Hey Oler, have you spent time stargazing, or watching satellites?
The best time for spotting satellites is in the hour or two before sunrise and after sunset.
Because of their altitude, they reflect the sunlight, which makes them really easy to spot, especially the massive ISS.
You'll probably recall I've mentioned that I used to travel and live in a car?
During this period I'd often lay on the cars bonnet late at night watching the sky.
Quite surprising how many meteorites streak the night sky aye man.
I've seen two that sorta spiralled as they burned up, leaving smoke trails, as they plummeting to Earth, these were really fuckin stunning to see.
So, I'm pretty confident that I've a good grasp of what's an artificial satellite travelling in a consistent orbit, and what's a meteorite burning up in, or just streaking across, the atmosphere.
There's one particular night, about an hour after sunset, where I'd been watching satellites.
I spotted one as it caught the sunlight, it was headed from the south in a northerly direction.
To my surprise though,...two more objects suddenly appeared, also catching the sunlight.
Initially, they were far behind the satellite and heading the exact same direction,....though at a much greater velocity.
I still don't know what the fuck I witnessed as I watched these two objects quickly catch up to the satellite, matching it's velocity and seeming to accompany it for about 20-30seconds.
Obviously at such a huge distance I couldn't see exactly what was going on, though it appeared as if one of these objects got really close to the satellite, almost as though docking because the three shining objects became only two for a brief few moments, before they then appeared to distance themselves from the satellite while keeping pace, then they both suddenly shot off, at incredible speed, in different directions from the satellite and from each other, quickly vanishing from my view.
The satellite continued on until I lost sight, seemingly undisturbed by whatever the fuck these two objects were doing.
This is only one of the times I've seen these things.
They're actually rather common.
I just don't know what they are.