You could be forgiven for thinking these amazing shots of the curvature of the earth were produced by a hi-tech Nasa telescope or an expensive special effects company. But they were actually produced by a £45 High Definition camera stuck into a styrofoam box with gaffa tape and floated 23 miles into the atmosphere on a helium balloon. PHD students Alex Baker and Chris Rose drove 100 miles from Ashbourne in Derbyshire to recover the images after their rudimentary craft splashed down in a field in Cambridgeshire. Baker, 26, and Rose, 25, spent two months planning their experiment and building their space exploration vessel after hitting on the idea last October. The close friends, both students in mechanical engineering at the University of Sheffield, wanted to complete their mini-space exploration as cheaply as possible to inspire others to follow suit. They home-made kit was capable of recording images from over 100,000 feet in the sky by inserting the HD video camera into a styrofoam box along with a GPS device so they could find their equipment once it had landed. They then inserted hand warmers inside the box to keep the gear as warm as possible in the -50 degree temperatures high above the earth, gaffa taped up the box, attached a parachute for a safe descent. (Daily Mail)...Opinion: I'm totally surprised this image has been printed in a national paper! Note the bright light anomaly below the sun .... Nibiru? Unless of course the scientific boys & girls claim its the ISS or a satellite? Nibiru images taken in 2004 has the same shape as this light source ... ???
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