#2023-11-09 09:28 AM - #Trails in #Beautiful #Skies+#Clouds of #Sint-#Lievens-#Houtem - #Belgium

7 months ago
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#2023-11-09 09:28 AM - #Trails in #Beautiful #Skies+#Clouds
of #Sint-#Lievens-#Houtem - #Belgium East-#Flanders
#Speed x 48: 0:21:21->0:28 - #BeautifulSkies - #VGA
The white trail in the beginning of the video from down left to up right was made by a fast moving plane about 5 minutes before the start of the video as seen by my own eyes. As seen on the video the trail does not disappear but it fans out into the sky becoming part of the "cloudy" sky. I find it very unlikely this trail to be a normal condensation trail. Unless somebody can explain using physics laws how normal condensation trails don't disappear for such a long time from the sky? Furthermore this "cloudy" sky contains other more vague linear structures of which I suspect they were made by plains more early before passing over our living place. Or is it normal for "cloudy" skies to contain such linear structures? How then, according to physics laws?
Play #ConnectFour:
https://www.tumia.org/en/directory/en/instance.php?tiname=Connect%20Four:AEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE&relationship=All&drsid=0&pisid=0&page=2
#Belgian #Meteo
https://www.meteo.be
Current #Jetstream and #Forecast
https://www.netweather.tv/charts-and-data/global-jetstream

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