Enough i guess according to pentagon
lol
Righties are going all over the place on this. So desperate to cling to whatever shred of self respect they have left. So they make shit up, tell it to other like minded people, let the made up shit circle back and then say, "see I told you so".
I'm finally beginning to understand how that kind of mind works.
Why would you have to be above 40K to spot it? People watched the first one from the ground
The relationship between object size and distance is an inverse linear relationship, i.e.
size is 1 / distance.
The most recent object that was shot down was described as the size of a bus and flying at 40000 ft.
A bus is 35 feet long
Commercial air traffic is between 36,000 and 42,000 feet
Turboprop aircraft have a ceiling of 31,000 feet
Typical private jet flies below 15.000 feet.
So, a commercial aircraft could have flown by close enough to see it. How close would that have to be?
Let's make 1 mm to the eye the smallest it could be. 1 mm = .003 ft
the diameter of the balloon would be the length of a bus or 35 ft diameter
35 ft x 1/distance = .003 ft
distance = 35/.003 = 12,000 ft
So, whatever the thing is, the pilot would have to be within 12,000 feet of it to even have a chance to see it. That's under absolute best conditions of lighting, contrast, pilot's eye and somehow a speck in the sky caught his attention. About 2.5 miles away. So, for an aircraft to see it, the minimum altitude would be 37,500 ft. if the pilot were looking directly up. Since a pilot would normally be looking forward, much less, probably 39,000 feet.
The bigger one was described as the size of three buses or 105 feet diameter. It could be seen if it were 35,000 ft away or about 8 miles away maybe a little more if the pilot were looking straight up. That balloon had a prop and could be steered away from regular air traffic patterns. So, easy peasy to avoid being seen.
Summary: You are caught in the dilemma of big numbers. 1) Is it possible that those balloons could have been seen from the air? Yes. 2) But very, very, very, very unlikely.
Yet you and your kind are only able to understand the first answer.
I'm not accounting for contrast or brightness and, yes, it's possible to see something smaller than a millimeter wide if one knows where to look. People did see it from the ground.
But only if one were looking for it and under the best conditions. Again, you are dealing with a common failure of logic. Sorry about that.
disclaimer: I don't expect you or any other MAGA to understand this. I ran the numbers for my own satisfaction.