NASA has established an independent study group investigating UFOs/UAPs/ETs

26. 10. 2022
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NASA is commissioning a study team to begin research in early fall unknown aerial phenomena (UAP) – that is, the observation of events in the sky that cannot be identified as aircraft or known natural phenomena – from a scientific perspective. The study will focus on identifying available data, how best to collect future data, and how NASA can use this data to advance scientific understanding of UAPs.

The limited number of UAP observations currently makes it difficult to draw scientific conclusions about the nature of such events. Unknown phenomena in the atmosphere are interesting both for national security, so for aviation security. Determining which events are natural is a crucial first step in identifying and elucidating such phenomena, consistent with one of NASA's goals to ensure the safety of air traffic. Officially, there is no evidence that UAPs are of extraterrestrial origin.

The US Congress should have issued a statement a month ago that the UAPs are either ARV or ETV. It is said to be unlikely that it would be foreign powers from Earth.

 

"NASA believes that the tools of scientific discovery are powerful, and they apply here," said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for science at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “We have access to a wide range of observations of Earth from space – and this is the lifeblood of scientific inquiry. We have tools and a team that can help us improve our understanding of the unknown. That is the very definition of what science is. That's what we do.'

The agency is not part of the working group UAPTF MMinistry of Defense nor her successor: Groups for synchronization of identification and management of aerial objects (AOIMSG). NASA however, it collaborates across government structures and recommends how to use scientific tools to clarify the nature and origin of unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP).

NASA

Independent study team

The agency's independent study team will be led by astrophysicist David Spergel, who is president of the Simons Foundation in New York and formerly chair of the Department of Astrophysics at Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey. Daniel Evans, assistant deputy associate administrator for research at NASA's Science Mission Directorate, will serve as the NASA official responsible for organizing the study.

"Given the lack of observations, our first task is simply to collect the most robust data set we can," Spergel said. "We'll be looking at what data — from civilians, government, nonprofits, companies — exists, what else we should try to collect, and how best to analyze it."

The study is expected to take approximately nine months to complete. It will bring together a range of experts from the scientific, aeronautical and analytical communities to focus on how best to collect new data and improve observations UAP.

“In accordance with NASA's principles of openness, transparency and scientific integrity this message will be shared publicly, “ Evans said. "All NASA data is available to the public—we take that responsibility seriously—and we make it easily accessible for anyone to see or study."

The study of life outside our planet

Although unrelated to this new study, NASA has an active astrobiology program, which focuses on the origin, evolution and distribution of life outside Earth. From studying water on Mars to exploring promising "ocean worlds" like Titan and Europa, NASA science missions work together to find signs of life beyond Earth.

In addition, the agency's search for life also includes using missions such as the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite and the Hubble Space Telescope to the search for habitable exoplanets, while the James Webb Space Telescope will try to record biological fingerprints in the atmospheres around other planets – recording oxygen, carbon and carbon dioxide in other atmospheres. For example, this could indicate that an exoplanet supports plants and animals like ours. NASA it also funds space research that looks for technosignatures—signs of advanced technology in space—on other planets.

Hidden messages between the lines

Sueneé: Again, the idea is presented to the public that NASA will be dealing with ET/ETV for the first time ever. It is emphasized to us that the research so far has nothing to do with aliens. NASA will ask, among other things, non-profit organizations and the public (that is, I assume also us people who have been dealing with the topic for more than several decades), what is happening in space.

NASA obviously did it this way it opens up the space to reveal things, about which people around exopolitics they've been talking about for over 30 years, which whistleblowers make clear NASA has known about for a long time, but never tells the truth - at least not publicly. Once again, NASA appears to be inventing the wheel for the public. So let's hope that this time they will be successful and it will finally be able to fly normally. ;-)

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