It provides an opportunity for us to expand our understanding of the world around us with the help of nasa
NASA’s independent UFO study team is ready to share its findings
In 2022, the agency asked a group of experts to review data on unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), a new designation for UFOs that now includes anomalous objects or activities that can’t be quickly identified in the sky, under the sea, or in space. The team is now prepared to release its first report on Thursday, September 14, which will make recommendations to NASA on how to gather and analyse data more effectively in order to shed light on the nature and genesis of UAP. The report is “not a review or assessment of previous unidentifiable observations,” the agency is eager to point out in a NASA statement announcing the event.On Thursday at 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT), representatives from NASA, including agency administrator Bill Nelson, will host a briefing on the UAP research group’s initial report along with David Spergel, president of the Simons Foundation. Thanks to the organisation, you may watch it live here on Space.com or on NASA TV.
Former astronaut Scott Kelly, numerous scientific authorities from academia, the aerospace and aviation sectors, and one science journalist make up NASA’s 16-person UAP study team.
One public meeting of NASA’s independent UAP study panel was held on May 31. The majority of the expert group’s discussion at that conference focused on how to acquire better data to help clear up some of the mystery surrounding UAP. The need for more and better information was one of the meeting’s recurring themes. The fact that many of the sophisticated sensors employed by the U.S. government and military still have their capabilities secret contributes to the current UAP data shortage.
NASA’s Dan Evans emphasised in the May 31 conference that investigating a subject like UAP is within the agency’s scientific purview despite the absence of conclusive facts. Evans remarked, “First and foremost, it gives us a chance to deepen our understanding of the world around us. “This work is ingrained in our DNA.”
The federal government has recently held numerous discussions on the subject of UAPs and UFOs. Two former U.S. military pilots testified in July about experiences with strange objects that took place in governed U.S. airspace.
David Grusch, a third witness at the hearing who previously served as a Pentagon intelligence officer and is a veteran of the U.S. Air Force, claimed that the U.S. government is concealing the existence of a “multi-decade UAP crash retrieval and reverse-engineering programme” and that “biologics came with some of these recoveries.”
Grusch stated that he meant “non-humans” when asked about the description of these “biologics.”
In April 2023, Sean Kirkpatrick, the director of the Pentagon’s new All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office, testified before the United States Senate Committee on Armed Services that his organisation had discovered “no credible evidence thus far of extraterrestrial activity, off-world technology, or objects that defy the known laws of physics.” These claims are in direct opposition to what Kirkpatrick said.
Kirkpatrick informed the committee that the bulk of unidentified objects reported to AARO exhibit common features of balloons, [uncrewed] aerial systems, clutter, natural events, or other easily comprehensible causes.
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