NASA’s first public UFO investigation begins to debate its conclusions

by time news

2023-05-31 20:03:41

Updated

“More quality data is needed,” says the president of the group of independent experts, who will present their conclusions during the summer

An unidentified object sighted by a fighter

This Wednesday the first public meeting of a panel created by NASA to study what the US government calls ‘unidentified aerial phenomena’ (UAF) and is commonly known as UFOs. The objective is to analyze what has been discovered since the formation of this working group last year.

The 16-member panel, which brings together experts from fields ranging from physics to astrobiology, was formed last June to examine UFO sightings and other data collected by both the government and private sectors.

“If I had to summarize in one line what I feel we have learned is that we need better quality data”, said the president of the panel, David Spergel, during his speech at the opening session.

NASA has stated that the purpose of the four-hour public session this Wednesday at the agency’s headquarters in Washington was to address some “final deliberations” before the team of experts publishes a report, which according to Spergel is scheduled for the end of July.

The panel has “several months of work ahead of it,” said Dan Evans, a senior research official at NASA’s science unit, and has denounced that its members have suffered harassment on social networks since they began their work.

“Such bullying only leads to further stigmatization of this field, significantly hindering the scientific process and discouraging others from studying this important topic,” NASA chief scientist Nicola Fox said during her keynote address.

The panel represents the first investigation of its kind ever conducted under the auspices of the US space agency on an issue that the Government once entrusted to the exclusive and secret sphere of military and national security officials.

This NASA study is independent of other Pentagon-based research into unidentified aerial phenomena documented in recent years by military aviators and analyzed by US Defense and Intelligence officials.

This Wednesday, the members of the NASA panel, which is based on unclassified data, have indicated that they are running into many of the obstacles that their Pentagon counterparts have detected. “Collection efforts are not systematic and fragmented across multiple agencies, often using uncalibrated instruments for scientific data collection,” Spergel said.

But these parallel initiatives by NASA and the Pentagon, both with some semblance of public scrutiny, mean a turning point in the US government after decades of discrediting sightings of unidentified flying objects They date back to the 1940s and have been associated with flying saucers and extraterrestrials.

While some see NASA’s science mission as promising a more open approach to the issue, the space agency has made it known from the outset that it wasn’t jumping to conclusions. “There is no evidence that UFOs are of extraterrestrial origin,” NASA stated when announcing the formation of the panel last June.

US defense officials have said that the Pentagon’s recent push to investigate these sightings has led to hundreds of new reports which are now being examined, although most are still considered to have no known explanation.

The head of the Pentagon’s newly formed Office for the Study of All Domains Anomalies has stated that the existence of intelligent extraterrestrial life has not been ruled out, but that evidence of such extraterrestrial origins has not been deduced from any sightings.

According to the criteria of

The Trust Project

Know more

#NASAs #public #UFO #investigation #begins #debate #conclusions

You may also like

Leave a Comment