Large alien spaceship appears out of nowhere in NASA film footage. Dam Mexicans are everywhere. [video=youtube;6X96xI1gLdQ]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6X96xI1gLdQ&feature=player_embedded#t=0s[/video] There ya have it. Aliens beboppin around Mercury and the Sun. On vacation??? .
It's a quirk in the procedure that they use to illuminate the faint glow of the coronal mass ejection. You can see the "artifact" of the process: the dark area to the right of where Mercury is positioned. "When [this averaging process] is done between the previous day and the current day and there is a feature like a planet, this introduces dark (negative) artifacts in the background where the planet was on the previous day, which then show up as bright areas in the enhanced image,"
Just what I needed - logic and technical graphics expertise. Well screw that Todd! It's an alien spaceship so get over it!
My bad, I should've referenced it: http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/1966-cloaked-mothership-mercury-ufo.html To make the relatively faint glow of a coronal mass ejection stand out against the bright glare of space — caused by interplanetary dust and the stellar/galactic background — the NRL scientists must remove as much background light as possible. They explained that they determine what light is background light, and thus can be subtracted out, by calculating the average amount of light that entered each camera pixel on the day of the CME event and on the previous day. Light appearing in the pixels on both days is considered to be background light and is removed from the footage of the CME. The remaining light is then enhanced. This works great for objects far off in the distance, such as stars, which don't move much relative to the sun. But it gets a little trickier when trying to account for nearer objects, particularly moving ones, like planets. "When [this averaging process] is done between the previous day and the current day and there is a feature like a planet, this introduces dark (negative) artifacts in the background where the planet was on the previous day, which then show up as bright areas in the enhanced image," Rich wrote in an email. He noted that the bright spot disappears when the CME footage is reprocessed using pixel values from a different day — the day after the CME, for example — to remove background light, instead of pixel values from the previous day. Those in favor of the bright spot being a cloaked UFO mothership rather than a data-processing artifact will surely point out that the spot in question is not round like the ghost of a planet, but rather sharp-edged like the Starship Enterprise .
Mercury gonna transit the sun today... Mercury poised for rare 'transit' across sun's face on Monday May 08 2016 - Stargazers will have a rare opportunity on Monday to witness Mercury fly directly across the face of the sun, a sight that unfolds once every 10 years or so, as Earth and its smaller neighboring planet come into perfect alignment.