
New images with unidentified flying objects came out, after the one’s with the striken MIG, last year, in the air, near Gherla. The new images, surprised by the video cameras on the Henri Coanda airport from Romania show a bright object, red and green, apparently static, present for at least 30 minutes, however, in some moments, it seemed that it was moving.
It’s hard to believe that the object could be aircraft preparing to take off, because, according to the timecode of the video camera, everything takes abaut/at least half of hour,and in this time the plane should have been arrived on the landing path. The object remains however in the same possition and at the same distance.
Sorin Stoicescu, who in that year, 2004, was the director of the General Direction of Civil Aircraft, from the Transport Ministry, state that the images are real and not tricked, according to the quote source.
They were surprised by the cameras of the International Airport Otopeni and analised by specialists from MapN and SRI. According to Sorin Stoicescu, the bright object even changed his shape at one moment.
The MIG from GherlaThe expert Catalin Grigoras inside the National Institut of Criminologies Examinations, analised the surprised images by the camera assembled on the board of the MIG involved in the aircraft accident on october 30, 2004, near Gherla.
The specialist state that after improving the image resolution, measured the velocity of rotation per second. One of catalin grigoras conclusions is that in the images apearrs two objects. One of them has a descending trajectory, which could lead on to the assumption of a falling (solid), if it’s not self propelled.
More astonishing is the trajectory of the second object, which raises, having two explanations:it may be or propelled, like a rocket, or self propelled.
And at that altitude the radars from Campia Turzii haven't record something on the screens, it was almost impossible that an object could have been launched of Terra. Moreover, the objects surprised by the aircraft camera have irregular forms.