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3 answers

Where are you located, how high in the sky and at what time was this observation, how large or bright was it compared to (for example) the full moon.

Without some details to go on, no way for us to know what it was. It could have been:
- the Goodyear blimp
- a plane in a complex holding pattern over an airport
- one of the planets
- a bright star near the horizon (it would twinkle all different colours near the horizon due to atmospheric refraction)

2007-10-30 12:41:38 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

New Mexico? Southwest?

Well, if you are in Hope, NM, it is probably just the lights of Roswell in the distance. Maybe they had a power outage recently -- check the Albuquerque Journal or the local Roswell paper for more info.

.

2007-10-30 12:35:08 · answer #2 · answered by tlbs101 7 · 1 0

I'm sorry, but I can't follow this, between your acronyms and typing mistakes ("does not more"?). Could you please translate into English? If you're reporting an observation, it would help if you specified your location, the time and date, the position in the sky (altitude and azimuth), and the size (in comparison to other objects).

2007-10-30 12:30:22 · answer #3 · answered by GeoffG 7 · 0 1

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