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    Philippe's page

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    29
    Nov

    Euronews (in partnership with ESA): Are we alone?

    No commentsBlogNovember 29th, 2011Philippe

    Euronews: Flying saucers, aliens and UFOs (unidentified flying objects) are fairy tales to most people, but to some they are real. What is the scientific explanation of these unexplained sightings in the sky? Is there life in space? Euronews Space magazine (March 2010) looks at both sides of the debate.

     

    Comment: One thing is to state that the show looks at the two sides of the debate and therefore appearing as tacking the topic in an objective manner. But it is a totally different one to attempt contribute to the debate. Once more, the typical treatment of the subject by the media and the easy association of UAP and Extraterrestrial life. To me, certainly a much too rigid approach that did not bring any results during the last 60 years. Are we simply not able to tackle the topic in another way? a more sophisticated, innovative approach could be required…

    22
    Nov

    November 2011: Interview of Mark Rodeghier, CUFOS scientific Director

    Comments Off on November 2011: Interview of Mark Rodeghier, CUFOS scientific DirectorNewsNovember 22nd, 2011Philippe

    In order to provide some complementary information and a different perspective about Ufologyto the readers, I have decided to run some (serious) interviews with different researchers and organisations involved in the field and to document these talks under the blog. My first session is directed towards one of the most serious North-American association, the CUFOS.

     Based in Chicago, the Center for UFO Studies (CUFOS – www.cufos.org) is an international group of scientists, academics, investigators, and volunteers dedicated to the continuing examination and analysis of the UFO phenomenon. The organisation publishes since 1976 the International UFO Reporter (IUR), a publication that most observers consider as the leading English-language UFO journal. The CUFOS purpose is to promote serious scientific interest in UFOs and to serve as an archive for reports, documents, and publications about the UFO phenomenon.
     Mr Rodegier, the scientific director of CUFOS has kindly accepted to answer my questions… (see BLOG’s tab)

    22
    Nov

    Interview with Mark Rodeghier:

    Comments Off on Interview with Mark Rodeghier:BlogNovember 22nd, 2011Philippe

     

    1. Mr Rodeghier, could you please introduce the CUFOS, its set-up and objectives? Is the center working in collaboration with others American or foreign Ufological organisations?

    CUFOS was begun in late 1973 by Dr. J. Allen Hynek, a professor of astronomy atNorthwesternUniversityand the long-time principal scientific advisor to the US Air Force project on UFOs (Blue Book). It is a not-for-profit organization that was envisioned by Hynek as a type of scientific clearinghouse and think tank for the UFO subject. The objectives and goals of the organization have evolved over time, but the most important are to be a reliable source of information on the UFO phenomenon, to do our own research on a small number of focused projects, and assist other individuals and organisations to do investigations and research that are rigorous and well designed. We have a small but select scientific board of collaborators, both in the States and abroad.

    CUFOS has formal ties with the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) and the Fund for UFO Research (FUFOR) through the UFO Coalition, a partnership that has completed a number of joint projects, such as the Abduction Monitoring study, or the publication of specialized monographs.

     

    2. What is your function within the CUFOS? Could you please describe some of your activities?

    CUFOS is not a large organization, and no one is paid a salary, so my duties range from the mundane to the more scientifically interesting. My chief tasks are to coordinate our investigative and research activities, to correspond and network with our collaborators, and to help organize and maintain the CUFOS archives. From time to time I also deliver lectures or appear on radio or television programs as a spokesman for CUFOS.

     

    3. You have been involved since some decades in the UFO research. From your perspective, how has the overall topic evolved since Mr Hynek’s period?

    Many years ago, the UFO problem seemed more simple and straightforward. If there are unknown UFOs in our skies, then they will undoubtedly be aliens from somewhere nearby in the cosmos. This was before abduction reports, before more bizarre cases were well known, and before the phenomenon continued to evolve in its characteristics (see below). Now the puzzle of UFOs has only deepened, although even Hynek before his death had realized that something even more unusual or esoteric than alien visitors might be involved, at least in part (an idea that researchers such as Jacques Vallee had proposed for many years).

     

    4. How can you explain the fact that since 60 years nobody has been able to be “lucky” in terms of finding “any” scientifically acceptable evidence? Is it just due to a lack of allocating the necessary resources?

    It is actually not surprising that we have made little progress in understanding or learning more about the UFO phenomenon since it first appeared with great publicity in 1947. The sociology of science, both in its traditional Mertonian forms and in the more modern “strong program” would have predicted this. To study anything scientifically requires resources, and this is especially true for a phenomenon that appears sporadically and whose appearance seems to follow no predictable pattern. This has made it impossible except in rare circumstances (e.g., at Hessdalen orYakimaValleyinWashingtonState) to obtain data about UFOs in real-time. This has left us with almost exclusively witness testimony as data, which has been sufficient to establish the existence and general mystery of UFOs, but has not provided enough data to go beyond simple searches for patterns. There have certainly been a few cases with some intriguing physical evidence, such as Delphos, Kansas, or the Amaranth case investigated by the French government UFO project (GEPAN, now GEIPAN), but these events don’t provide any insight into the fundamental nature of the UFO phenomenon.

    As comparison, think about the lack of progress in explaining how ball lightning is generated. The study of ball lightning, while not well funded, has attracted the attention of a small number of atmospheric physicists and other scientists, and while there are many theories, there are no definitive answers. And the study of ball lightning predates serious UFO studies by many years.

    Given that ufology has always operated at the margins of society, with no institutional funding, no support in the universities, and with active hostility from most elements of the established sectors of society, it is perfectly understandable that a phenomenon on which experiments can’t easily be done and that appears for only a brief duration would have so little physical evidence. (I certainly believe there is enough “soft” evidence from witness testimony to make a strong case for the reality of the UFO phenomenon.)

     

    5. If so, what could be done according to you to remedy this?

    I am hopeful that new technologies will make it easier to create networks of stations that can observe UFOs as they appear. We urgently need to acquire spectroscopic data about UFOs which will immediately provide some clues about their origin. And I am hopeful that the public can become involved in these efforts, as amateur astronomers have and continue to assist professional astronomers in many research projects.

    I am not so naïve as to suppose that new, significant sources of funding will soon be available, so I expect that progress will continue to be quite slow. We must try to be more clever with the resources we have.

     

    6. What is your(s) personal hypothesis concerning the nature of the UFO phenomena?  Is Ufology a serious subject?

    I have remained firmly agnostic about the ultimate origins of the UFO phenomenon, for several reasons. First, we don’t know enough or have appropriate data collection methods in place to test the various hypotheses that have been suggested. Ufology is a serious subject, but it is barely a proto-science. We are still at the stage of Tycho Brahe collecting observations which Johannes Kepler could then later use to develop his laws of planetary motion.

    I do expect that there is more than one phenomenon involved in the unknown UFO cases. Some of these are probably caused by currently unrecognized natural phenomena (balls of light cases fall into this category), some may be caused by elements of the human mind and psychology (some encounter cases fall into this category), and others may well be caused by a non-human intelligence (daylight disk and other cases of the “nuts and bolts” type fall into this category).

     

    7. Are you a SETI supporter? Do you think that we should intentionally transmit messages across the cosmos?

    I definitely believe it is worthwhile to listen and search for signs of ETI, and I’m pleased that SETI has broadened its efforts to search for optical signals and other forms besides radio waves. Some SETI investigators have even argued that we should search for alien probes in the solar system or evidence of ancient alien activity on Earth (see http://www.iar-conicet.gov.ar/SETI/Tough-Lemarchand.pdf for one example). I am waiting for the SETI community to recognize that such ideas are also compatible with current visits of alien probes to Earth, which could thus be one cause of UFO sightings. This isn’t much of a logical leap, but it is one that they refuse to take.

    As for broadcasting messages, I’m not concerned about any danger to us from such intentional signals, but I also don’t believe there is a good rationale for doing so now. Or, if we are going to send signals, it should be done systematically, not in sporadic efforts as has been done beforehand.

     

    8. The abduction topic is very marginal in Europe compared to the U.S.A. What do you think about that?

    Abductions have indeed been studied and taken much more seriously in the U. S., but that has also been true of UFO crashes and other more exotic topics in the UFO field. American ufologists have generally been more oriented toward the idea that some UFOs could be extraterrestrial craft, and it is actually a small leap from there to believe that alien beings might want to abduct some humans for testing. Abductions have also been taken more seriously in Australia, and certainly so in South America, so the split on abductions is more on the lines of Europe compared to the rest of the world, rather than Europe compared to the U.S.  In recent years, though, there has been a division among serious ufologists here in the States, with some continuing to believe that abductions are real events, basically as reported by the witnesses, while others have become more sceptical, or at least more cautious in viewing the data. I tend to be in the second group, although there are certainly a few very intriguing abduction cases, such as Buff Ledge in Vermont, that argue for the reality of at least the core experience.

    The majority of those who report abductions are sincere, but I believe they have had various types of experiences or events that have explanations other than aliens abducting them from their homes or vehicles. These include sleep paralysis, odd dreams, and dissociative states. But there remains a residue of data that defies easy explanation. European ufologists have tended to focus on these other explanations and, perhaps rightly, have also shunned the use of hypnosis for memory recovery in abduction cases.

     

    9. If you would have to list your own 5 best UFO sightings, which cases would be featured?

    My list of “best” UFO cases depends somewhat on whether the list is of physical trace cases, or cases with instrumented data, or just solid, reliable cases with competent observers, etc. It also changes over the years as new cases occur or old ones are re-investigated. To name a few, the Mansfield, Ohio case of 1973 (the Coyne sighting), where a National Guard helicopter was affected by a UFO, Loch Raven Dam, Maryland, where the vehicle of two witnesses was affected by a UFO, and they suffered physiological effects, Socorro, New Mexico in 1964, where a policeman saw a UFO at close range, along with two humanoid figures, and traces were left by the UFO, the Clyde Tombaugh sighting from 1949 of odd green rectangles moving across the sky, and the RB-47 radar case from 1957 where an Air Force plane with sophisticated equipment tracked UFOs, along with ground radar.

    I could easily name many other cases, but these five provide a range of case types and UFO effects. You will note that they are all from many years ago. Although there are certainly interesting cases that occur now, some of the most intriguing and well-investigated cases happened in the first half of the modern era of UFO sightings.

     

    10. There seems to be since several years an important reduction of good/strange UFO cases inEurope. Is it also what you observe in theU.S.A.?

    There are some “facts” about UFOs that are well-established, even if they don’t help us unravel the mystery of the subject. One of these facts is that after an upsurge in sightings in the late 1970s, UFO reports declined, worldwide, for many years until the 1990s, but even then have been at lower numbers compared to the 1950 to late 1970s period. This is true despite the fact that there are more potential observers, as population has continued to increase everywhere, and there are more ready means of reporting, including the internet. Even more significant is the reduction in cases involving potential physical evidence (Close Encounters of the Second Kind) and cases where a creature or humanoid is seen in conjunction with a UFO (Close Encounters of the Third Kind). This type of close encounter has almost vanished even though there were hundreds of such reports in the early years.

    Another significant change has been in the number of daylight sightings, which have decreased from about one-third years ago to just a few percent today. And finally, UFOs are much more commonly reported to be triangular or boomerang-shaped now, rather than the common disc that is the image of a UFO in the popular mind. What to make of these changes, and whether they are truly fundamental to the phenomenon, is another puzzle.

     

    11. With the tendency of more administrative openness and transparency, do you expect more official American UFO archives to be released in the next years? Are there still attempts to locate UFO related information?

    There are continuing attempts to locate more official documents that are concerned with UFOs, such as by John Greenwald at his The Black Vault project (www.theblackvault.com/), but we face diminishing returns. I don’t believe that there is some large cache of documents waiting to be discovered at any agency or organization (with the possible exception of the US Navy), and even then, these documents will be of more historical than scientific interest. Furthermore, if there has been, or is now, a truly super-secret study of UFOs being conducted by a government group, those files will never be accessed via archival searches and FOIA requests.

     

     

    12. Have you read Ms. Leslie Kean’s UFO book? What is your opinion?

    Kean’s book is a first-rate attempt to make a case that UFOs deserve scientific study, and that some UFO reports are of potential military and government interest. She did not try to search out new sightings and data, but instead, as a working journalist who has become convinced of the reality of UFOs, attempted to present a cogent and compelling case using some of the best evidence. Whether or not the book will succeed in gaining the attention and support of scientists, the media, and governments is a different matter, but I appreciate her effort.

     

    13. Given the difficulties of studying the UFO subject, why do you and your colleagues stay in this vexing field?

    Scientists and professionals need a strong motivation to remain in the field, given the many obstacles and frustrations. First, actually witnessing a UFO, especially one that is nearby or is very anomalous, is often personally convincing that there is something of substance to the UFO phenomenon. Second, the idea that some UFOs could be extraterrestrial craft, with all the potential fantastic implications for science and society that involves, drives people to conduct research because they consider this to be perhaps the leading scientific problem of our era. Whatever one’s reasons for studying UFOs, an investigator must possess a great tolerance for ambiguity, uncertainty, and frustration because otherwise they would leave the field for other subjects.

    Of course, anyone who studies UFOs has a “real” career in some other discipline which always takes as much, or more, time as can be devoted to UFO studies. And one’s normal career often eventually take precedence and leads people to leave ufology, especially when it is clear there is no funding for UFO studies.

     

    14. What are your personal and CUFOS future plans?

    Personally, I continue to be interested in looking for patterns in the UFO data, especially using data mining techniques as well as more standard methods. This type of research is made more difficult because the quality of data on UFO sightings is admittedly rather low, but I still believe that there are relationships in the data, and with external variables, that may be fruitful. I also am working on projects to gather physical evidence which we hope to fund through the public and its interest in the subject.  At CUFOS we hope to scan our complete collection of UFO reports—over 50,000 sightings—and make them available on the web.

     

    Many thanks Mr Rodeghier for your time and all the best luck for your future UFO researches….

    02
    Nov

    Web site updates

    Comments Off on Web site updatesNewsNovember 2nd, 2011Philippe

    Two recent additions:

    – Under Blog, a comparison between some recent iridescent cloud pictures taken in Nepal and two pictures that had been collected by the UK MoD in their UFO files;

    – A new reference document (under Document) pertaining to the topic of UFOs and Astronomers:  “A statistical survey among Italian astronomical observatories”

    ( Pittella, Massimo. UPIAR vol. 3 No. 1, 1978/79, pp. 307-315)

    Abstract: This statistical survey was performed between the years 1977 and 1978, among the most important 14 astronomical and astrophysical observatories in Italy. It had the purpose to probe the opinion of a major slice of the Italian scientific community about the UFO subject and to know whether the staff of some observatories had directly sighted some UFO phenomena. This informative test did not supply us with new and unexpected information. However it is a clear document emphasizing the mediocre standard of information and sensibility of the scientific environment upon the UFO question. Such an investigation, if addressed to other scientific circles too and regularly repeated, could be a suitable way to assess time to time possible developments of the scientific opinion about the UFO subject.

    31
    Oct

    Unusual Atmospheric Occurence and Iridescent Cloud

    No commentsBlogOctober 31st, 2011Philippe

    Reading the August 2011 of the British BBC magazine FOCUS, I came across some spectacular and beautiful pictures of rainbow clouds over Mont Everest. The photographer, astronomer Oleg Bartunov, took the below images during a Himalayas expedition in Nepal.

    Cloud iridescence is the occurrence of colors in a cloud similar to those seen in oil films on puddles, and is similar to irisation. It is a fairly uncommon phenomenon, most often observed in altocumulus, cirrocumulus and lenticular clouds, and very rarely in Cirrus clouds. The colors are  usually pastel, but can be very vivid. Iridescence is generally produced near the sun, with the sun’s glare masking it, so it is more easily seen by  hiding the sun behind a tree or building. Other aids are dark glasses, or observing the sky reflected in a convex mirror or in a pool of water.

    Iridescent clouds are a diffraction phenomenon cause by small water droplets or small ice crystals individually scattering light. Larger ice crystals produce halos, which are a refraction phenomena rather than iridescence.

     

    Iridescence should similarly be distinguished from the refraction in larger raindrops that makes a rainbow. If parts of clouds have small droplets or crystals of similar size, their cumulative effect is seen as colors. The cloud must be optically thin, so that most rays encounter only a single droplet. Iridescence is therefore mostly seen at cloud edges or in semi-transparent clouds, and newly forming clouds produce the brightest and most  colorful iridescence. When a thin cloud has droplets of similar size over a large extent, the iridescence takes on the structured form of a corona, a  central bright disk around the sun or moon surrounded by one or more colored rings (Source: Wikipedia).

       

    These pictures immediately reminded me of a UFO report that had been collected by the UK Ministry of Defence in 2004, and which was released in March 2011 on their website.  Two striking color photographs, taken in Sri Lanka by a member of the RAF,  of an “unusual atmospheric occurence” (pictures below) were attached to the report. As described in the attached testimony, the witness noticed a partial aura in the sky, heard a clap of thunder, then observed a ring like a doughnut appearing.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Comparing today these pictures, it is my opinion that the described phenomenon can be explained by a high altitude iridescent cloud, featuring an exceptional doughnut-shape…rather than a UFO, a type of nuclear explosion or a sort of air burst… Still a very unusual and rare atmospheric phenomenon that would certainly take many of us by surprise, and makes us wonder.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    11
    Sep

    Cockpit Chronicles…six surreal sights by pilots…

    No commentsBlogSeptember 11th, 2011Philippe

    A well illustrated article (Kent Wien international co-pilot) about stunning sights (natural and man-made) occasionally observed by pilots.

    http://www.gadling.com/2011/03/11/cockpit-chronicles-six-surreal-sights-seen-by-pilots/

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    07
    Sep

    European Geosciences Union (EGU) General Assembly 2011 present the Hessdalen Phenomena and UAP

    No commentsNewsSeptember 7th, 2011Philippe

    Having participated to the last EGU assembly in Vienna, I would like to bring forward a short feedback and some materials (abstracts & posters PDF files) relating to the posters presented on the Hessdalen Phenomena and UAP topic.

    1. The EGU

    The European Geosciences Union (EGU), founded in 2002 as a merger of the European Geophysical Society (EGS) and the European Union of Geosciences (EUG), is a dynamic, innovative, and interdisciplinary learned association devoted to the promotion of the sciences of the Earth and its environment and of planetary and space sciences; and to the cooperation between scientists.  Every year the EGU General Assembly brings together during a week geoscientists from all over the world into one meeting covering all disciplines of the Earth, Planetary and Space Sciences. 

     

    2. EGU 2011 Assembly

     The EGU General Assembly 2011 (Vienna, 3-8 April, 2011) was an important event and a great success, featuring an impressive amount of 4,333 oral and 8,439 poster presentations, in a dozen union wide and 520 disciplinary sessions! To give an example about the wealth of the programme, under the programme group “Atmospheric Sciences” which was of particular interest to me, there was a split of four main domains (Meteorology, Boundary layer processes, Atmospheric chemistry and aerosols, Interdisciplinary sessions in Atmospheric Sciences), grouping more than 60 different sessions !

    The scientific programme included Union Symposia, Interdivision Sessions, Educational and Outreach Symposia, as well as oral and poster sessions on disciplinary and interdisciplinary topics covering the full spectrum of the geosciences and the space and planetary sciences. Furthermore, Key Note and Medal Lectures, Great Debates, Short Courses, Union Masterclasses, Townhall Meetings, and Splinter Meetings completed the overall programme. At the 2011 conference, a total of 10,725 scientists from 96 countries participated (of which 28% students).

     

     3. Sessions
    I had the great pleasure to meet at this conference Bjørn Gitle Hauge and Erling Strand from the Østfold University College, and Elisabeth Blanc from the CEA (Commissariat a l’energie Atomique, F). These persons are studying the mysterious Hessdalen Phenomena (HP) and presented for the first time their research projects at the EGU.  One important point is that any research on unexplained atmospheric phenomena can always be presented to scientific conferences, however if associated as a starting point to a potential defined natural phenomenon (e.g. lightning, sprites, aurora, airglows). In addition, it surfaced from some discussions that even if the Hessdalen Phenomena is relatively well known (being in the headlines since 30 years), still some scientists were not at first convinced that it a genuine phenomena existed. At least they seem to be more persuaded after having had the opportunity to talk extensively to the speakers.

    Regarding the HP, it is worthwhile stressing the fact that since 2010 the French Space Agency (CNES/GEIPAN) has started a working collaboration with the Norwegian (Ostfold Univ. College) and Italian researchers (Radioastronomy Institute of Medicina) which aims at studying the unexplained atmospheric phenomena and acquiring scientific data. A first concrete action has been the installation in the Hessdalen valley of a set of experiments: an infrasound array and wideband antenna.  The reason being that electric fields or infrasound could be produced by the HP, similarly to others transient luminous events (e.g.sprites). Details can be read below in the abstract and poster reproductions. The datatape containing 6 months of measurements has already been retrieved and analysis are currently being preformed by French researchers.

     

    Session: Lighting: physics, detection and atmospheric effects

     

    ->> The Hessdalen Phenomena (Erling Strand)

         ABSTRACT: EGU2011 ES Abstract 9137

     

         POSTER: egu2011 ES poster EGU 2011-9137


     

     

     

     

     

    ->> Optical spectroscopy and radar analysis of transient luminous phenomena in the low atmosphere over Hessdalen valley (Bjørn Gitle Hauge)

         ABSTRACT: EGU2011 BGH Abstract-13262

     

         POSTER: EGU poster BGH

     

     

     

     

     

     

     ->> Infrasound and wideband electric field measurements during Hessdalen Science camp 2010 (Elisabeth Blanc)

         ABSTRACT: EGU2011 EB Abstract 9137

     

          POSTER: EGU poster EB

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Regarding the UAP Observations Reporting Scheme, I had decided to submit two proposals. The first one for introducing the project in general terms, under the Session: “Aurora, Airglow and Transient Luminous Events in Planetary Atmospheres”. My motivation was (a) Increasing the project’s visibility within the Geoscientific community; (b) Collecting some comments, ideas about the evolution of the project in the future, (c) Eventually finding Atmospheric Scientists that would be interested in joining the project’s expert group; (d) Requesting general advice about how circulating any relevant/interesting “UAP related information” within the Geoscientific community.

    The second one, in relation with the project’s educational aspects under the Session called “Science in tomorrow’s classroom”. I believe that this domain is of paramount importance, as there is a clear need of demistifying UFO events and fighting against pseudo-scientific information. In addition, the more UAP researchers can reduce the overall signal-to-noise ratio (misidentifications of natural/man-made phenomena) and focus on the more challenging observations, the better it will be. Moreover, it is also my opinion that through the UAP topic opportunities exist of stimulating the general public’s interest towards scientific fields, Technology and Observation skills.

     

          ABSTRACTS: EGU2011 Abstract PA 9442-3     

                            EGU2011 Abstract PA _outreach -13487-6

     

          POSTERS: EGU poster PA_Towards

                        EGU poster PA_Observed

     

     

     

     

     Although that I did not fulfill all the above objectives, participating to the EGU was certainly very useful. Overall, the feedback from the Geoscientists was positive, confirming therefore the relevance and validity of the project’s concept and the value of some specific features. Similarly to the Astronomers and Planetary Scientists, no special objection was raised against the nature of the project. However and ultimately, some data are needed and not only verbal testimonies or pictures. 

    This is the reason why it is extremely important that the serious work initiated by the Norwegian, Italian and French researchers must continue, encouraged and backed up (financially and materially). There exists an unique opportunity of acquiring scientific measurements on a new phenomena, therefore legitimising at the same time the study on Unidentified Aerospace Phenomena. I will have the opportunity in a future post to present in details further information about the Hessdalen project. Stay tuned ! 

    24
    Jul

    Scientific and sociological background of the search for extraterrestrial intelligent life

    No commentsNewsJuly 24th, 2011Philippe

    Although not directly related to the project, I have added under the “About us” / Publications a paper that I wrote last January for the European Space Policy Institute. It is called “UFOs and Exogenous Intelligence Encounters”.
    Readers interested with the “Extraterrestrial hypothesis” (The hypothesis that unidentified flying objects (UFOs) are best explained as being extraterrestrial life or non-human aliens from other planets occupying physical spacecraft visiting Earth…Ref Wikipedia) will find some food for thought.

    Any comment is obviously welcome !

    Abstract:

    The search for extraterrestrial life has fascinated scientists and the public alike for over half a century. In recent years, astronomers and planetary scientists have multiplied their efforts to discover life forms by probing planets suitable for supporting its development with telescopes and robotic exploration missions. Although the probability of discovering micro-organisms on other planets is increasing, the prospect of making contact with developed, intelligent extraterrestrial beings remains distant. However, such an event can not be excluded; it may happen unexpectedly and under as yet unforeseen circumstances, but it remains in the realm of possibility. In fact, recent opinion polls have shown that a large part of the public considers such an event as very probable, or that it has even taken place already. Although the popularised perception of such “close encounters of the third kind” in the form of UFO sightings is scientifically unfounded, it helps to build public support for space exploration missions, advance scientific knowledge on atmospheric phenomena and psychologically prepare the public for encountering extraterrestrial life. Furthermore, one should not necessarily assume that such a contact would be initiated by humans, or that we would be able to realise and comprehend it based on our own experience and intellect. After all, it would be the greatest discovery in the history of mankind” 

    04
    Jul

    Mystery Flash on Mauna Kea

    No commentsBlogJuly 4th, 2011Philippe

    Further to the Norway spiral’s event from 2009 (see previous blog entry), a new fascinating footage related to a weird atmospheric flare has circulated on the web. This video originates from the astronomical observatory on the summit of Mauna Kea, in Hawaii, and has been filmed on the 22th of June 2011.






    Mr Ichi Tanaka, a Support Astronomer of Subuaru Telescope (Hawaii) posted the video on the Starship Asterisk’s website (APOD and General Astronomy Discussion Forum), requesting the APOD readers to help clarifying the nature of this event (See forum entry at: http://asterisk.apod.com/viewtopic.php?f=29&t=24251&hilit=atmospheric+flare). “In the early morning of 22 March we, Subaru Telescope observers on the summit of Mauna Kea, noticed that there is a huge halo of light above the eastern horizon. It was slowly expanding to over 45 degrees in 5 minutes or more.  The event was captured by the Subaru Catwalk Night Camera and also by CHFT’s NNW webcam….”

    Similarly than in Norway, it seems that the most likely cause of that event is a Minuteman III missile launch from the Vandenberg Air Force Base (Claifornia). The footage can be seen at: http://vimeo.com/25743686

    From Wikipedia: The LGM-30 Minuteman is a U.S. nuclear missile, a land-based intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), featuring a length of 59 ft 9.5 in (18.2 m) and a weight of 78,000 lb (35,300 kg). Propelled by three solid-propellant rocket motors, this missile has an operational range of 8,100 miles (13,000 km) and a flight altitude of 700 miles (1,120 kilometers). The letter “L” in “LGM” indicates that the missile is silo-launched; the “G” indicates that it is designed to attack ground targets; the “M” indicates that it is a guided missile. A side view of Minuteman-III ICBM is the following:

    Phil Plait in his Disovery’ Bad Astronomy blog provides his theory of the event: “…a missile launches from California, and three minutes or so later the third stage releases an explosive charge which blows fuel out into space. This fuel expands in a shell, fades as it gets bigger, and appears to move across the sky as it does so. And there’s the other idea that this might be from a shock wave from the missile itself, which I cannot rule out…”

    Regardless of the final explanation of this mysterious event, it must now be clear that professional amateurs won’t hesitate to share with their colleagues any  “unidentified sighting”. It is obvious to me that in this context no cover-up could take place !

    30
    Jun

    New sightings report forms (NL, PT, RU)

    No commentsNewsJune 30th, 2011Philippe


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    In addition to English and French, sightings report forms have also been made available in three other languages:

    Dutch, Portuguese and Russian. They can be found under the tab ” Submit a report”.

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