View Full Version : FUKUSHIMA fallout decays into Barium and Strontium - Blue Beam - 3D Imaging by milatr
ktlight
29th March 2011, 23:08
Be sure to check out both videos and the PDF. Very interesting indeed!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d40afX7vwfo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5uJSo-Ed70
http://www.dtic.mil/cgi-bin/GetTRDoc?AD=ADA338490&Location=U2&doc=GetTRDoc.pdf
Teakai
30th March 2011, 00:02
We should spread this everywhere, facebook it, blog it, talk about it - so nobody falls for it. I've posted it to facebook - hopefully it'll get passed on from there.
It would be great of they tried to carry it off and everyone just went, oh yeah, whatever.
ThePythonicCow
30th March 2011, 00:26
I fixed the pdf link in Post #1 above.
When one just copies and pastes text with a link from somewhere else, if the link is over a certain length, then the middle portion of the link is removed and replaced with "...", breaking the link. One has to take an extra step to copy over the actual link URL in its entirety to get the resulting link to work.
And here is a link to the main Youtube video in Post #1 (some users find the link itself useful, from what I recall): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d40afX7vwfo&feature=player_embedded
loveandgratitude
30th March 2011, 00:33
If it is a hologram would not a laser beam torch penetrate directly through the hologram, as the hologram only exists as a mist ether like vision.
ThePythonicCow
30th March 2011, 00:42
If it is a hologram would not a laser beam torch penetrate directly through the hologram, as the hologram only exists as a mist ether like vision.
Holograms are typically created by shining lasers through some special material or reflecting lasers off some special material. Lasers provide an excellent light source (bright, coherent, single frequency) for such work.
HURRITT ENYETO
30th March 2011, 00:46
If it is a hologram would not a laser beam torch penetrate directly through the hologram, as the hologram only exists as a mist ether like vision.
Thats a very good point,
Maybe an Achilles heel?
No doubt they have/will remedy this.
The only way i see a blue beam type scenario playing out is to use a large number of real material craft and then create maybe thousands of holograms alongside the real craft so the real ones can be shot down/otherwise proven solid,therefore Joe Sixpack would think they must all be solid etc.
ThePythonicCow
30th March 2011, 00:59
Thats a very good point (lasers penetrating right through the hologram)
No, if you read the .pdf in Post #1, you will see that they actually require two laser beams to generate the hologram.
A single laser source is split into two beams, one of which is left unmodulated and the other reflected off a barium-strontium crystal with the holographic image encoded in it. Then the two split beams are brought back together and their interference patterns form the visual hologram.
It is however (in my amateur view) completely impossible to form holograms in the sky using barium and strontium dust clouds, because those clouds would not form a crystal with the holographic image properly encoded in them.
I conclude that this won't work. TPTB cannot use the barium and strontium in the air from Fukushima, nor in the air from chemtrails, to form holograms in the sky. The problem is not the lasers - the lasers would be almost essential to actually make it work. The problem is that the chemtrails and dust clouds are not in the form of a crystal encoding some image in fine detail.
HURRITT ENYETO
30th March 2011, 01:15
Thats a very good point (lasers penetrating right through the hologram)
No, if you read the .pdf in Post #1, you will see that they actually require two laser beams to generate the hologram.
A single laser source is split into two beams, one of which is left unmodulated and the other reflected off a barium-strontium crystal with the holographic image encoded in it. Then the two split beams are brought back together and their interference patterns form the visual hologram.
It is however (in my amateur view) completely impossible to form holograms in the sky using barium and strontium dust clouds, because those clouds would not form a crystal with the holographic image properly encoded in them.
I conclude that this won't work. TPTB cannot use the barium and strontium in the air from Fukushima, nor in the air from chemtrails, to form holograms in the sky. The problem is not the lasers - the lasers would be almost essential to actually make it work. The problem is that the chemtrails and dust clouds are not in the form of a crystal encoding some image in fine detail.
Yeah.... lasers are so yesterday :)
If some type of Blue beam scenario were ever played out i think the technology used would be light years beyond lasers.
I agree that its unlikely Chemtrails and Strontium etc. could be used for this purpose however, if they somehow did manage to produce holograms in the sky(by whatever means) they would not be solid, merely convincing illusions, so maybe a laser beam could penetrate them?
mcaballero
30th March 2011, 02:23
This paper describes a method that allows to store a 3-dimensional image inside a barium-strontium solid crystal. This works because according to the description, the crystal is capable of storing the phase relationships of light (this is similar to a hologram, except that a hologram is 2D).
You cannot do this in the atmosphere because the phase relationships of light are ruined if the barium and strontium atoms don't preserve their positions.
HURRITT ENYETO
30th March 2011, 05:42
Radiation reaches UK
http://www.metro.co.uk/news/859463-japan-radiation-reaches-uk-but-is-no-risk-to-health
GlassSteagallfan
30th March 2011, 10:53
I fixed the pdf link in Post #1 above.
When one just copies and pastes text with a link from somewhere else, if the link is over a certain length, then the middle portion of the link is removed and replaced with "...", breaking the link. One has to take an extra step to copy over the actual link URL in its entirety to get the resulting link to work.
And here is a link to the main Youtube video in Post #1 (some users find the link itself useful, from what I recall): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d40afX7vwfo&feature=player_embedded
For broken pdf links: Right click on the link, choose 'Save Target As'
For broken web links: Right click on the link, choose 'Open in a New Tab' or 'Open in a New Window'
ThePythonicCow
30th March 2011, 10:59
For broken pdf links: Right click on the link, choose 'Save Target As'
For broken web links: Right click on the link, choose 'Open in a New Tab' or 'Open in a New Window'
When the link (the hidden URL itself) is broken, one cannot save it or open it. That was the case here, until I fixed it.
ktlight
30th March 2011, 12:07
I fixed the pdf link in Post #1 above.
When one just copies and pastes text with a link from somewhere else, if the link is over a certain length, then the middle portion of the link is removed and replaced with "...", breaking the link. One has to take an extra step to copy over the actual link URL in its entirety to get the resulting link to work.
And here is a link to the main Youtube video in Post #1 (some users find the link itself useful, from what I recall): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d40afX7vwfo&feature=player_embedded
Thanks, Paul, I didn't know and will watch out in the future.
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