UFO report boldly goes where no one has gone before
A task force will share data it collected on unusual flight phenomena with Congress. UFO enthusiasts rejoice. But a German expert with decades of research under his belt doesn’t believe aliens have ever been to Earth.
By : migrator
Update: 2021-06-02 20:41 GMT
Chennai
If you have an interest in UFOs (unidentified flying objects, for the uninitiated) and have always wondered what exactly the US government and intelligence services know about them, June 2021 may be a big month for you. The Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs) Task Force, a group within the US Department of Defense (DOD), is set to present an unclassified report to Congress this month about what knowledge Pentagon officials have gathered on UAPs and how they are dealing with the data they have managed to collect. UAPs is the term military officials and researchers who don’t want to be associated with the expression UFO use when talking about objects in the sky that fly without any visible form of propulsion, in patterns that defy our knowledge of physics. So yes: The US Department of Defense will tell US Representatives and Senators what they have learned about unidentified flying objects in US airspace.
And the public is going to hear all about it (though there could be a delay between the presentation in Congress and the release of the full report to the general public). No hushed conversations on secret military sites, which conspiracy theorists are sure have been going on since a UFO purportedly crashed in Roswell, New Mexico, in the summer of 1947, but a straightforward report. Avi Loeb, professor of science at Harvard University and Director of the Institute for Theory and Computation within the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, told DW what makes this such a momentous occasion. “This new report is different from past discussions on Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs) or Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP) in that it involved documented evidence collected by military personnel based on detection by multiple instruments (radar, infrared cameras, optical cameras),” Loeb wrote in an email.
The information presented in the report is likely to indicate “the possible existence of objects which behave in ways that cannot be explained by the technologies we possess.” A Gallup poll from 2019 showed that one third of US-American adults believed that at least in some cases, UFO sightings involved actual alien spaceships. Hans-Werner Peiniger became interested in UFOs at 15 and has researched them for almost 50 years now. The head of the Society for Research into the UFO Phenomenon (GEP) in Germany says that the overwhelming majority of sightings, however, have natural or man-made explanations. “Since 1972, we’ve looked into roughly 4,500 sightings” reported to the GEP by witnesses, Peiniger told DW. “There are only around 5% that we couldn’t find any comprehensible explanation for.” The rest, Peiniger says, are often helium balloons of the kind you see on fairs, insects in-flight that can appear like a flying saucer in photos, weather phenomena or satellites. As for the other 5%: “Maybe they’re natural phenomena that we simply cannot explain yet.” Peiniger says after the many cases he’s researched, he is highly skeptical that any UAP sightings are alien spacecraft. “I don’t want to rule it out completely,” Peiniger said, “but I am assuming that we are not currently being visited by extra-terrestrials.”
This article was provided by Deutsche Welle
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