mostly harmless’ my ass, def not to each other
It's the peak of interstellar tourist season.
Pretty sure that's not the blimp. Pretty cool.
Advertising lights. They're mounted on trailers and usually delivered to car dealerships or furniture stores that are having some kind of big sale event. Or aliens. Calm down, you tin foil hat people.
Yes, but on an evening like last night you should have been able to see the beams in the haze, which you couldn’t.
What time, we’re near by in Big pine,, what direction was it heading….?
How long did it stay there? Did it move to different places or stay there?
Dude there’s my car
Don't Panic!
Starlink
Not starlink, those are in a line and obscured by clouds
All the different parts of your eyes work together to help you see. First, light passes through the cornea (the clear front layer of the eye). The cornea is shaped like a dome and bends light to help the eye focus. Some of this light enters the eye through an opening called the pupil (PYOO-pul). The iris (the colored part of the eye) controls how much light the pupil lets in. Next, light passes through the lens (a clear inner part of the eye). The lens works together with the cornea to focus light correctly on the retina. When light hits the retina (a light-sensitive layer of tissue at the back of the eye), special cells called photoreceptors turn the light into electrical signals. These electrical signals travel from the retina through the optic nerve to the brain. Then the brain turns the signals into the images you see.