Is There Has Any Aliens |
Introduction
NASA Will Study UFO UAP Phenomenon Are We Alone In The Universe? This question has always intrigued scientists around the world. We're a long way from answering this question, and we don't know if we'll ever get a real answer. One thing is certain, though: we don't stop looking for life elsewhere in the universe. When we study exoplanets, we look for life. When we send encrypted messages to other stars, we look for life.
Our radio telescopes let us hope for our lives as we try to catch even the most elusive signal. And still, still nothing. From time to time, however, people on Earth seem to witness some strange phenomena in the sky. They don't know how to explain it and they see something in the sky. They call them UFOs. If you were driving the New Jersey Turnpike on July 14, 2001, you wouldn't believe your eyes. For about 15 minutes just after midnight, drivers were startled by strange orange-yellow lights in a V formation over the Arthur Kill Waterway between Staten Island, New York, and Carteret, New Jersey. Lt. Daniel Tarrant of the Carteret Police Department was a witness, as well as other metro-area residents of Fort Lee, New Jersey, near the Throgs Neck Bridge on Long Island and the George Washington Bridge.
A group known as the New York Strange Phenomena Investigators claimed, Military jets or space flights could have caused the mysterious lights but air traffic controllers initially denied that any airplanes to have received FAA radar data that supports UFO sightings from that night. This is one of countless stories of unidentified flying objects, otherwise known as UFOs. Over the years, people have witnessed all kinds of apparitions, some of which can be scientifically explained, others scientifically unexplained. We just don't know what they are. Such is the case in Stephenville, Texas.
Texas Alien Sight
Texas Alien Sight |
On the evening of January 8, 2008, dozens of its residents saw white lights above Highway 67, first in a horizontal arc and then in vertical parallel lines. No sound was found. Later, the US Air Force revealed that F-16s were flying over the Brownwood Military Operating Area (just southwest of Stephenville), but many townspeople said what they saw was too technologically advanced for current human capabilities.
The good news is that in October 2022, NASA selected 16 people to participate in its Independent Research Team on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP). Observations of aerial phenomena that cannot be identified as aircraft or as known natural phenomena, UAPs, are classified as unidentified aerial phenomena. The independent survey began on Monday, October 24. The study will last 9 months and the team will lay the foundation for future studies on the nature of UAP.
To do this, the team will identify how data is collected by civilian government agencies, commercial organizations. The study will consider only unclassified data and, hopefully, a full report will be released to the public in mid-2023. Everyone at NASA must be pretty excited because exploring the unknown in space and the atmosphere is at the heart of every scientist. Understanding the data we have around unknown atmospheric phenomena is important to help us draw scientific conclusions about what is happening in our skies.
Data scientists make the language and the unexplainable, explainable. Unidentified aerial phenomena are of interest to air safety and possibly to ensure aircraft safety. Without access to a broad set of data, any observation is nearly impossible to verify or interpret.
The team consists of experts, professors and members of NASA. David Spergel, for example, is a scientist with a great interest in the search for planets and nearby stars He measured the age, shape and composition of the universe and was instrumental in establishing the standard model of cosmology. Then, there's Annamaria Beria, a research associate with the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California. His research focuses on the emergence of communication in complex life systems and data science applications in astronomy, both for biosignatures and the science of technosignatures. Even oceanographers join the team.
Paula Bontempi has been one for over 25 years. He spent eighteen years at NASA and was appointed Acting Deputy Director of NASA's Earth Science Division for the Science Mission Directorate. He has led many NASA Earth-observing satellite missions in marine science, as well as NASA research on ocean biology, biochemistry, carbon cycles, and ecosystems. But the group also consists of journalists.
For example, Nadia Drake is a freelance science journalist and contributing writer to National Geographic. Other names include Reggie Brothers, Federica Bianco, Jane Bass, Nadia Drake and Mike Gold. Basically, the dream team! However, UFOs have always been present as mysterious phenomena, so why has NASA decided to classify them scientifically now? Why did they suddenly return to the news?
Why are aliens suddenly back in the news??
Aliens Back in NEWS! |
U.S. UFOs are back in the news due to videos initially leaked by the Navy and later confirmed and officially released by the Pentagon showing UAPs in the sky. Speculation about their nature has moved from mundane objects like birds or balloons to space visitors. But without context it's obviously impossible to tell what they really are. But with multiple observations of the same phenomenon, we might understand more. Interdisciplinary scientific inquiry will do just that.
This requires a scientific classification. One of the reasons why UAP has not been taken into account until now, may be the apparent taboo surrounding the UAP phenomenon, linking it to the paranormal or pseudoscience while ignoring the history behind it. Maybe we should just let scientific curiosity lead the way in understanding such phenomena. And at the same time, we should be wary of outright dismissal of the assumption that every UAP phenomenon must be explainable. Now the question is: why should astronomers - and scientists in general - care about these phenomena?
Why should astronomers care about these phenomena??
Well, as always, the answer is simple: because scientists are curious. They like to understand why the world works and how it works, and are always happy if you give them puzzles to solve, even when it's not about their area of expertise. So, are you excited to have a fledgling scientific team to study these unknown objects? Maybe, with the power of science and scientific classification, we will know that aliens really exist!
Or maybe we'll just find these strange phenomena that were actually a bug in our observations. However, you should know that we are quite obsessed with UFOs. The task force was convened before NASA announced the creation of the team. In the hot summer of 1952, a disturbing series of radar and visual sightings occurred near the National Airport in Washington, D.C. According to scientists, these events were caused by temperature changes in the air above the city.
During that period, UFO reports were also quite frequent. Maybe this was done to better investigate these scenes. The Central Intelligence Agency requested the US government to form an expert panel of scientists to investigate the incident. The panel was led by H.P. Robertson, a physicist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California, and other physicists, included an astronomer and a rocket engineer. They reached three main conclusions: (1) 90 percent of sightings can easily be attributed to astronomical and meteorological phenomena, such as bright planets and stars, or auroras, or terrestrial objects such as airplanes, balloons, birds, and searchlights, and (2) no obvious security
There were no threats. (3) There was no evidence to support the existence of ET. As if this were not enough, a second committee was formed in 1966 at the request of the Air Force to review the most interesting material collected by a project called "Project Blue Book". It was the culmination of a series of systematic studies conducted by the United States Air Force (USAF) between 1947 and 1969 on UFO sightings in the United States and over large parts of America and Europe.
Two years later the committee, which made a detailed study of 59 UFO sightings, published its findings. The report was reviewed by a special committee of the National Academy of Sciences. A total of 37 scientists contributed to the report, which covered detailed investigations of UFO sightings. Like the Robertson panel, the committee concluded that the reports contained no evidence of anything other than anecdotal evidence and that UFOs did not warrant further investigation. NASA will come to a different decision this time? We can't wait to find out. As always, stay tuned as we'll keep you updated!