Dit is ons nieuw hondje Kira, een kruising van een waterhond en een Podenko. Ze is sinds 7 februari 2024 bij ons en druk bezig ons hart te veroveren. Het is een lief, aanhankelijk hondje, dat zich op een week snel aan ons heeft aangepast. Ze is heel vinnig en nieuwsgierig, een heel ander hondje dan Noleke.
This is our new dog Kira, a cross between a water dog and a Podenko. She has been with us since February 7, 2024 and is busy winning our hearts. She is a sweet, affectionate dog who quickly adapted to us within a week. She is very quick and curious, a very different dog than Noleke.
DEAR VISITOR,
MY BLOG EXISTS NEARLY 13 YEARS AND 4 MONTH.
ON /30/09/2024 MORE THAN 2.230.520
VISITORS FROM 135 DIFFERENT NATIONS ALREADY FOUND THEIR WAY TO MY BLOG.
THAT IS AN AVERAGE OF 400GUESTS PER DAY.
THANK YOU FOR VISITING MY BLOG AND HOPE YOU ENJOY EACH TIME.
The purpose of this blog is the creation of an open, international, independent and free forum, where every UFO-researcher can publish the results of his/her research. The languagues, used for this blog, are Dutch, English and French.You can find the articles of a collegue by selecting his category. Each author stays resposable for the continue of his articles. As blogmaster I have the right to refuse an addition or an article, when it attacks other collegues or UFO-groupes.
Druk op onderstaande knop om te reageren in mijn forum
Zoeken in blog
Deze blog is opgedragen aan mijn overleden echtgenote Lucienne.
In 2012 verloor ze haar moedige strijd tegen kanker!
In 2011 startte ik deze blog, omdat ik niet mocht stoppen met mijn UFO-onderzoek.
BEDANKT!!!
Een interessant adres?
UFO'S of UAP'S, ASTRONOMIE, RUIMTEVAART, ARCHEOLOGIE, OUDHEIDKUNDE, SF-SNUFJES EN ANDERE ESOTERISCHE WETENSCHAPPEN - DE ALLERLAATSTE NIEUWTJES
UFO's of UAP'S in België en de rest van de wereld In België had je vooral BUFON of het Belgisch UFO-Netwerk, dat zich met UFO's bezighoudt. BEZOEK DUS ZEKER VOOR ALLE OBJECTIEVE INFORMATIE , enkel nog beschikbaar via Facebook en deze blog.
Verder heb je ook het Belgisch-Ufo-meldpunt en Caelestia, die prachtig, doch ZEER kritisch werk leveren, ja soms zelfs héél sceptisch...
Voor Nederland kan je de mooie site www.ufowijzer.nl bezoeken van Paul Harmans. Een mooie site met veel informatie en artikels.
MUFON of het Mutual UFO Network Inc is een Amerikaanse UFO-vereniging met afdelingen in alle USA-staten en diverse landen.
MUFON's mission is the analytical and scientific investigation of the UFO- Phenomenon for the benefit of humanity...
Je kan ook hun site bekijken onder www.mufon.com.
Ze geven een maandelijks tijdschrift uit, namelijk The MUFON UFO-Journal.
Since 02/01/2020 is Pieter ex-president (=voorzitter) of BUFON, but also ex-National Director MUFON / Flanders and the Netherlands. We work together with the French MUFON Reseau MUFON/EUROP.
ER IS EEN NIEUWE GROEPERING DIE ZICH BUFON NOEMT, MAAR DIE HEBBEN NIETS MET ONZE GROEP TE MAKEN. DEZE COLLEGA'S GEBRUIKEN DE NAAM BUFON VOOR HUN SITE... Ik wens hen veel succes met de verdere uitbouw van hun groep. Zij kunnen de naam BUFON wel geregistreerd hebben, maar het rijke verleden van BUFON kunnen ze niet wegnemen...
04-11-2016
National Geographic Channel's 'Mars': Does Art Imitate Life?
National Geographic Channel's 'Mars': Does Art Imitate Life?
By Douglas Messier, Space.com Contributor
LOS ANGELES — The new National Geographic Channeldocudrama "Mars" tells the story of the first human mission to the Red Planet in 2033, while also flashing back to interviews with real people who are working today to make the flight a reality.
The series is a work of fiction, but could this be a case of art imitating life? Has 2016 been a pivotal year during which humanity became serious about mounting a crewed expedition to Mars?
"I think it may well be," said Andre Bormanis, the co-executive producer of the six-part series, which debuts on Nov. 14. "Time will tell, obviously." [Trailer: 'Mars' by the National Geographic Channel]
Bormanis spoke last week during a panel discussion about Mars here at the Griffith Observatory that was moderated by Curator Laura Danley. He was joined by Rob Manning, Engineering and Science Directorate chief engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, and Leonard David, author of a companion book for the series titled "Mars: Our Future on the Red Planet." (David is also Space.com's Space Insider columnist.)
Mars has been getting a lot of attention lately. In September, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk unveiled an ambitious plan to begin sending astronauts to Mars as early as 2024. And NASA is eyeing human missions to the Red Planet in the mid-2030s.
"It's a whole new territory to explore," Bormanis said. "Who wouldn't want to drive a rover through Valles Marineris, or go to the polar caps and go exploring around those areas?"
Manning said that the question of whether life ever existed on the Red Planet— and whether it still does today — is a leading motivator for sending humans there.
"Scientists would love to go to Mars," he said. "We'd love to go find out. Mars, in fact, could be the next step for the web of life to grow again."
David said Mars is the next logical step in the human exploration of space.
"I look at Mars as some kind of metaphor for exploration," he said. "I look at it as a metaphor for scientific discovery. I also look at Mars as a metaphor for danger. A lot of work to do — not easy, it's going to be hard, and the challenges ahead are phenomenal. But, I think humans in the arc of exploration — that's exactly where we go. And so that's what I try to capture in the book."
Though they're excited by Musk's bold plans to send humans to Mars, David and Bormanis said they have some serious concerns about the effort.
"It's the kind of vision that is really exciting for a lot of people," said David, who said Musk's plan harkened back to ones promoted by Wernher von Braun and Walt Disney in the 1950s. "Most of my engineering friends go, 'Nice try. We need more details.'"
Part of the reason Musk wants to colonize Mars is to "back up humanity" — making the species much less vulnerable to extinction in the event of a catastrophe here on Earth. Bormanis said he had an issue with that rationale.
"I think that's kind of a cynical reason to launch a mission to Mars, in the near term anyway," he said. "There is no urgency to send human beings to Mars in terms of our various social problems, which are many. I think there are great reasons to do it, I hope we do it and I hope we do it soon, but the notion that there's going to be like an asteroid impact or a plague or this, that or the other thing that is going to potentially wipe out human civilization ..."
"Or an election," David interjected, spurring laughter from the crowd.
During the year he spent researching and writing his book, David talked to many of the people who are working on advancing Mars exploration. He was struck by their enthusiasm and their inventiveness.
"There were days where I'm writing this book and I'm going, 'This is really, really hard, and I don't know if it's going to happen,'" he said. "Then I get a new paper from somebody and I go, 'Oh, they solved that. That's pretty interesting. And there's people working on the problem. Definitely this is hard to do, but it's not insurmountable.'"
There’s A Rogue Black Hole Streaking Through the Universe
There’s A Rogue Black Hole Streaking Through the Universe
IN BRIEF
Black hole B3 1715+425 was discovered hurtling through the universe at 2,000 kilometers a second, nearly stripped naked of its surrounding galaxy.
Astronomers believe that in about a billion years, B3 1715+425 will become invisible, as it'll have no new stars left to feed it.
It’s never a good day when you find yourself naked and alone, streaking through an unfamiliar neighborhood. But that’s the reality for a black hole called B3 1715+425, located in a galaxy cluster 2 billion light-years away.
B3 1715+425 started out like any other supermassive black hole, with a full elliptical galaxy full of stars around it. But astronomers have shown that it’s since been stripped and left nearly naked, hurtling through the Universe at 2,000 kilometers a second – with no signs of slowing down.
“We’ve not seen anything like this before,” said lead researcher James Condon, from the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, who thinks the unusual black hole could help us to better understand galaxies form and evolve.
Supermassive black holes – which are millions or billions of times more massive than our Sun – are common throughout the Universe, and lie in the center of most galaxies.
The team spotted this naked rogue while looking for supermassive black holes that weren’t at the centers of galaxies, to try to understand more about these humungous structures. But they weren’t expecting to see B3 1715+425.
“We were looking for orbiting pairs of supermassive black holes, with one offset from the center of a galaxy, as telltale evidence of a previous galaxy merger,”said Condon.
“Instead, we found this black hole fleeing from the larger galaxy and leaving a trail of debris behind it.”
The researchers think that the trouble started when it bumped into another galaxy. That’s not unusual, and most large galaxies in the Universe got that way by merging with other, smaller galaxies.
Normally when a bump happens, the supermassive black holes at the centers of each galaxy being to orbit one another, gradually moving closer and closer together until they merge, releasing a huge burst of energy (the first gravitational waves we detected earlier this year came from one of these black hole mergers).
But in the case of B3 1715+425, something went wrong.
Using the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) network of telescopes, Condon and his team were able to get a closer look at B3 1715+425.
Based on how the black hole is behaving now, they think is that, millions of years ago, B3 1715+425’s galaxy passed through a much larger galaxy – one that had already swallowed up other galaxies in its path.
Because it was so big, instead of merging into it, B3 1715+425’s galaxy was shredded and ripped apart, with parts of its stellar debris strewn throughout the galaxy cluster.
The supermassive black hole at the center managed to escape with the stars that were closest to it, and that’s what’s left burning through the surrounding space, gradually losing ionising gas as its last remaining stars burn out.
The astronomers believe that, eventually, in about a billion years, B3 1715+425 will become invisible, as it’ll have no new stars left to feed it – but it will likely continue hurtling throughout the Universe without a trace.
That suggests that there might also be more of these naked black holes out there that researchers simply haven’t been able to see before.
Condon and his team will now continue to hunt down more black holes like B3 1715+425, and as better optical telescopes come online, they might have a chance of spotting even very faint naked black holes streaking through the sky.
They might also be able to find some examples of what they were originally looking for: black holes not at the centers of their galaxies.
In the meantime, they’ll continue to study B3 1715+425 to see what it can teach us about how galaxies and galaxy clusters form and evolve.
The research will be published in Astrophysical Journal, and is available in full online now at arXiv.org.
You can see Cordon talking about the incredible discovery below:
World's Largest Space Telescope Is Complete, Expected to Launch in 2018
World's Largest Space Telescope Is Complete, Expected to Launch in 2018
By Sarah Lewin, Staff Writer
After more than 20 years of construction, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is complete and, following in-depth testing, the largest-ever space telescope is expected to launch within two years, NASA officials announced today (Nov. 2).
NASA Administrator Charles Bolden hosted a news conference to announce the milestone this morning at the agency's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, overlooking the 18 large mirrors that will collect infrared light, sheltered behind a tennis-court-size sun shield. JWST is considered the successor to NASA's iconic Hubble Space Telescope.
"Today, we're celebrating the fact that our telescope is finished, and we're about to prove that it works," said John Mather, an astrophysicist and senior project scientist for the telescope. "We've done two decades of innovation and hard work, and this is the result — we're opening up a whole new territory of astronomy." [How NASA's James Webb Space Telescope Works (Infographic)]
The telescope will be much more powerful than even Hubble for two main reasons, Mather said at the conference. First, it will be the biggest telescope mirror to fly in space. "You can see this beautiful, gold telescope is seven times the collecting area of the Hubble telescope," Mather said. And second, it is designed to collect infrared light, which Hubble is not very sensitive to.
Earth's atmosphere glows in the infrared, so such measurements can't be made from the ground. Hubble emits its own heat, which would obscure infrared readings. JWST will run close to absolute zero in temperature and rest at a point in space called the Lagrange Point 2, which is directly behind Earth from the sun's perspective. That way, Earth can shield the telescope from some of the sun's infrared emission, and the sun shield can protect the telescope from both bodies' heat.
The telescope's infrared view will pierce through obscuring cosmic dust to reveal the universe's first galaxies and spy on newly forming planetary systems. It also will be sensitive enough to analyze the atmospheres of exoplanets that pass in front of their stars, perhaps to search for signs of life, Mather said.
The telescope would be able to see a bumblebee a moon's distance away, he added — both in reflected light and in the body heat the bee emitted. Its mirrors are so smooth that if you stretched the array to the size of the U.S., the hills and valleys of irregularity would be only a few inches high, Mather said.
In addition to Bolden and Mather, Christopher Scolese, director of the Goddard Space Flight Center; Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA's new associate administrator for science; Eric Smith, the telescope's program director; and Bill Ochs, director of the James Webb mission, attended the news conference.
The James Webb Space Telescope is fully assembled, officials said Nov. 2 — and on track for an October 2018 launch.
"Some of you that have followed JWST know that it almost didn't happen, and it's mainly because of the people that are sitting here, able to talk to you today, that we're all here and within two years of launch," Bolden said.
The telescope was originally scheduled to launch in 2014, at a cost of about $5 billion, but a series of setbacks and budget constraints delayed and nearly canceled the project. Now, though, officials affirmed that the telescope is on track and on budget for an October 2018 launch on an Ariane 5 rocket. (As a result of the delays, JWST's cost is now $8.7 billion, Ochs said.) The project is led by NASA but supported by international partners, including the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency.
The telescope's testing at Goddard, which has already begun, will ensure that it can withstand the shaking and loud noise of a rocket launch. Then, it will be moved to Texas, where its focus will be tested, and then to California for some final assembly. The testing is particularly high-stakes, because unlike Hubble, which was repaired and refocused in orbit by astronauts, this telescope is not intended to be repaired by humans.
"It's critically important to get it right here on the ground, and that's the purpose for the tests that we're doing here and, most importantly, for the tests when we get it down to Johnson [Space Center] in Chamber A, the big vacuum chamber," Bolden said.
"[We need to] make sure it can, in fact, be focused, so that we don't find, as we did with Hubble, that we don't have the ability to do what we thought it was going to be able to do," Bolden said, referring to the repairs needed to focus Hubble after launch. Each of JWST's mirrors is individually tunable, he said, so they can be adjusted without a corrective lens like the one astronauts put on Hubble.
"Our lessons learned from the Hubble [telescope incident] were, if you really care about something, you've got to measure it at least twice," Mather added. "And if you don't get the same answer, you'd better figure out why."
Researchers will make observations with the telescope for at least 5 years, and will carry enough fuel for 10 years — if they're lucky, JWST will last even longer, Mather and Bolden said. They added that the craft will absolutely be hit by space debris over the course of its lifespan, and that it's designed to function fine with small holes in its mirrors.
The full telescope, with a 21.3-foot (6.5 meters) mirror assembly, is too large to launch fully extended, so the telescope will be carefully furled during launch and will have to unfold over the course of two weeks once it's in space, Mather said. After that, the sun shield will be extended carefully, and the telescope will be given time to cool down. Finally, it will be focused, they said.
By six months after launch, the telescope will be ready to begin doing science.
Mather alluded to the "7 minutes of terror" of the Curiosity Mars rover's automated landing in 2012 — a famously complicated maneuver that used a rocket-powered sky crane to lower the vehicle to the Martian surface.
Evidence from the Viking landers from the 1970s shows that we could have overlooked some evidence for life on the planet.
Finding any confirmation of life on Mars is very unlikely, but the ability to rake another look at promising evidence is an important backbone of science.
REVIEWING THE DATA
With all the attention Mars has been getting lately, scientists have been revisiting data from past mission to the red planet. Data from the Viking landings show evidence of of water, organic molecules, and methane. This increase in the potential signs of ancient life on Mars prompted researchers Gilbert V. Levin from Arizona State University and Patricia Ann Straat from the US National Institutes of Health to reexamine data from NASA’s 1976 Mars Viking landings.
The researchers found traces of ambiguous chemical signals (radioactive 14CO2 isotope) in Martian soil collected in 1976 by the Viking landers. They don’t claim that the landers (whose locations were 6,500 km (4,000 miles) apart) definitively found life on Mars.
“[I]n the absence of a non-biological agent that satisfies all Viking findings, and in view of environmental evidence that Mars may well be able to support extant life, it seems prudent that the scientific community maintain biology as a viable explanation of the LR experimental results,” the researchers say, going against the widely-accepted opinion that Viking labeled release (LR) experiment on soil collected by the landers didn’t show signs biological processes.
AN UNLIKELY SCENARIO
“Even if one is not convinced that the Viking results give strong evidence for life on Mars, this paper clearly shows that the possibility must be considered. We cannot rule out the biological explanation,” said Chris McKay, NASA astrobiologist senior editor of Astrobiology that published the study.
Still, the researchers remain hopeful: “Life may therefore still exist, if only in a cryptobiotic state, subject to resuscitation whenever water becomes available.”
Why Space Elevators Could Be the Future of Space Travel
Why Space Elevators Could Be the Future of Space Travel
IN BRIEF
Expensive, unsustainable rockets have served as our primary means to exit Earth, but space elevators present a cheaper way to enter outer space.
Although new materials are needed, space elevator missions are in motion and we could see the first elevator constructed in the next several decades.
IT COST UPWARDS OF $160 BILLION TO PUT THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION IN ORBIT. NEW SATELLITE LAUNCHES ARE GOING TO BE A WHOLE LOT CHEAPER.
IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.
THE SPACE ELEVATOR
Getting into space with rockets is ridiculously expensive. A NASA Inspector General report says the agency will pay Russia $491.2 million to send six astronauts into space in 2018. That’s almost $82 million a seat.
And depending on what company you launch a satellite with, it costs between $10 to $30 million for every metric ton you send into space, The Motley Fool reported this year. But there’s a vastly more affordable answer to rockets — space elevators.
Futurists have flirted with the idea of space elevators since 1895 when the Eiffel Tower inspired Russian scientist Konstantin Tsiolkovsky. Tsiolkovksy reasoned if a tower was built 35,800 kilometers (22,236 miles) high, it would reach geostationary orbit and could carry payloads to outer space. His concept isn’t too far off from current thinking.
A 2002 NASA study by Dr. Brad Edwards re-invigorated the scientific community with what’s considered today’s modern day space elevator. According to the study, a flexible and durable cable with a space station counterweight could serve as a viable space elevator.
A mechanical “climber” — using magnetic levitation or rollers along the tether — would then carry many tons of equipment or people into orbit. Although such a project would cost in the tens of billions, it would eventually pay for itself by providing much cheaper space travel to a greatly expanded market.
A 2014 report by the International Academy of Astronautics (IAA) proposes a “ribbon” tether stretching well past geostationary orbit that’s roughly one hundred million times longer than its width. The “ribbon,” held down by an anchor as heavy as about 170 school buses, could carry 1 kilogram to geosynchronous orbit for $500, opposed to the current price of $20,000 per kilogram via rocket, according to the IAA report.
Dr. Peter Swan, who helped author the IAA report, is the president of the International Space Elevator Consortium, a professional society of space elevator enthusiasts advocating for the megastructure. He said space elevators offer an “opening of our vision towards humanity’s future.”
“There’s a tremendous movement of moving off-planet,” Swan told Futurism. “Space elevators could jump in and help the whole process by lowering the cost to geosynchronous and beyond.”
Swan, a satellite engineer by trade, said a functioning elevator would decrease the cost of launching satellites and missions by 99 percent.
A different concept by Thoth aims to build an elevator just 20 kilometers (12.4 miles) high to launch rocket trips that would cost less fuel. But Thoth and the IAA face the same obstacle as all other space elevator designs: materials.
THE MATERIALS PROBLEM
To build a tether capable of reaching tens of kilometers from Earth, an incredibly strong, dense, and flexible material is needed. This is because gravity decreases the farther away from Earth you are, so the tensile strength for the cable has to support roughly 5,000 kilometers (3,000 miles) of itself.
Engineers thought the tether could be made of ultra flexible and tough carbon nanotubes, but a study by Hong Kong Polytechnic University ruled them out this year. It’s also possible a version of the diamond nanothreads researchers discovered in late 2015 could be the key.
Swan said diamond nanothreads or boron nitride might work but still believes carbon nanotubes will be crucial in building the space elevator tether, despite the new Hong Kong Polytechnic University study.
“I don’t believe that any of the space elevator people that are working with carbon nanotubes to have been scared by that statement,” Swan said.
Point being: The materials don’t exist — yet. But we could see the right materials come out before 2030, according to a study published in the journal New Space.
The materials problem isn’t stopping the Japanese from trying to build a space elevator. The STAR-C orbiter from Shizouka University is on its way to the ISS and will test Kevlar in space to see if the material could work as a tether.
“They’re going to simulate what a tether climber could do on Kevlar. That would be a major step forward in the knowledge of space tethers and space elevators,” Swan said. “I applaud their activity.”
And since gravity isn’t as strong on the Moon or Mars as it is on Earth, we already have the materials — like Kevlar — to build space elevator tethers on these smaller celestial bodies. So space colonists in the immediate future could make use of the technology.
SOLAR SPACE ELEVATORS
Space elevators also present a way to generate potentially massive amounts of solar electricity. This is because solar panels in outer space — where the Sun’s light is unfiltered — can absorb vastly more energy than on Earth. The array could then radiate electricity down to Earth, bypassing power lines completely, Swan said.
“The key is to put acre-size solar arrays at geosynchronous (altitude), and radiate the energy down to the Earth at very, very low cost,” Swan said.
The 2009 sci-fi anime “Gundam 00” portrays a world where humans depend on a few orbital elevators to almost completely power the planet with solar power. Could something like it be in our future?
Swan ultimately believes space elevators will expand “the aperture of the human spirit.”
“By having extremely low-cost access to space, you can open up the human mind, so moving off-planet is not a dream, but a reality,” Swan said. “We can talk about going to Mars, going to the Moon, having a colony orbiting around the Earth.”
Scientists May Have Identified the Particles That Make Up Dark Matter
Scientists May Have Identified the Particles That Make Up Dark Matter
Simulated distribution of dark matter approximately three billion years after the Big Bang (illustration not from this work). Credit: The Virgo Consortium/Alexandre Amblard/ESA [Source]
NOVA/PBS
IN BRIEF
Using an advanced supercomputer, scientists came up with a profile for dark matter, concluding that it may be made of axions of a specific type.
With this new information, the race is on to be the first to prove the existence of dark matter particles.
MYSTERIOUS AND DARK
Understanding what dark matter is has proven to be amazingly difficult. Of course, one might expect this from a thing that is, for all intents and purposes, entirely invisible. Scientists have come to the conclusion that dark matter exists by observing the way gravity behaves—either our model of gravity is in need of an update, or dark matter exists. The latter is the most likely conclusion.
While there seem to be several phenomena explainable only by the existence of dark matter, there hasn’t been actual proof that it indeed exists. Studies abound, of course, but to date they have been inconclusive.
What (we think) we know is that dark matter comprises around 25-27% of the mass and energy in the observable universe. It cannot be seen, as it doesn’t seem to interact with photons, but it does interact with gravity, making it “observable.”
That may not be a lot to go on, but it’s enough for a team of German-Hungarian scientists from the University of Wuppertal, Eötvös University in Budapest, and Forschungszentrum Jülich to work with.
By extending the Standard Model of particle physics and using the JUQUEEN (BlueGene/Q) supercomputer at Jülich’s lab, the team led by Zoltán Fodor came up with elaborate calculations to predict just what particles make up dark matter.
Understanding what dark matter is, scientists believe, depends largely upon figuring out what particles make it up. It could be one of two possibilities: either dark matter is composed of a few very heavy particles or several light ones. Fodor’s team looked towards the latter. Of these, axions seem to be the most promising — although still hypothetical. What the researchers needed was evidence that these extremely light subatomic particles indeed exist.
Theoretically, the existence of axions can be explained as an extension to quantum chromodynamics (QCD), which predicts that very weakly interacting particles whose mass depend on quantum topological fluctuations can exist. To demonstrate this, the team needed the JUQEEN supercomputer to calculate the conditions by which axions can exist and contribute to the matter making up the universe.
The results were promising. If dark matter is largely made up of axions, these should posses a mass of 50 to 1500 micro-electronvolts (standard units of particle physics), which is up to ten billion times lighter than electrons — that’s an average of 10 million axions per cubic centimeter of the universe. In the Milky Way alone, there should be about one trillion axions per cubic centimeter.
“The results we are presenting will probably lead to a race to discover these particles,” says Fodor. At the very least, this study gives physicists a concrete range for their search of axions. The team also predicts that, within a few years, it will be possible to experimentally confirm or rule out the existence of axions. Thanks to the Jülich supercomputer, we may be a step closer to figuring out dark matter…now that we know what we need to look for.
NASA, SpaceX, and other institutions are accelerating their efforts to send humans to Mars, but the overall takeaway is that we’re not going to the Red Planet just for a quick tour. When we get there, we’re staying there. But it won’t be easy: Mars is always just a few short steps away from killing you. If we really want to establish a long-term colony on the Red Planet, we’re going to need to find a way to make it resemble something closer to the warm and fuzzy rock we call Earth.
And that’s where the idea of terraforming Mars comes in. A new YouTube video produced by Life Noggin makes the case for how humans could go about terraforming Mars and transforming it from a cold wasteland into a more amenable environment.
The video outlines four different major obstacles keeping us from making life on Mars an easy and comfortable existence: the thin and carbon dioxide soaked atmosphere, the low temperatures, th lack of a magnetosphere, and the low gravity.
The video concentrates on the first three factors, since they’re all connected with one another. First up, how can we make Mars’s atmosphere better suit our human needs? It’s one percent as thick as Earth’s and is a staggering 95.97 percent carbon dioxide. This means it’s not breathable by humans and does little to ensure the warmth of the sun (already farther from Mars than it is from Earth) is trapped well enough to keep Mars a cozy place (temperatures drop to minus 63 degrees Celsius).
Life Noggin says we might be able to create greenhouse effects by mining methane from rocks on Mars and combining it with atmospheric carbon dioxide endemic to the planet.
Terraforming Mars and making it into a new Earth
Maybe that is feasible, but the video also argues humans might be able to use ammonia derived from busted-up ice-rich comets from the outer solar system. For now, that’s just insane. The idea that we’ll be able to pull in that much ammonia from that many asteroids hanging around the solar system is ridiculous. Life Noggin also says that because ammonia is mostly nitrogen by weight, plants could serve as a useful way to foster an atmosphere similar to Earth’s — but it neglects to explain how exactly this would work and what the connection is.
With a thicker atmosphere to warm the planet, the video says “the rest of the terraforming job will be a relative cake walk” by mentioning we could melt Mars’s polar ice caps to create large bodies of water on the rest of the Martian surface.
Mars still has no magnetosphere to help protect the atmosphere from solar winds
Almost immediately, the video backtracks on this suggestion — acknowledging that we haven’t solved the magnetosphere problem! See, a magnetic field helps to repel solar winds and keep the surface from becoming an irradiated hazard zone. Mars used to have magnetic fields that jutted out from the poles — just like Earth — but lost them at some point in its ancient history. The result was that solar winds stripped the Red Planet of its atmosphere and resulted in a fast hemorrhage of liquid water.
The video makes no case for how to rectify this issue — because no expert is even close to figuring out how to recreate a planet’s magnetosphere. “Any atmosphere we do add on Mars won’t last,” the narrator says, “so Mars isn’t the best option” for making a terraformed new world.
The video goes on to outline how terraforming might work — and might fail on other planets and moons in the solar system, and eventually we’re left with the same understanding with which we entered the video: there is no place like Earth. A colony on Mars is possible, but for the rest of this century at the very least, don’t expect it to look much different from the destitute world you’ve already seen it to be.
In the 400 years since Galileo discoveredSaturn’s rings, astronomers have obsessed to learn exactly how these incredible celestial structures — comprised of ice and rock, stretching out as big as a house or shrunken to as small as a speck of sand — first originated. We now have an answer, and it’s more savage and ferocious than we could have realized.
In a new study published in the journal Icarus, researchers from Japan’s Kobe University report using sophisticated modeling and computer simulations to unravel how the rings were born. They started off with the knowledge that four billion years ago, during a period called the Late Heavy Bombardment, there were several thousand Pluto-sized objects that existed beyond Neptune. So the researchers calculated the probability that these objects passed by the planets of our solar system during this period, only to be destroyed by the planet’s tidal force.
They figured that these celestial objects did experience multiple encounters with three of our ringed planets — Uranus, Neptune, and Saturn. The researchers plugged all of this information into a computer simulation to figure out how much disruption actually happened and found that, “the combined mass of these captured fragments was found to be sufficient to explain the mass of the current rings around Saturn and Uranus.”
Celestial objects got pummeled when they got too close to Saturn. Those fragments were captured in the tidal force of the planet and coalesced to form rings. It’s similar to the proposed process for how Mars will develop its own ringin about 30 million years throughthe torn apart pieces of its crumbling moon, Phobos.
This Saturn ring revelation comes paired with an extra surprise: a new image of the rings captured by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft.
This photo was taken with a spectral filter.
Here we see the famed rings lit by the sun at 41 degrees above the ring plane. Consisting of continually colliding icy particles, NASA points out that these collisions are what cause the rings to wave and wake. This in turn creates a “subtle influence” on both Saturn and its moves. It’s a chain reaction of influence and reaction — much like the creation of the rings themselves. The life of the rings — gorgeous as they are — continue to exhibit residual traits of their more chaotic past.
It’s hard to conceptualize space. Movies have made it seem flat and empty, sort of a Star Wars credits style flat plane of existence. But space is actually a lot like Earth, at least geographically: There are hills, valleys, deep pits that seem to fall into nothing, more powerful and consequential than perhaps any mountain top or canyon here on Earth. You just can’t see them.
In his new book, The Gravity Well, Sandford uses his 28 years’ worth of expertise in working on spaceflight and being at the forefront of the space industry to explain how humans ought to go about conquering the gravity well, one of the most impressive obstacles that has prevented humans from deep space travel.
What is the gravity well?
This is sort of my working definition — and I just sort of made this up — but I’m using the Earth-sun Lagrange point [the points in the orbital configuration of two bodies where another smaller object can maintain a stable position]. That’s why I say it’s a million miles.
The exact physical definition is not so important as the idea that space is not this black, black region — it’s got terrain. It has mountains and flat spots and valleys that we have to negotiate. If we play our cards right, we can go a long way with very little energy. If we play our cards incorrectly, we can spend a tremendous amount of energy to go not so far.
xkcd's illustration of the gravity well.
A lot of people think about space and they think there’s nothing there when that couldn’t be further from the truth. Not only is there terrain but there are wells, and there’s a lot of water. There’s actually trillions of dollars worth of minerals in space not too far from the gravity well.
What are other misconceptions about space?
Probably the biggest one is that it [space exploration] is expensive. The public investment in space [i.e. NASA’s annual budget] is $18 billion dollars. That’s a big number, but what I try to do in the book is provide a framework for that number just like I tried to reframe their mental model of space. The kinds of problems that the civil space program can help us solve are problems that we currently spend two orders of magnitude more on than what it costs to execute a civil space program. I’m including in my definition what I call an “audacious civil space program,” not the one we have now which simply maintains the status quo.
I make the argument that if we as a nation recognize these benefits and use the space program the way it can be used and the way it has been in the past successfully, we would reap these rewards and those rewards would be problems that we spend in total trillions of dollars to address every year. As a nation, we spend about a trillion dollars on education every year. Anything that can inspire a generation of people to go into STEM has a truly huge value to the century. If we have to spend 10 billion dollars to get that, that’s a lot of money, but it’s relative to the benefit and relative to how much we spend today on that problem. It’s not actually very much money. That’s the kind of re-framing I’m trying to do in terms of the cost of space.
Earth's gravity well.
Do you think that commercial space has been a big factor in persuading people to start taking these operations more seriously?
I absolutely think that it’s all tied together. I would suggest to you that there has always been a contingent of people working under the radar on the problem of going to Mars through the years that you may or may not have known about. Now that people like Musk are making this pitch to the public and the public is responding, I do think it helps.
What are some other obstacles preventing us from successfully and safely traveling out into deep space and conquering the gravity well, so to speak?
There’s so much that we need to learn how to do to be able to land people on Mars. Some of those things we have to learn how to do are surface-based activities like surface habitats and surface construction equipment and resource utilization. There are some things that actually simply happen in space. They’re in-space technologies and that has to do with communications and navigation and guidance and trajectory analysis. Highly autonomous rendezvous and docking. I should say highly autonomous and highly reliable on rendezvous and docking. Our [extravehicular activity] tools have to get better and more automated. For both in space and surface system, we need better life support.
A illustration for a proposed Mars entry-descent-landing.
Going 25,000 mph in space to going quietly and safely under the surface — we’re talking about trying to figure this out for a 15 to 30 metric ton payload, not a rover that’s under one metric ton. They’re incredibly large systems that we need for habitats and power systems and that kind of thing.
Then there are obstacles to the settlement as well. That’s where Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos and those guys come in because they are literally taking the systems that we use for exploration, and making it into a commercial system that will cost significantly less.
They’re doing amazing things to reduce the cost of access to space. Reusability in the design and launch of rockets means the manufacturing costs come down as well as the assembly and integration cost. When SpaceX launches a rocket, the mission control system is dramatically different than a NASA system. That lowers the cost. That’s probably the first thing that we need to work on.
What are the benefits of space travel?
One point I haven’t mentioned yet is the benefits of space on international influence. [President] Kennedy started the Apollo program not for economics or education — it was about international influence. His exact words are actually pretty poetic and meaningful and deserve to be understood. I think Apollo was extremely successful and may have been his biggest contribution to the victory of democracy and capitalism over communism as anything else.
Photos via Randall Munroe/xkcd, University of Liverpool, NASA, YouTube
DID NOSTRADAMUS PREDICT THE RISE OF PUTIN AND AN ALIEN INVASION IN 2017?
DID NOSTRADAMUS PREDICT THE RISE OF PUTIN AND AN ALIEN INVASION IN 2017?
Alien UFO invasion in 2017 - 2020? Nostradamus and Revelation prophecies. Alien UFO invasion of earth in 2017? Alien takeover of the planet? Fullfilling Book of Revelation prophecies of the rise and defeat of the Antichrist Putin. Nostradamus and Book of Revelation prophecies of alien invasion of earth and modification of human DNA. Revelation 19 - return of Jesus Christ, possibly on a UFO. Revelation 21 - the New Jerusalem descends from outer space. Revelation 22 - DNA modification of the human species.
Alien Invasion of Earth and the New Jerusalem is a Giant Alien City. Bible prophecies of the Book of Revelation, Aliens invade and take over earth. Jesus Christ leads the alien UFO fleet. Jesus Christ and the Aliens will defeat the Antichrist Putin.
Mysterious green light 'fireball' spotted in Japan sky
Mysterious green light 'fireball' spotted in Japan sky
Amysterious green light recorded travelling at speed over Japan has attracted the attention of curious UFO watchers.
The green object was captured by a Nippon TV affiliate weather camera in eastern Japan and released by NHK to add to the spooky sightings on Halloween night.
So have the little green men from outer space been captured on camera? Astronomers believe they might have a more normal explanation for the emerald green ‘orb’.
An astronomer told NBC the bright lights could be a very bright meteor known as a ‘fireball’.
“A fireball is another term for a very bright meteor, generally brighter than magnitude -4, which is about the same magnitude of the planet Venus in the morning or evening sky,” explains the American Meteor Society.
“A bolide is a special type of fireball which explodes in a bright terminal flash at its end, often with visible fragmentation”
The astronomer also suggested the green light could have been space debris re-entering the atmosphere, however no evidence has been found on the ground, the BBC reports.
Malcolm Robinson, a founder member of Strange Phenomena Investigations (SPI), believes there is a normal explanation for 95 per cent of UFO sightings.
“We are only talking about a small 5 per cent that can’t be explained and three per cent of the five could be our own black budget technology,” he explained at a recent talk on UFOs.
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VIDEO: Mysterieuze groene ‘vuurbal’ gespot in de lucht boven Japan
VIDEO: Mysterieuze groene ‘vuurbal’ gespot in de lucht boven Japan
Een mysterieus groen licht boven Japan heeft de aandacht getrokken van UFO-jagers. Dat schrijft de Daily Telegraph.
Het groene object werd vastgelegd door een weercamera van Nippon TV in het oosten van Japan.
Een astronoom vertelde aan NBC dat de heldere lichten afkomstig kunnen zijn van een ‘vuurbal’, een zeer heldere meteoor.
Een bolide is een vuurbal die een magnitude -14 of helderder bereikt. Astronomen gebruiken het woord gewoonlijk om er een opvallend heldere vuurbal mee aan te duiden, vooral één die explodeert.
Geen bewijs
De astronoom suggereerde ook dat het groene licht ruimtepuin zou kunnen zijn dat richting de aarde is gevallen, hoewel daar volgens de BBC geen bewijs voor is gevonden op de grond.
Malcolm Robinson van Strange Phenomena Investigations (SPI) merkte op dat 95 procent van de UFO-waarnemingen kan worden verklaard.
Hulp
“Vijf procent is onverklaarbaar en drie procent daarvan zou te maken kunnen hebben met onze eigen geheime technologie,” legde hij uit.
Afgelopen maand schakelde de politie de hulp van het publiek in toen er een UFO was gefilmd boven het Kanaal van Bristol.
First Contact: De aarde wordt klaargestoomd voor ‘contact met een andere beschaving’
First Contact: De aarde wordt klaargestoomd voor ‘contact met een andere beschaving’
De film First Contact, die voorzien is van commentaar door de legendarische acteur James Woods, vertelt het verhaal van Darryl Anka, die naar eigen zeggen na een UFO-waarneming in contact kwam met een buitenaards wezen genaamd Bashar.
Volgens Anka geeft Bashar boodschappen door om de aarde voor te bereiden op contact met een andere beschaving.
Uit EEG-onderzoek blijkt dat er opzienbarende veranderingen optreden in zijn brein als hij de boodschappen doorkrijgt.
Niet vreemd
In de film, die op 14 oktober jongstleden in première ging in Praag, wordt besproken welke positieve impact contact met buitenaardsen kan hebben op onze beschaving.
Buitenaards contact klinkt de meeste mensen inmiddels niet vreemd meer in de oren. De vraag is niet óf het gaat gebeuren, maar wanneer, aldus Woods.
In de documentaire komen ooggetuigen aan het woord en wordt wetenschappelijk bewijs gepresenteerd.
Realiteit
Ook proberen de makers een antwoord te geven op vragen die al duizenden jaren worden gesteld: Waarom zijn we hier? Hoe zal de toekomst eruitzien? Wat is de aard van ons bestaan?
Bashar legt in de film uit hoe het universum werkt en hoe ieder persoon zijn of haar eigen realiteit creëert.
De afgelopen 30 jaar hebben duizenden mensen van over de hele wereld naar zijn boodschappen geluisterd.
Nederland
First Contact stelt dat we niet alleen zijn en dat waarheid vreemder is dan fictie.
Wil jij dat de film ook in Nederland in de bioscoop te zien zal zijn, kijk dan hier voor meer informatie.
During my time as Director of Investigation for the British UFO Research Association (BUFORA) I had the pleasure of cooperating with UFO researchers and UFO research organisations in both the UK and around the world. BUFORA had many regional UFO groups affiliated with them and also used to cooperate with others on a regular basis. One such organisation was the Plymouth UFO Research Group (PUFOG) in Devon in the UK. Its chairman was Robert (Bob) Boyd and in February of 1995 Bob passed a very interesting UFO photographic case to me. The sighting in question came from a former Royal Marine and took place while he was still serving with H.M. Forces in Cyprus.
On the 20th of April 1993, PUFOG were interviewed by their local BBC radio station. As a result of that broadcast PUFOG were contacted by a former Royal Marine. He had been a Regimental Sergeant Major and he wanted to relate a UFO sighting from 1971. According to Bob Boyd this turned out to be one of the best UFO reports they had ever received.
Map showing Malta and Cyprus.
(Credit: Google Maps)
The witness in question didn’t want any publicity so his name was changed and he was simply referred to as ‘Steve’. What follows is a verbatim reproduction of his UFO sighting. He was interviewed by PUFORG and this interview and photographs are reproduced here with permission of Bob Boyd. The photographs are copyright PUFORG.
“I used to me a member of the Royal Marines, and we were part of a group called 41 Commando Group that was stationed in Malta. We used to depart from Malta 2 or 3 times a year and go to Cyprus for what’s called field exercises. I don’t know if you know the shape of Cyprus, but it looks something like a rugby ball laid on its side. On this particular night (31st May, 1971), we were deployed in the field. The unit deployed with Echo company on the left hand side, in other words on the west end of the island. We had 2 companies on the north and my unit which was Command HQ, was due south at a place called Ghoshi Trooli. Altogether there were about 1400 men on the exercise.
At our position, we were doing what is known as a night move and what happens is you move a Command HQ, from one place in the field to another place in the field in darkness. One of my jobs was to control that move. So I would depart, set up a new location and then the unit would have to move to me, and we would have the spaces where they all went. Shortly before 8.00 pm, we drove to a new location. There was a particularly bad piece of track on the way there and I dropped off a young marine, a policeman, and said to him to stay on this track and when the unit comes, make sure you push them towards me in the right direction. There was one place where they could make a bad turn.
Shortly after getting on the ground, I located the various places and cleared them out. About 8 o’clockish a very bright light appeared behind a crest maybe a thousand metres away. What it looked like initially was the headlights of a car on full beam, situated behind the hill. Because this was a night move with no lights, I got on the radio gave my call sign and told them to turn their lights off. The light just got stronger so I transmitted again, negative lights. As I’m talking this light came over the crest about a thousand meters away, and you go ‘it’s not bloody headlights it’s a flare’. I thought at first this was a mortar flare I was looking at. Mortar flares are stationary. You fire it up in the air and the aim is to illuminate the area. They hang by a parachute. The initial reaction was mortar flare and I was pretty concerned because we were in carbon grove, which is dry trees and if a flare lands amongst them you’ve got major problems. Twelve men had been killed in similar circumstances. A flare started in the Troodhos forest and a large number of English troops were killed. This was years before in 1957, which was in my time.
UFO photo taken by Royal Marines. Click to enlarge.
(Credit: PUFORG)
So now when I’m in a senior position in 1971 I think I’ve got a phosphorous flare hanging above a bloody carob grove and I’m not going to be very happy. It appeared from a thousand meters, which as I said was from behind the crest but it could have been quite high in the sky. The impression I got was that initially it was quite low. My initial impression was that this object of light was about 5-10,000 feet. That’s a complete guess.
There was about 20 of us at this place, looking at this light, when we suddenly realise that it isn’t a flare and you say ‘well what else can it be. The more you looked and the more people spoke, you couldn’t relate it to something else you’d seen, it was difficult to pin a label on. This was a massive thing. It appeared to be about the size of a golf ball at arms length. That’s the angle we were looking at (pointing 45 degrees). You had no obvious sign of movement. The main mass of light was almost spherical but it was putting out so much radiance, it looked like nothing you’d ever seen before. All it was like, was a burning ball of light. The light was extremely bright and when I’m talking about extremely bright, I’ve never seen anything as bright in my life.
The brilliance wasn’t burning enough to burn your eyes but it was just…..awesome. The nearest I can get to it is if you lowered the sun. And this is what I mean by a burning ball of light. The thing was that bright you see. It was like a burning orb of light, one orb of brilliance. I could also see other lights amongst it or thought I could. Not obvious lights. They weren’t like porthole lights with little people putting their heads out and waving at you. It was just what I thought indications of other lights, the same colour as the main one. You had this burning ball coming overhead like that and I am seeing something, not actually a cross but other lights roughly that shape within the centre light.
Front and back of it, especially when it was lower in the sky, you had like a vortex of movement as though you had displacement of air. In other words if a thing is moving it would push air backwards and forwards. I could see something like that. You get a lot of dust in Cyprus, especially at that time of year. Very dry dusty conditions and you get a lot of dust in the atmosphere. If you had a burning ball of phosphorous, you would have the central core of phosphorous, then the glare of the diffused light. If you were moving that phosphorous through conditions where there was dust, you would get movement, a push vortex and a vortex behind.
UFO photo taken by Royal Marines. Click to enlarge.
(Credit: PUFORG)
There was a lot of chat among the 20 men. You’re all talking about it. You’ve never seen anything like it in your life. We are now watching this for some minutes. Remember I told you that I’d left a marine corporal guarding at the track. We all of a sudden we hear this (beats hand on table) and this guy came over the hill doing about 600 mph!! This is in full kit. And you know Cyprus is a hot and sticky place. Anyway, he came up and after panting for a bit said ‘Can you see that?’ We said yes and he said ‘Thank Christ for that’. It wasn’t till that happened that you realised that by being in a group of people watching, it wasn’t frightening as it was if you were alone. I mean for a Marine Corporal to disobey my orders and bugger off, and then it was something. To a lone individual…..to run away from something is a serious offence, let’s not disguise the fact. He deserted the post that I had given. For a lone individual, what he saw by himself…..meant it was a bit more serious than that.
Everybody on the exercise, about 1400 men, saw the light. During this period the unit you remember, is doing a night move. As I said we had radio sets and we could hear transmissions of other people taking about the light, and at one stage the following dialogue took place between a call sign which is a unit and a commanding officer, Sunray. There was a little bit of chat about the light then Sunray said ‘It must be a flying saucer ha ha’. There were the words he used.
We watched this for 22 minutes. We were all professional observers. I carry powerful binoculars, night glasses, and there was about half a dozen pairs of binoculars there. Now you may think that what I was going to tell you is stupid, but the light went from ground zero and took 22 minutes to disappear out of sight of binoculars to the right of the moon. WE didn’t use the glasses when the light was easily visible because it was so bright it might have damaged your eyes through binoculars. It was when it was at height that we used the binoculars. So using night glasses leaning on a land rover, watching this light, the moon is now hanging over Dekali Garrison and the object ended up to the right of the moon.
A point I want to make is that there was no impression of speed, sound or movement. You were looking at something that seems to drift past you. I’ve been trained for 27 years to judge distances, that’s what I’m paid for. But I couldn’t tell you if that was 1000 meters high, 5000 metres high, 50 mile high. I’m also a professional parachutist, so I knew distances in the air, gut I couldn’t tell you how far away it was or how high. It was just something you’d never seen before. The day we saw the light was the same day that the Americans had launched on of their moon shots. I think it was the second one.
We then moved back to the barracks. When I got back to base, I wrote a complete report of everything we’d seen that night. It covered about 5 pages. I posted it to my wife first and told her to keep the letter because I knew it was something different – and she ditched it!! The next morning, we were all talking in the mess about the light, so I rang Aquitiri and asked to speak to the station Net. Officer and I couldn’t get hold of him. The lines were burning. So I contacted my opposite number there and spoke to him. He said ‘Is it about the light we saw last night, and I said yes. He said ‘the switchboard had been jammed solid’. The he said that ‘it was the Mariner shot (NARAS) that’s all we were watching’.
Later that morning the colonel sent for me and (we were referring to the light in general discussion) he instructed that all sub-units who’d seen it, were requested to write a report on it and anybody who had taken photos to hand them in as part of the research into this Mariner thing. And this was done. I then got to draw ammunition. I used to lodge my ammunition in a compound. Bring it off a ship, put it in the compound and draw from the army barracks. Everyone you saw would say did you see that light and you’d have a chat about it. I went down there and was talking to the blokes about it. One bloke had come out of the mess, drunk: out of an army mess, drunk. He gets to the car park and goes to start his car and he looks up and sees what we saw and he said in seconds he was stone cold sober. He raced back into the mess goes ga a ga and they all run out to watch the light.
The Turks or the Greeks, I don’t know which but one of them believes a light, a bright light like this means the coming of the new Messiah. When I went for the ammo, locals worked in the ammunition dump, and one of them was telling us that his village had seen this as part of their sort of religion of Christ and that, and they all turned out and were praying in the streets, thinking that the Boss Man had arrived again. It wasn’t just a few people. It was reported in the local press so it could easily be checked I’m not giving you a load of waffle. You could dead easy get a check o it.
I started collating the reports and listening to other people talking about it. Echo Company was on the left of the Island. Now they had observed what we had observed, maybe ten minutes prior. So let’s say at about 7.35 pm, they’d noticed this light coming from West to East, so it was coming straight towards them. This light came from West to East. Halfway across the Island, it then turned from North to South. So Echo Company watch it coming towards them, it then comes inland turns from North to South. We watch it as it came over the mountain and flies south. I didn’t know they had Mariner craft that turn a right angle basically and then disappear. All the reports were handed in, photos and negatives and quite a lot got handed in. If you’ve got 1400 blokes in the field, you’re going to have a hundred of them with cameras, aren’t you? There was a large quantity of films handed in. I would say over a hundred rolls of film.
UFO photo taken by Royal Marines. Click to enlarge.
(Credit: PUFORG)
Weeks later it was confirmed that this was a UFO. You see what happened the first morning when the colonel asked me to get the reports; he didn’t give me a full brief. I would be responsible for running the unit and he would normally be dead straight with me. Now for some reason he had a top level meeting with his company commanders and would have discussed it with them, but he didn’t tell me the full story.
In the centre of Cyprus is a place called the Troodhos Mountains, on top of which they’ve got the most sophisticated radar in the world. They’re called golf balls because of their appearance and are maybe 3-400 feet in circumference. They used to monitor the U2 flights and long range radar transmissions. There’s a fighter base at Aquitiri and it’s a very sophisticated fighter base. On RAF bases abroad, they always have QRF (quick response) fighters burning internally. So on an operational base you always have the latest aircraft there, ready to go.
About 2 or 3 weeks later we were off the coast of (location deleted) doing a job. I went in for my morning sherry with him and he said ‘That UFO’s been confirmed’. So I said what UFO? “Didn’t I tell you?’ he said. I said, no but you’re going to tell me now, aren’t you? And then he explained that this was a UFO and it was an official job from reports, they went off and then it then came back as confirmed as a UFO.
I was told this by him, that is the colonel that during this, those ‘golf balls’ up on Troodhos had traces early on in the game. They put 2 Lightings up (RAF fighter aircraft), which were capable of about 1200 mph. They would obviously have an early interception course on this particular object, whatever it was, and they could be put alongside it. And the way it was said to me was ‘Two Lightings couldn’t touch it’. In service parlance that means that you can up two aircraft and they could not get those planes in contact with the object.
The radar at Troodhos pinged them early, and the Lightning’s went up. You never get a single plane going off QRF, you always get two. You’ve got two fighters depart from Aquitiri to investigate, told them to have a look, so they get a vector course. They pick it up on their radar long before it’s visible, probably 5 to 600 miles away. So the Troodhos radar would have picked it up at distance, the Lightings would be sent up to investigate it and they can’t touch it doing 1200 mph. Yet when you ask me how fast is it going and I’m telling you it is almost stationary. If it looked almost stationary, and the Lightning’s couldn’t touch it, it must have been a fair old height. But none of the facts relate, it doesn’t fit in with anything you’ve seen before.
I would be very interested in seeing what the Lightning’s saw. They would have been put up early enough by radar to get within good seeing distance to it. They all actually carry cameras on board, so they would trigger the cameras if nothing else. These would be cine cameras. These photos I’ve given you were taken by a naval publicity photographer. In the middle of the Island you had the support company, which was firing the weapons. The photographer, who took these, was with that company. He was using tripods set up for night firing. It wasn’t just a hit and miss affair with a guy with a camera. This is one of the few occasions that a guy was there with a proper set of equipment, tripods, etc. This guy was photographing what id known as Wombats and Nobats. They’re anti-tank guns and have an open breech called venture and when the round fires, the propellant burns out the back in a big flash, so when you see them they look very dramatic. You know the gun crew, the hooded figures, the round going out, a big flash at the back. That’s what his camera was set up for.
When the light appears the guy put his camera on it and included these on the same reel of negs. And these were handed in as part of what I told you. These I imagine are the only 3 surviving photos of this. He handed the roll in but a couple of days later, he was in the dame mess as me, gave me a set of the prints he had done. And that’s what these are. I had more photos than this but a couple have been nicked. I think I had 5 or 6 originally. When I showed them to people, I loaned them to one or two of them and possibly they kept one or two. I had about half a dozen at first. Luckily I’ve still got these. I’m well aware that it’s taken me 20 years to tell you this. Now if I was trying to do a snow job, I wouldn’t wait 20 years to tell you what I saw. I’m also no idiot. You could probably falsify photos 1, 2 & 3, by a dark room, a neon light and a clever photographer. But there is no way you could do this one (photo 2) which shows the lights of Dekalia Garrison, 6 or 7 miles away.
The photos are time exposures, so don’t show the ball of light as such but its trail across the sky. I don’t know how long he left the shutter open. You can get a good idea of how bright it was. The photos also show the illuminated dust in the atmosphere as it passes through. Lots of people who saw this are still serving. You’ll find that the senior officers like me have gone but lots of the younger ones will still be serving.
It’s taken me 20 years to tell you now, because you don’t like getting ridiculed. I’ve told it to other people because the beauty of it is I can prove what I’m saying. Luckily I’ve still got the photos showing the horizon. There was no cover up or hush up on the base because it fitted in with the Mariner thing, but we all knew it wasn’t that. What was surprising was that it didn’t make the English press. I’ve sometimes read or heard on the radio, that someone has seen a flying saucer. It’s amazing that on a thing like this where you’ve got, in my case, at least a thousand or more trained observers, whether they are junior or senior, all looking at the same object, and I’m talking about at least half an hour or more. Plus from different locations spread over an area of a couple of hundred square miles. You’ve got the whole small isolated community like Cyprus seeing it, and reported on their radio, their own media and yet it never got any massive press coverage over here.
I just heard you by accident on the radio and what clicked in my mind was when you said the MoD had got something on these lines. I thought I’ll tell him about the photos. Otherwise they would have just lain there forever.”
END OF INTERVIEW
The 3 photos are reproduced here in full. You can see as ‘Steve’ described in photo number 2 the lights of the garrison at the bottom of the photo.
At the time when the photos and interview were conducted PUFORG contacted the Ministry of Defence in the UK to see if they could obtain any further information on this event. After all ‘Steve’ had told them that he collated lots of reports and photos and that later his colonel had confirmed that it was a UFO. The reply from the UK Mod was:
The files for 1971 would have been sent to the public records office a long time ago and are covered by the terms of the public records act, remaining closed from public viewing, until 30 years after the last action was taken.
Of course those 30 years has now passed and in the last few years the UK Ministry of Defence has begun releasing its UFO files to the National Archives. The main man behind this is Dr David Clarke. I recently asked Dr Clarke to check to see if there was any sign of this incident in the released MoD files:
Nothing. I’ve gone through the files for that year at Kew with a fine tooth comb and would have a note of it if it was there. But as it was Royal Marines the report might have gone to the Navy and never reached the Air Staff. There are any number of reasons why it doesn’t appear in the UFO files. If they knew it was a military exercise of some description it might never have been treated as a UFO at official level. That’s the problem with following up cases like this that rely upon the memories of a single individual decades after the event.
I don’t agree with Dr Clarke that we are relying purely on the memories of one individual. If the witness is correct then he collected numerous reports as ordered by his commanding officer and photographs as well. The fact that they are not in the released files will only fuel speculation in some quarters that the MoD has not released everything and that there is indeed some kind of cover-up in place. I’m not sure I share such an idea but I can fully understand why some researchers do support such a notion.
And what of the three photographs provided. I asked UFO photographic analyst Winston Keech to comment on them:
My first pass of the photos and report look good – unless I find finer detail I would consider them genuine print copies of a real illuminated object taken with a standard lens on a tripod on long exposure. I have identified the tracks of stars in the background which should confirm the exposure duration etc. There is one effect from the forward scattered light around the object in one print that I need to explain, that is unusual – but that aside, they appear genuine … proper report to follow
There are a few typos in the report, which I suspect are due to phonetic interpretation of an original conversation … nothing drastic – except that the correct spelling of the RAF base is ‘Akrotiri’. I did Ii n fact put in for detachment to that very base when I was a pilot with the RAF in the early 80’s … along with half the RAF, as it is considered a prize detachment … almost sea and sun holiday in fact!
It has always been a very strategic base for refueling and reach of the middle east/turkey … and I can confirm that it was the home to the no 56 squadron, who would have just converted to Mk 6 Lightning’s (not quite as quick in climb, but with longer fuel range) from the Mk 3 model, in 1971.
Note also, that the radar referred to with 500 mile range is the hilltop radar, not the lightning’s onboard radar – the lightning would have only be good for less than 50 miles targeting radar range depending on model and conditions. The hilltop system would have been similar to the early Fylingdales modified ‘sage’ system.
Hope this of help,
really interesting case,
Win.
p.s. for a commissioned officer to desert his post like that would normally be considered an extremely bad/unthinkable thing … it generally results in dishonorable discharge – so to not be, speaks volumes in my opinion.
I also asked Winston Keech if he thought that the Mariner 9 launch could have been misidentified and be a possible explanation for this sighting and photographs:
I would say that it would not be possible to see the launch phase of the mariner 9 probe from Cyprus at that time. It was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida at 22:23 gmt in a direct ascent and separated from it’s launch vehicle at 22:36 gmt (a 13 min ascent) then deployed its solar cells at 22:40 gmt. The ground observation visual range to low earth orbit height (about the separation height) would be around 300 miles max. As this was a direct (vertical) ascent this means that the earth could only have rotated Easterly by around 250 miles by that point, so at absolute best it could not be seen in more than an area from 300 miles offshore from Florida to 550 miles inland from Canaveral and +/- 300 miles North South during the entire launch phase. The local launch time in Cyprus would be 23:23 to 23:36 and the probe would not be visible at all until around 20 hours later as Cyprus would be rotating away from the launch site, which is around 1/5 of the Global circumference away to the West. (as it was quoted as vertical ascent therefore controlled to fly directly from the launch point towards its target – mars, so would be flying westerly downrange at around 1000 mph by separation). I think we can pretty much rule out the Mariner probe. Presumably his ‘8 pm’ would be local time, or he would have quoted it as 1900 Zulu (as Cyprus is GMT +1 hr I believe).
Hope this is of help,
Win.
And just to be on the safe side I consulted with former RAF Wing Commander Alan Turner just to see if he knew anything about the operations of the base there at the time in Cyprus and to check that the witness’s recollections were indeed accurate:
“Many thanks for your article on what was observed in Cyprus – very convincing stuff. What is impressive is the fact that the sighting was acknowledged formally as a UFO.I was involved with 56 Lightning Squadron when it returned from Cyprus in early 1974, but I don’t know if that particular squadron was there at the time of the Royal Marine’s sighting. Having said that, a couple of the pilots alluded to “sightings which were weird” although they didn’t go into detail”.
Many UFO researchers will tell you that UFO sightings made by trained observers, especially members of the military, are held in high regard. They are less likely to be fooled by misidentifying known natural phenomenon although they are not infallible of course. They are after all only human like the rest of us. This sighting would seem to fall in to that category. It seems highly unlikely that it was not a misidentification of the launch of Mariner 9. If it was, then why ask for all the reports to be collected? Mariner 9 was a mission to Mars and was launched in the full blaze of normal publicity. This case has the potential to be quite unique simply by the amount of military observers involved. One would of course like to speak to more of them and as a researcher I’d like to know where within the Ministry of Defence these reports are stored because so far they have not been released. Are they simply buried in red tape and languishing in a dusty file somewhere, or are the conspiracy theorists correct and there really is a cover- up? I for one don’t have the answers but hopefully one day someone will.
References: PUFORG Report No: 9308.
Winston Keech (private correspondence)
Dr David Clarke (private correspondence)
Wing Commander Alan Turner (private correspondence)
About the author: Philip Mantle is the former Director of Investigations for the British UFO Research Association and is the publisher at FLYING DISK PRESS. He can be contacted at: http://flyingdiskpress.blogspot.co.uk/
I found this way back when and wanted to see if I could go back and make the detail of the structure on the moon more focused. Its really big. The original photo is below, altered photo above. You can see that this looks like a giant long triangle craft that has become half buried by the lunar dust. It must have been there for a million years to have so much debris covering it up. Perhaps others could get it more focused than this, if so, leave the link to your focused photo below. thanks,
UFO Hovering Over NYC On Nov 1, 2016, Video, UFO Sighting News.
UFO Hovering Over NYC On Nov 1, 2016, Video, UFO Sighting News.
Date of sighting: Nov 1, 2016
Location of sighting: New York City, NY, USA
Here is s UFO that hovers in place and is clearly not a drone or plane. It was recorded by Brianf121 of Youtube. The object appears to want to look like it has plane lights on, and yet, its not moving. Its a nice camouflage, but lucky for us, someone noticed it hanging there. Some UFOs do have the ability to change their outside appearance with lights or hologram imagery, to make themselves appear as a normal plane.
UFO Hiding In Cloud Flying Low Over City In California, Oct 29, 2016, UFO Sighting News.
UFO Hiding In Cloud Flying Low Over City In California, Oct 29, 2016, UFO Sighting News.
Date of sighting: Oct 29, 2016
Location of sighting: California, USA
UFOs make clouds, thats just a fact. We have reported hundreds of UFOs hiding in or near clouds over the years. Here we have a giant UFO shaped cloud. The shape is disk like because the UFO is disk shaped, but much smaller...about 10% the size of the cloud. The layers are made because the disk decides to rise up or lower, but its making the cloud at the same time, so it appears a new layer is there.
Scott C. Waring
Eyewitness states:
I've never seen a cloud like this before, it was literally layered. Super WEIRD, UFO-looking cloud in California!
UFOs like to investigate human technology, and where better to see the newest and fastest cars than at a Formula 1 trials race. Its the perfect opportunity for aliens to observe and scan human emotions, feelings, and commitments to win. As well as some awesome cars. Don't be so surprised, like we can record a movie, they can record so much more. Scott C. Waring
News states: Mexico: UFO Over Speedway During Formula 1 Trials By Alfonso Salazar During the Formula 1 speed trials this afternoon (October 29, 2016) the time being 1:25 in the afternoon, an unidentified flying object flew over the Hnos. Rodriguez speedway from west to east at an altitude of approximately 10,000 meters. The UFO flew at a speed comparable to that of aircraft. It was highly visible, as the sky was completely blue. Witnesses to the UFO's transit were on the orange stands to the left of the main track, and the UFO went off toward the eastern part of the city until it vanished from sight. It is worth noting that UFOs have been seen flying over the same speedway during other events, at times remaining static overhead. On one occasion, such a report was even transmitted live over Brazilian television.
Scout, currently in development down at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, works by aggregating and analyzing data from a number of different telescopes. When it identifies a near-Earth Object (NEO), it both calculates the risk of impact and collects subsequent data gathered by other telescopes.
A handful of such objects are tracked pretty much every night. Sunday’s asteroid was never on a trajectory to actually crash into the Earth, but it did pass within about 300,000 miles and measured somewhere between around 16 and 80 feet across — which made it the kind of too-close-for-comfort object Scout was designed to alert us to. A companion program called Sentry is tasked with tracking larger ones. Asteroids measuring around 450 feet across are the ones approaching the size capable of destroying a major city, and astronomers hope that Sentry will one day be able to identify around 90 percent of those larger threats.
Of course, Scout and Sentry can only warn us about NEO’s on potentially dangerous trajectories — they can’t actually break them up or move them. Kind of like those weird LifeLock commercials that joke about monitoring the problem without being able to fix them, these kinds of programs still leave it up to us to develop a solution. Astronomer Ed Lu told NPR that the key to being able to divert NEO’s is early detection, at least a decade or two. When they’re that many billions of miles away, they can be “nudged” off course little by little.
NASA’s already on the case, working in conjunction with other major space science entities like the European Space Agency, Observatoire de la Côte d´Azur (OCA), and the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU/APL). The collaboration, known as the Asteroid Impact and Deflection Assessment (AIDA) Mission, is at the forefront of a potentially life-saving maneuver called the kinetic impact technique. This basically involves a spacecraft smashing into the worrisome asteroid in question, pushing it a fraction of a percent off its orbit. The idea is that by the time it reaches Earth, that gap will have widened significantly enough to keep it at a safe distance.
Meet the Nightmare Machine: An AI That Creates Your Worst Fears
Meet the Nightmare Machine: An AI That Creates Your Worst Fears
DeepDream Project/Google
IN BRIEF
Dr. Cebrian and his colleagues fed 200,000 images of human faces into the machine – then, they fed a zombie face into the neural network.
When a machine learns what images scare humans, it can be taught to do the opposite, and generate behavior that makes us feel comforted.
GENERATING FEAR
The artificial intelligence (AI) currently being developed is largely benevolent. It can mimic the way humans think, complete menial and repetitive tasks, and more. But that doesn’t prevent people from being afraid of AI, thinking it will take away jobs or eventually turn Terminator into a documentary.
Somebody thought AI wasn’t scary enough, and did something to change that. Researchers from MIT and Australia’s CSIRO have created AI that actively warps pictures into scary nightmare fuel.
Aptly named the Nightmare Machine, the algorithm started like any nightmare would, rather benignly. The researchers fed their algorithm 200,000 faces, for it to recognize and generate a normal face.
But they then fed it just one picture of a zombie, and changed the code so the zombie face would have more weight in the images generated. Soon after, the algorithm was generating nightmare fuel like crazy.
FOR COMFORT AND WARMTH
Creating sleepless nights is not the main reason for the Nightmare Machine. It has a higher purpose: to tell machines how to comfort us. When it learns what images or things scare humans, AI can then be taught to do the opposite, and generate behavior that makes us feel safe.
“Just like a child, or an adult, by learning behavior that upsets humans, a machine can then be trained to avoid that behavior,” says Manuel Cebrian Ramos, of the CSIRO, in a statement. “So the same technology we are using in this silly project could actually be used to comfort, to invite humans to co-operate with machines.”
In fact, he believes that this is the best way to create benign AI, as opposed hard wiring rules. “Instead of [Asimov’s] top-down rules, which are always going to have loopholes, it’s better for a machine to learn bottom up,” says Cebrian.
Essentially, if machines can help us understand them, then it’s going to be easier to work with them. “If we perceive them as alien, as too different from us, then we will fight them, and I don’t like that, I like co-operation,” he says.
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Over mijzelf
Ik ben Pieter, en gebruik soms ook wel de schuilnaam Peter2011.
Ik ben een man en woon in Linter (België) en mijn beroep is Ik ben op rust..
Ik ben geboren op 18/10/1950 en ben nu dus 74 jaar jong.
Mijn hobby's zijn: Ufologie en andere esoterische onderwerpen.
Op deze blog vind je onder artikels, werk van mezelf. Mijn dank gaat ook naar André, Ingrid, Oliver, Paul, Vincent, Georges Filer en MUFON voor de bijdragen voor de verschillende categorieën...
Veel leesplezier en geef je mening over deze blog.