Originally posted on /x, but I figure if anyone can debunk this, it's /sci, and is mostly scientific anyway. On December 18-19, a MASSIVE wave of energy of some sort was detected on the MIMIC microwave background imagery system. This system usually just monitors water vapor in Earth's atmosphere, but it can also detect interference from high energy cosmic events, such as severe solar flares. They've officially acknowledged this as a glitch.... But this is highly unlikely due to the clear sin wave pattern depicted in the time lapse. The last time something similar to this happened was the Gamma Wave burst that was deflected by Earth's atmosphere on 2004, on the same day as the magnitude 9.1 earthquake/tsunami that killed 240,000 people in the region of Indonesia. It is now theorized that the two events may have been correlated, and that the energy buildup in the atmosphere can cause adverse effects below the Earth's surface. More info can be found in this article and video. Could this be rated to Obama's executive order in October to prepare for inclement Space Weather by the end of 2016? Or China's construction of a massive fallout bunker prepared to hold 200,000 chosen citizens? Did they know about this type of cosmic event in advance and neglect to tell the populus? What does /sci rhink? Just a glitch?
http://www.theeventchronicle.com/study/large-wave-energy-unknown-source-hitting-earth-now/#
>>8559404
>But this is highly unlikely due to the clear sin wave pattern depicted in the time lapse.
Polar orbit satellite? Surely that's the most likely pattern?
>>8559459
Wow, this looks extraordinarily like the pattern seen in the video: sin waves out of phase. Well, I guess if nothing happens by next week, I know what happened lol.
>>8559404
>It is now theorized that the two events may have been correlated, and that the energy buildup in the atmosphere can cause adverse effects below the Earth's surface.
Source: some view-baiting conspiritard's anus
no one thinks this and there's absolutely no reason to believe it works this way
>>8559404
It's true anon
>>8559404
Geophysicist here. The fact that it is seen as a perfect sine wave, the more likely it can be interpretted as a glitch. Earth scientists are occassionaly lazy programmers. I've even seen many papers that interprets a modelling artefact as a geological feature before. So, do not worry.