my thoughts exactly
"Sir, which weapon?"
<dramatic pause> "All of them."
my thoughts exactly
News is reporting it's an artifact from an improperly calibrated sonar. Also, the sonar they're using isn't designed for surface mapping.
Right.....
The problem, he says, is that the pictures of this roughly 190-foot-wide disk-shaped formation were taken using side-scan sonar, a relatively inexpensive type of sonar technique useful for finding sunken ships. However, the images themselves reveal several distortions that render them virtually useless for identifying an undersea formation, Singh says.
First, he says, if you look carefully, you can see a reflection of the circular formation on the right side of the image. Since side-scan sonar is taken with two instruments that bounce acoustic waves in opposite directions from the boat, a feature on one side shouldnt affect the image on the other side. This means youve got cross-talk, in which one channel is electrically contaminating the other, Singh says. In other words, the sonar instruments arent wired properly. Strike one, he says.
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Strike two: The black horizontal lines going through the image show that sonar signals are dropping out (that is, the instruments arent detecting them), further calling the measurements into question, Singh says. Finally, he says, the edges of the image, just beyond the circular formation, are gray, meaning the sonar couldnt tell what was there. That shows the sonar isnt calibrated well enough to trust, Singh says. Thats strike three.
Charles Paull, senior scientist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, Calif., says that even if the formation were real, it could be something as mundane as a circular rock outcropping or the result of fluid or gas venting. Such venting causes inexplicable and poorly understood structures like pockmarkscircular depressions that Paull has seen all around the world. In one area off California alone, he says, he has mapped more than 1400 such pockmarks.
Another possible explanation thats not quite as exciting as a UFO: The disk-shaped formation and the tracks, seen in just 300 feet of water, could have been caused by a fishing trawl. For example, Paull says, the jaws or opening of a trawl could easily have struck the bottom elsewhere and dropped a disk-like mound of sedimentor a trail of pebbles that make up the track marks, he says. Or, Singh says, the image could be simply fish. Ive been fooled hundreds of times [when using side-scan sonar] into thinking Ive found something, when its just a rock outcrop or a school of fish.
Singh has used side-scan sonar to look for shipwrecks himself, and the key, he says, is to turn the ship around and double-check anything that looks as interesting as Lindbergs image (which the treasure-hunters apparently did not). The 2D images that side-scan sonar creates can reveal sunken ships or even underwater mines, but it doesnt give you a 3D image, nor does it directly measure water depth. Substances that reflect light differently than their surroundings can also fool side-scan sonar. Its really difficult. Side-scan sonar is an art form, Singh says.
And, Paull says, in the absence of a clear picture, people see what they want to. The finding is curious and fun, but much ado about nothing.
Read more: Underwater UFO? Get Real, Experts Say - Popular Mechanics
If this is true then the movie sucks because I rage quit every game of battleship I play
News is reporting it's an artifact from an improperly calibrated sonar. Also, the sonar they're using isn't designed for surface mapping.