Watch the skies and land and oceans

Very interesting, good catch. A prelude of inversion of the magnetic axis of earth?
I'm not sure what to make of it. A European Space Agency satellite first studied the phenomenon in 2001, hence all the detailed graphics. It speaks of an influx of powerful energy, albeit temporarily, which then "disappears" in a few minutes. Hole in the ionosphere sounds like "opening up" to me. So yeah, might be related to an incursion of the magnetic axis and changes in the magnetic field. We'll just have to wait and see.

Interesting things happen not just on Earth. The sky is also active.

Good catch! When we heard a couple of such loud booms locally on separate days, I thought... Surely this is not a localized phenomenon. There's got to be people in the rest of the world hearing booms as well.

Locally, a third loud boom was heard last weekend, and they quickly published a story in the mainstream newspaper. 'It was the police doing "air" experiments against terrorism, and to expect more of such loud booms and we're sorry for the inconvenience.'

Not reassuring.
 
Interesting things happen not just on Earth. The sky is also active.
I just saw this post from the EarthSky FB page about this overhead explosion today.
KABOOM! Did you hear it? Around 9 a.m. EDT this morning, residents of Ohio and Pennsylvania began flooding the 911 line with reports of an “earthquake like” explosion.
The National Weather Service out of Pittsburgh was quick to say: “We’re receiving reports across western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio of a loud boom and a fireball in the sky. Our satellite data suggest it was possibly a meteor entering the atmosphere.”
And the National Weather Service out of Cleveland followed up with data confirming the #meteor. Looking at satellite imagery from the Geostationary Lightning Mapper, you can see a bright streak over the Cleveland area that would be consistent with a meteor entering the atmosphere. And many people caught the fireball on video.
☄️
More: https://earthsky.org/.../sonic-boom-from-a-meteor.../
 
100 years of physics challenged by observation.


I'm 73 and have never seen a crescent moon illuminated on the bottom like the one seen from diverse locations on February 20, 2026. (The one featured in this video was taken at 8:45 in Florida after the sun had set 2 hours earlier.) Traditional astronomy says the illuminated crescent must be on the side facing the sun (i.e. East or West due to Earth's rotational axis orientation). But this recent crescent moon was 135 degrees out of place, and followed a solar coronal hole aimed directly at Earth, with a electromagnetic field fired at 101 (100 times normal) and an historic peak Schumann resonance.

This guy has an interesting theory to explain such an event.

Two comments were especially interesting:
"To humanity you will see things that you never saw before you never were taught any of these phenomenons in science class things have changed drastically you will see things that will be unbelievable do not be fearful don't believe everything you see you are watching The greatest show on Earth"

"Two timeliness have merged and are reporting on this. Some say its normal and some say they never seen it."

Certainly no physics have been challenged
by that Tic-Toc drama queen guy's "observation"

I tried to simulate the location somewhere in Florida with a star map, with 20 Feb 2026 as the date (at sunset which the star below charts shows), and find, that the moon he claims was wrongly tilted by a whopping "135 degrees" - was not wrongly tilted in any way. I really don't understand where the guy got his claims from ?! (The moon set around 3 hours and 20 minutes after the sun did).

So, the moon was around 9° above the horizon at 20.45 local Florida time and would have looked like a "boat"; illuminated from below in the direction of the already set sun. Exactly like in the claimed photo

Nothing wrong. Nothing off. Nothing unusual what so ever.

Florida_moon_20260220.png
 
Back
Top Bottom