These next tiny things are about their visit to Aremo X3, at the end of the first chapter.
How would they have been able to get an image like that, from the distance they were? For Michel to recognise a bridge, recognise it as a city, etc, it could not be from the top-down view that our GPS satellites normally give us. But I don't see how they could get any other view apart from an aerial view.Right in the middle of these large monitors, I began to distinguish an enormous mass that is difficult to describe. Let me say only that it was round in form and blue-grey in colour. It remained immobile in the centre of each screen.
In the room, all was silent. The general attention was focused on three astronauts in command of oblong-shaped pieces of equipment resembling in some ways, our computers.
Suddenly, covering a huge area of what I believed was a wall of the cabin I was stupefied to see an image of New York - no! That’s Sydney, I said to myself, and yet the bridge is different ... was it even a bridge?
My question here is: How could they get a third-person view of their spacecraft?My attention turned to another smaller screen being monitored by two of my ‘hostesses’. On this panel I could see our spacecraft, as I had already seen it in our parallel universe. As I watched, I was surprised to see, slightly below the middle of our vessel, a small sphere ejected, like an egg from a hen. Once outside, this sphere accelerated rapidly towards the planet below. As it disappeared from view, another sphere emerged in the same manner, and then a third. I noticed each sphere was being monitored on separate screens by different groups of astronauts.
Sorry for the insignificant questions, but I do like to iron out any 'kinks' in my understanding of The Book.