2di7 ha scritto: Allora, ho fatto delle veloci verifiche: il rettangolo nero ancora c’è in Google Sky e in Microsoft Telescope, ad esempio e, non escludo sia presente anche in altri software gratuiti astronomici.
In particolare prendiamo a riferimento Google Sky.
Primo: ho fatto una prova (banale). Caricando i dato in basso a sinistra IRAS o WMAP
Immagine: 35,62 KBvediamo facilmente che il quella zona non c’è nessun dato nascosto e le immagini vengono regolarmente caricate.
Secondo: software come Google Sky sono pieni di errori. Addirittura in questo 3ad
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/ubbthreads.p ... d=1#import ce n’è una raccolta!
Terzo: la zona della costellazione di Orione è talmente famosa che immagini della stessa in altri cataloghi certo non mancano.
Quarto: ne parla anche la NASA qui
http://astrobiology.nasa.gov/ask-an-ast ... nd-answers Cita:
7. Can you explain the fact that the area at (5h 53m 27s, -6 10’ 58”) has been blackened out in Google Sky and Microsoft Telescope? People suggest that these have been blackened out because those are the co-ordinates where Nibiru is located at present.
Several people have asked me about this blank rectangle in Orion in Google Sky, which is a presentation of images from the Sloan Digital Survey. This can’t be a “hiding place” for Nibiru, since it is a part of the sky that could be seen from almost everywhere on the Earth in the winter of 2007-08 when much of the talk about Nibiru began. That would contradict the claims that Nibiru was hiding behind the Sun or that it could be seen only from the southern hemisphere. But I too was curious about this blank rectangle, so I asked a friend who is a senior scientist at Google. He replied that he “found out that the missing data is due to a processing error in the image stitching program we use to display the Sloan survey images. The team assures me that in the next run through, this will be fixed!”
Direi mistero risolto!?!?