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That's obviously all part of the Great Conspiracy!
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Thank you for the video!
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For those who don't want to spend the data watching a video, here's a still shot of ONE satellite.
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Maybe if they kept the camera running for another hour they'd get a shot of another satellite?
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That would be a group, wouldn't it?
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Calling all flat-earthers!! Calling all flat-earthers!!
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The little "x" like figure zipping across the bottom of the (spherical) sun is the International Space Station.
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It goes by very quickly, which the photographers caught with their rapid frame (motor drive ?) camera.
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We used to call them "motor drive" in the days of emulsion film but these days it's all digital.
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Their page has the following:
By the way, it’s not quite true that there was only one “spot” on Earth where the transit across the sun’s face was visible. But it is true that there was only one area where the eclipse was visible. Derek Kind – who was not far from the other team – also caught the transit:.
If they'd have checked into sunspots they'd find out that the more magnification you use the more sunspots you can see. Which is a lot like this repeat demand for a "group of satellites" but in the opposite direction, because you can't really say there is only one sunspot or two or three, or if you can't see any then there are none. They're different sizes, so there are always sunspots, just whether your enlargement power is enough to see them is the only variable.
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