Panelists discussed what they knew about unidentified aerial phenomena (the new preferred term for unidentified flying objects, or UFOs) and discussed the possible disclosure of any remaining classified government information.
Astronomers Adam Frank and Woodruff Sullivan, at the University of Rochester and the University of Washington respectively, published a paper in the May issue of the journal Astrobiology exploring what they call the “cosmic archaeological question.”
For almost 40 years, astronomers have wondered whether an anomalous 72-second signal from space may have been a communication attempt by extraterrestrials.
On Oct. 28, the spacecraft Cassini will sweep through this liquid and analyze its cocktail of chemicals to give scientists an understanding of the moon’s alien ocean.
On April 8, 1665, around 2 p.m., fishermen anchored near Barhöfft (then in Sweden, now in Germany) reported seeing ships in the sky battling each other. After the battle, a dark object hovered in the sky.
In the 19th century, a long-standing problem in cosmology was that the sky was curiously dark at night. If the universe is infinitely large, and contains an infinite number of stars, the end point for any part of the night sky should be bright, illuminated by light shining from a distant star.
There are, and have been for some time, claims by UFO disclosure supporters that there is in existence a fleet or fleets of human spaceships charged with monitoring alien traffic throughout our solar system and even defending our solar system in the event of an extraterrestrial attack.
Epoch Times has gone through declassified communications intelligence NSA reports to collect some interesting tidbits of UFO sightings recorded by the U.S. government.
Is it possible that we are overlooking extraterrestrial signals in our search of the skies for intelligent alien life? If alien life does exist in our galaxy and beyond, is it possible that its signals could be similar to what we detect and label as pulsars? We see pulsars as a natural phenomenon, but what if that’s not the case?