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 Ontdek de Fascinerende Wereld van UFO's en UAP's: Jouw Bron voor Onthullende Informatie!
Ben jij ook gefascineerd door het onbekende? Wil je meer weten over UFO's en UAP's, niet alleen in België, maar over de hele wereld? Dan ben je op de juiste plek!
België: Het Kloppend Hart van UFO-onderzoek
In België is BUFON (Belgisch UFO-Netwerk) dé autoriteit op het gebied van UFO-onderzoek. Voor betrouwbare en objectieve informatie over deze intrigerende fenomenen, bezoek je zeker onze Facebook-pagina en deze blog. Maar dat is nog niet alles! Ontdek ook het Belgisch UFO-meldpunt en Caelestia, twee organisaties die diepgaand onderzoek verrichten, al zijn ze soms kritisch of sceptisch.
Nederland: Een Schat aan Informatie
Voor onze Nederlandse buren is er de schitterende website www.ufowijzer.nl, beheerd door Paul Harmans. Deze site biedt een schat aan informatie en artikelen die je niet wilt missen!
Internationaal: MUFON - De Wereldwijde Autoriteit
Neem ook een kijkje bij MUFON (Mutual UFO Network Inc.), een gerenommeerde Amerikaanse UFO-vereniging met afdelingen in de VS en wereldwijd. MUFON is toegewijd aan de wetenschappelijke en analytische studie van het UFO-fenomeen, en hun maandelijkse tijdschrift, The MUFON UFO-Journal, is een must-read voor elke UFO-enthousiasteling. Bezoek hun website op www.mufon.com voor meer informatie.
Samenwerking en Toekomstvisie
Sinds 1 februari 2020 is Pieter niet alleen ex-president van BUFON, maar ook de voormalige nationale directeur van MUFON in Vlaanderen en Nederland. Dit creëert een sterke samenwerking met de Franse MUFON Reseau MUFON/EUROP, wat ons in staat stelt om nog meer waardevolle inzichten te delen.
Let op: Nepprofielen en Nieuwe Groeperingen
Pas op voor een nieuwe groepering die zich ook BUFON noemt, maar geen enkele connectie heeft met onze gevestigde organisatie. Hoewel zij de naam geregistreerd hebben, kunnen ze het rijke verleden en de expertise van onze groep niet evenaren. We wensen hen veel succes, maar we blijven de autoriteit in UFO-onderzoek!
Blijf Op De Hoogte!
Wil jij de laatste nieuwtjes over UFO's, ruimtevaart, archeologie, en meer? Volg ons dan en duik samen met ons in de fascinerende wereld van het onbekende! Sluit je aan bij de gemeenschap van nieuwsgierige geesten die net als jij verlangen naar antwoorden en avonturen in de sterren!
Heb je vragen of wil je meer weten? Aarzel dan niet om contact met ons op te nemen! Samen ontrafelen we het mysterie van de lucht en daarbuiten.
12-01-2018
Scientists have found evidence of a ‘fourth dimension’
Scientists have found evidence of a ‘fourth dimension’
Eureka!
For a long time have scientists thought that the universe had three spatial dimensions: top-down, left-right, front-back.
In 1905, Albert Einstein helped us with his theory of relativity to understand “the dimension of time”. But the new fourth spatial dimension has remained hidden so far.
The truth is that the fur dimension is as mysterious as it gets.
Two groups of scientists from America and Europe claim to have discovered the fourth dimension, and their findings have been published in the journal Nature.
Despite the fact we can’t see it, the fourth dimension is there.
Image Credit: Shutterstock.
Researchers carried out two experiments in which they could observe the quantum Hall effect – the movement of electrons within a material limited to two dimensions as this material passes through a magnetic field in a perpendicular way – and they demonstrated— theoretically—that this effect can be extended in four spatial dimensions.
Despite the fact that the papers focused on two different experimental approaches, they arrived at a similar conclusion.
European scientists created a 2D system with supercooled atoms held in position with a special grid made of lasers. Referred to as ‘charge pump’, scientists used it to test the flow of electrical charge while monitoring how the atoms behaved. Scientists noted how variations in the movement match up with how a 4D quantum Hall effect would ripple out, which gives us hope that a fourth spatial dimension may somehow be accessed.
The second group of scientists created a system with light particles which were set to move through a special glass that has the ability to bounce light back and forth between the edges. Scientists simulated the effects of electrical charges via physical input and observed how the light behaved. Experts looked for irregularities that could only exist if there was a fourth dimension. Again, researchers observed a 4D quantum Hall effect.
Speaking about the discovery to Ryan F. Mandelbaum at Gizmodo, Mikael Rechtsman from Penn State University said: “Physically, we don’t have a 4D spatial system, but we can access 4D quantum Hall physics using this lower-dimensional system because the higher-dimensional system is coded in the complexity of the structure.”
“Maybe we can come up with new physics in the higher dimension and then design devices that take advantage the higher-dimensional physics in lower dimensions.”
The discovery is perhaps best explained by Science Alert writer David Nield who wrote: “just as a 3D object casts a 2D shadow, scientists have managed to observe a 3D shadow potentially cast by a 4D object – even if we can’t actually see the 4D object itself. That could unlock some new findings in the very fundamentals of science.”
“I think that the two experiments nicely complement each other,” one of the European researchers, Michael Lohse from the Ludwig-Maximilians University in Germany, said in an interview with Gizmodo.
The findings from the two experiments have been published in Nature hereand here.
Historic: For The First Time In 150 Years, A Lunar Eclipse Will Coincide With A Blue Moon
Historic: For The First Time In 150 Years, A Lunar Eclipse Will Coincide With A Blue Moon
Prepare yourself sky gazers, for the first time in 150 years–actually 152 years to be precise–a Lunar Eclipse will coincide with a blue moon. This event will make the moon look much larger, much brighter and of a different color.
Now don’t get confused by the term Blue Moon, as it has nothing to do with the color of the moon.
The full moon will seem red or a burnt-orange hue, hence its “blood moon” moniker.
According to NASA, this occurs because the indirect sunlight that reaches the moon, during a total lunar eclipse, first makes its way through our planet’s atmosphere, where most of the scattered blue-colored light is filtered out.
A super ‘blue Moon’ is said to occur on January 31st.
Image Credit: Shutterstock.
The moon could also appear blood red, dark brown or gray say, researchers.
It’s a magical event and Dr. Noah Petro, a planetary geologist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center calls it a “collision of multiple lunar events.”
“A lot of things are happening at once,” Petro said. “It’s a cool event.”
The only thing left to do is hope for good weather.
Events like this is why I love astronomy. At the end of January, to be exact on January the 31st, we will witness a total lunar eclipse.
This NASA chart details the visibility range and times for the Jan. 31, 218 total lunar eclipse.
Image Credit: NASA
A lunar eclipse occurs when our planet is aligned between the Sun and our moon. As this alignment occurs, our planet’s shadow blocks the sunlight from reflecting off the moon. So, when looking at the moon we actually sere our planets shadow on the moon.
When a TOTAL lunar eclipse occurs, where a full moon passes through earth shadow, our sun’s light is actually filtered through our planet’s atmosphere, which makes the moon look reddish from our viewpoint on Earth.
Space.com tells us that the last time a total lunar eclipse coincided with a blue moon was on March 31, 1866.
IF for some reasons you end up missing this incredible astronomical event, fear not, as on December 31st, 2028, you’ll get a chance to witness the same thing.
The event on January 31st is part of a series of three lunar events that started on December 3rd, 2017. The second event took place on January 2nd 2018, and the third, grand finale will happen on January 31st.
Even though the total lunar eclipse will be visible all over the world, you have to be located on the nighttime on Earth while the eclipse takes place in order to witness this rare astronomical phenomenon.
As glowing balls hover over the night sky near Charlotte, scientists probe for aliens
GIMBAL is the first of three US military videos of unidentified aerial phenomenon (UAP) approved for public release. The footage shows what was on display in the cockpit for the pilots of a U.S. Navy F/A-18 Super Hornet. Department of Defense/To The Stars Academy of Arts and Science via Storyful
As glowing balls hover over the night sky near Charlotte, scientists probe for aliens
BY BRUCE HENDERSON
Last Sunday night, an Indian Trail man’s wife excitedly burst into their house to report two orange, glowing balls that seemed to hover a few hundred feet overhead.
The man, who reported the incident to the Mutual UFO Network, wrote that he and his grandson headed outside to see a single ball hovering silently above them. Less than a minute later, a group of three balls appeared.
“My first thought was Chinese lanterns but they would have been very, very large, small plane or helicopter size, and defying wind patterns,” wrote the man, who MUFON would not identify. “The light source was much much brighter than a candle. With the binoculars it appeared spherical with a red beam coming out of the yellow-orange glow that the whole sphere was giving off.
On Nov. 11, 2014, a Navy captain and technician were on a routine daytime patrol mission flying north along the Chilean coast, west of Santiago, and filmed an unidentified flying object.
CEFAA
More and more, says the venerable Scientific American, scientists are seriously seeking answers to that question. In a piece posted Tuesday, the magazine declares 2017 “a banner year for scientists seeking aliens – even though they (apparently) didn’t find any.”
It’s not that scientists delight in crushing the belief that aliens are among us, the article states. They instead demand clear evidence to support an extraordinary claim. Yet some scientists acknowledge the slight possibility of extraterrestrial explanations for some recent observations.
The extreme dimming of Boyajian’s Star, for example, was probably caused by space dust – unless its light was absorbed by “alien megastructures.” Last October, the large object called ‘Oumuamua that streaked past Earth was probably a comet but might also have been an alien probe.
Just last month, a self-described UFO investigator posted a YouTube video that suggests a group of alien aircraft were recently seen hovering over Spring Lake, North Carolina, about two hours east of Charlotte. The video got nearly 70,000 views within two days of being posted.
What are the politics of U.F.O.s? Hillary Clinton said she believed in giving wider access to government records related to U.F.O.s and extraterrestrial life. Listen to what other presidents had to say about aliens and Area 51.
Editor Mary Joyce said the website grew out of photos taken by an 8-year-old in the mountain community of Cashiers that appeared to show a saucer-shaped silhouette against the sun. Since then, Joyce said, UFO sightings have been reported all over Jackson County.
Joyce said public officials and academics scoff at such accounts even if, she adds, they privately acknowledge them.
“The ones that want to get the information out kind of tiptoe around. They’re not going to lightly do this,” she said. “The people who are really, really aware of what’s going on regarding UFOs have actually feared for their lives.... These people have real reasons to be fearful if they know stuff. The (scientists) at the college level, they don’t know squat.”
Official Washington also appears to have taken an interest in probing the potential for alien encounters.
In a story line that could have been borrowed from the “X-Files,” the New York Times reported in December on a secretive Defense Department program, shut down in 2012, that investigated UFO sightings. The program was largely funded at the request of former Senate majority leader Harry Reid of Nevada.
(Video has no sound) FLIR1 is the second of three US military videos of unidentified aerial phenomenon (UAP) approved for public release. The footage was captured by a US Navy F/A-18 Super Hornet present at the 2004 Nimitz incident off the coast of San Diego. Pilot interviews state that the UAP was hovering at 24,000 feet.
Department of Defense/To The Stars Academy of Arts and Science via Storyful
The program and the aerospace company it hired “produced documents that describe sightings of aircraft that seemed to move at very high velocities with no visible signs of propulsion, or that hovered with no apparent means of lift,” the Times reported.
The program’s former director, Luis Elizondo, told CNN: “My personal belief is that there is very compelling evidence that we may not be alone.”
Photos were taken by Glynis Heenan and shown here on skyshipsovercashiers.com. Scientific American magazine called 2017 a “banner year” for scientists probing such sightings. Photos taken by Glynis Heenan in this screenshot of skyshipsovercashiers.com
MUCKING UP MARS Scientists are racing to figure out how to keep astronauts and potential life on Mars safe from one another before humans arrive at the Red Planet.
T he Okarian rover was in trouble. The yellow Humvee was making slow progress across a frigid, otherworldly landscape when planetary scientist Pascal Lee felt the rover tilt backward. Out the windshield, Lee, director of NASA’s Haughton Mars Project, saw only sky. The rear treads had broken through a crack in the sea ice and were sinking into the cold water.
True, there are signs of water on Mars, but not that much. Lee and his crew were driving the Okarian (named for the yellow Martians in Edgar Rice Burroughs’ novel The Warlord of Mars) across the Canadian Arctic to a research station in Haughton Crater that served in this dress rehearsal as a future Mars post. On a 496-kilometer road trip along the Northwest Passage, crew members pretended they were explorers on a long haul across the Red Planet to test what to expect if and when humans go to Mars.
What they learned in that April 2009 ride may become relevant sooner rather than later. NASA has declared its intention to send humans to Mars in the 2030s (SN Online: 5/24/16). The private sector plans to get there even earlier: In September, Elon Musk announced his aim to launch the first crewed SpaceX mission to Mars as soon as 2024.
“That’s not a typo,” Musk said in Australia at an International Astronautical Congress meeting. “Although it is aspirational.”
Musk’s six-year timeline has some astrobiologists in a panic. If humans arrive too soon, these researchers fear, any chance of finding evidence of life — past or present — on Mars may be ruined.
“It’s really urgent,” says astrobiologist Alberto Fairén of the Center for Astrobiology in Madrid and Cornell University. Humans take whole communities of microorganisms with them everywhere, spreading those bugs indiscriminately.
Planetary geologist Matthew Golombek of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., agrees, adding, “If you want to know if life exists there now, you kind of have to approach that question before you send people.”
A long-simmering debate over how rigorously to protect other planets from Earth life, and how best to protect life on Earth from other planets, is coming to a boil. The prospect of humans arriving on Mars has triggered a flurry of meetings and a spike in research into what “planetary protection” really means.
One of the big questions is whether Mars has regions that might be suitable for life and so deserve special protection. Another is how big a threat Earth microbes might be to potential Martian life (recent studies hint less of a threat than expected). Still, the specter of human biomes mucking up the Red Planet before a life-hunting mission can even launch has raised bitter divisions within the Mars research community.
Astrobiologist Pascal Lee (right) collects snow in the Canadian Arctic to test how far human-associated microbes venture from a mock Mars vehicle (left).
BOTH: A. SCHUERGER AND P. LEE/ASTROBIOLOGY 2015
Mind the gaps
Before any robotic Mars mission launches, the spacecraft are scrubbed, scoured and sometimes scorched to remove Earth microbes. That’s so if scientists discover a sign of life on Mars, they’ll know the life did not just hitchhike from Cape Canaveral. The effort is also intended to prevent the introduction of harmful Earth life that could kill off any Martians, similar to how invasive species edge native organisms out of Earth’s habitats.
“If we send Earth organisms to a place where they can grow and thrive, then we might come back and find nothing but Earth organisms, even though there were Mars organisms there before,” says astrobiologist John Rummel of the SETI Institute in Mountain View, Calif. “That’s bad for science; it’s bad for the Martians. We’d be real sad about that.”
To avoid that scenario, spacefaring organizations have historically agreed to keep spacecraft clean. Governments and private companies alike abide by Article IX of the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, which calls for planetary exploration to avoid contaminating both the visited environment and Earth. In the simplest terms: Don’t litter, and wipe your feet before coming back into the house.
But this guiding principle doesn’t tell engineers how to avoid contamination. So the international Committee on Space Research (called COSPAR) has debated and refined the details of a planetary protection policy that meets the treaty’s requirement ever since. The most recent version dates from 2015 and has a page of guidelines for human missions.
In the last few years, the international space community has started to add a quantitative component to the rules for humans — specifying how thoroughly to clean spacecraft before launch, for instance, or how many microbes are allowed to escape from human quarters.
“It was clear to everybody that we need more refined technical requirements, not just guidelines,” says Gerhard Kminek, planetary protection officer for the European Space Agency and chair of COSPAR’s planetary protection panel, which sets the standards. And right now, he says, “we don’t know enough to do a good job.”
In March 2015, more than 100 astronomers, biologists and engineers met at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., and listed 25 “knowledge gaps” that need more research before quantitative rules can be written.
The gaps cover three categories: monitoring astronauts’ microbes, minimizing contamination and understanding how matter naturally travels around Mars. Rather than prevent contamination — probably impossible — the goal is to assess the risks and decide what risks are acceptable. COSPAR prioritized the gaps in October 2016 and will meet again in Houston in February to decide what specific experiments should be done.
Contamination questions
Scientists met in 2015 to identify knowledge gaps that need to be filled before human boots on Mars will be safe for potential Martian life and for humans themselves. The gaps include:
Monitoring microbes
How do microbes respond to spaceflight and relocation, and do genetic changes occur in the organisms that could be passed to future generations?
What microbes should be monitored and how should a Mars crew do so?
How can a crew prevent contamination?
How can a microbial infection on Mars be diagnosed and treated?
When should an astronaut be quarantined or not allowed to return to Earth?
Controlling contamination
Do longer stays on Mars (500 days versus 30 days) mean more contamination, and do they require different planetary protection requirements than shorter stays?
Do astronauts need protocols for verifying what microbes have escaped the spacecraft?
What decontamination procedures are needed for inside and outside the spacecraft?
What quarantine facilities are needed? How will scientists recognize special regions if they exist?
What research is needed to plan and design resource extraction systems?
What type of wastes can be intentionally left behind on Mars?
What factors need to be considered to design extravehicular activity suits?
Natural transport of contamination
How well can microbes survive, grow and evolve in Mars environments?
What happens to windblown dust on Mars?
Could dust storms carry microbes from a lifeless region to a special region?
Considering many pathways, how likely are humans to transport hardy Earth microbes to Mars?
What will leak or vent out of pressurized containers or human facilities?
How will scientists study microorganisms that can’t be cultivated using current techniques?
How far will microbes travel from human landing and habitation sites?
What is the risk of humans contaminating subsurface resources, such as underground ice?
Stick the landing
The steps required for any future Mars mission will depend on the landing spot. COSPAR currently says that robotic missions are allowed to visit “special regions” on Mars, defined as places where terrestrial organisms are likely to replicate, only if robots are cleaned before launch to 0.03 bacterial spores per square meter of spacecraft. In contrast, a robot going to a nonspecial region is allowed to bring 300 spores per square meter. These “spores,” or endospores, are dormant bacterial cells that can survive environmental stresses that would normally kill the organism.
To date, any special regions are hypothetical, because none have been conclusively identified on Mars. But if a spacecraft finds that its location unexpectedly meets the special criteria, its mission might have to change on the spot.
The Viking landers, which in 1976 brought the first and only experiments to look for living creatures on Mars, were baked in an oven for hours before launch to clean the craft to special region standards.
“If you’re as clean as Viking, you can go anywhere on Mars,” says NASA planetary protection officer Catharine Conley. But no mission since, from the Pathfinder mission in the 1990s to the current Curiosity rover to the upcoming Mars 2020 and ExoMars rovers, has been cleared to access potentially special regions. That’s partly because of cost. A 2006 study by engineer Sarah Gavit of the Jet Propulsion Lab found that sterilizing a rover like Spirit or Opportunity (both launched in 2003) to Viking levels would cost up to 14 percent more than sterilizing it to a lower level. NASA has also backed away from looking for life after Viking’s search for Martian microbes came back inconclusive. The agency shifted focus to seeking signs of past habitability.
Although no place on Mars currently meets the special region criteria, some areas have conditions close enough to be treated with caution. In 2015, geologist Colin Dundas of the U.S. Geological Survey in Flagstaff, Ariz., and colleagues discovered what looked like streaks of salty water that appeared and disappeared in Gale Crater, where Curiosity is roving. Although those streaks were not declared special regions, the Curiosity team steered the rover clear of the area.
The Mars rover Curiosity was assembled and tested in a clean room before its 2011 launch, in part to limit the hitchhikers it carried from Earth.
JPL-CALTECH/NASA
But evidence of flowing water on Mars bit the dust. In November, Dundas and colleagues reported in Nature Geoscience that the streaks are more likely to be tiny avalanches of sand. The reversal highlights how difficult it is to tell if a region on Mars is special or not.
However, on January 12 in Science, Dundas and colleagues reported finding eight slopes where layers of water ice were exposed at shallow depths (SN Online: 1/11/18). Those very steep spots would not be good landing sites for humans or rovers, but they suggest that nearby regions might have accessible ice within a meter or two of the surface.
If warm and wet conditions exist, that’s exactly where humans would want to go. Golombek has helped choose every Mars landing site since Pathfinder and has advised SpaceX on where to land its Red Dragon spacecraft, originally planned to bring the first crewed SpaceX mission to Mars. (Since then, SpaceX has announced it will use its BFR spacecraft instead, which might require shifts in landing sites.) The best landing sites for humans have access to water and are as close to the equator as possible, Golombek says. Low latitudes mean warmth, more solar power and a chance to use the planet’s rotation to help launch a rocket back to Earth.
That narrows the options. NASA’s first workshop on human landing sites, held in Houston in October 2015, identified more than 40 “exploration zones” within 50 degrees latitude of the equator, where astronauts could do science and potentially access raw materials for building and life support, including water.
Golombek helped SpaceX whittle its list to a handful of sites, including Arcadia Planitia and Deuteronilus Mensae, which show signs of having pure water ice buried beneath a thin layer of soil.
What makes these regions appealing for humans also makes them more likely to be good places for microbes to grow, putting a crimp in hopes for boots on the ground. But there are ways around the apparent barriers, Conley says. In particular, humans could land a safe distance from special regions and send clean robots to do the dirty work.
That suggestion raises a big question: How far is far enough? To figure out a safe distance, scientists need to know how well Earth microbes would survive on Mars in the first place, and how far those organisms would spread from a human habitat.
Where to?
The most desirable places on Mars for human visits offer access to water in some form and are near the equator (for increased solar power and to get a boost when launching a return rocket). Rovers and landers have found evidence of a watery Martian past. Planners of future robotic and human missions have potential landing spots in mind. Map excludes polar regions.
Hover over or tap the map points to explore.
E. OTWELL; T. TIBBITTS; M. GOLOMBEK; USGS ASTROGEOLOGY SCIENCE CENTER, GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER/NASA
A no-grow zone
Initial results suggest that Mars does a good job of sterilizing itself. “I’ve been trying to grow Earth bacteria in Mars conditions for 15 years, and it’s actually really hard to do,” says astrobiologist Andrew Schuerger of the University of Florida in Gainesville. “I think that risk is much lower than the scientific community might think.”
In 2013 in Astrobiology, Schuerger and colleagues published a list of more than a dozen factors that microbes on Mars would have to overcome, including a lot of ultraviolet radiation from the sun; extreme dryness, low pressure and freezing temperatures; and high levels of salts, oxidants and heavy metals in Martian soils.
Life challenges
Astrobiologist Andrew Schuerger of the University of Florida and colleagues identified the challenges microbes would have to overcome to thrive on Mars:
Ultraviolet radiation from the sun, which damages DNA
Extreme dryness
Low pressure, about 0.1 percent the ambient pressure on Earth
An atmosphere that is high in carbon dioxide and low in oxygen
Extremely low temperatures, with a global average of -61° Celsius
Charged particles from the sun
Cell-damaging, high-energy particles from interstellar space, which reach the surface because Mars lacks a strong magnetic field
Ultraviolet light from static electricity discharge from blowing Martian dust
Volatile oxidants in the atmosphere created by UV light from the sun
Oxidizing soils across the planet
Extremely high salt levels at some sites
High concentrations of heavy metals in the soils
Acidic conditions
Perchlorates in the soils, which are toxic
Source: A. C. Schuerger et al/Astrobiology 2013
Schuerger has tried to grow hundreds of species of bacteria and fungi in the cold, low-pressure and low-oxygen conditions found on Mars. Some species came from natural soils in the dry Arctic and other desert environments, and others were recovered from clean rooms where spacecraft were assembled.
Of all those attempts, he has had success with 31 bacteria and no fungi. Seeing how difficult it is to coax these hardy microbes to thrive gives him confidence to say: “The surface conditions on Mars are so harsh that it’s very unlikely that terrestrial bacteria and fungi will be able to establish a niche.”
There’s one factor Schuerger does worry about, though: salts, which can lower the freezing temperature of water. In a 2017 paper in Icarus, Schuerger and colleagues tested the survival of Bacillus subtilis, a well-studied bacterium found in human gastrointestinal tracts, in simulated Martian soils with various levels of saltiness.
B. subtilis can form a tough spore when stressed, which could keep it safe in extreme environments. Schuerger showed that dormant B. subtilis spores were mostly unaffected for up to 28 days in six different soils. But another bacterium that does not form spores was killed off. That finding suggests that spore-forming microbes — including ones that humans carry with them — could survive in soils moistened by briny waters.
The Okarian’s trek across the Arctic offers a ray of hope: Spores might not make it very far from human habitats. At three stops during the journey across the Arctic, Pascal Lee, of the SETI Institute, collected samples from the pristine snow ahead and dirtier snow behind the vehicle, as well as from the rover’s interior. Later, Lee sent the samples to Schuerger’s lab.
The researchers asked, if humans drive over a microbe-free pristine environment, would they contaminate it? “The answer was no,” Schuerger says.
And that was in an Earth environment with only one or two of Schuerger’s biocidal factors (low temperatures and slightly higher UV radiation than elsewhere on Earth) and with a rover crawling with human-associated microbes. The Okarian hosted 69 distinct bacteria and 16 fungi, Schuerger and Lee reported in 2015 in Astrobiology.
But when crew members ventured outside the rover, they barely left a mark. The duo found one fungus and one bacterium on both the rover and two snow sites, one downwind and one ahead of the direction of travel. Other than that, nothing, even though crew members made no effort to contain their microbes — they breathed and ate openly.
“We didn’t see dispersal when conditions were much more conducive to dispersal” than they will be on Mars, Schuerger says.
Samples collected inside a mock Mars rover and grown in the lab were full of microbes from the rover’s crew (three dishes at left). But nothing grew in most samples from outside the rover (dish at right), suggesting microbes didn’t travel far from the vehicle.
A. SCHUERGER AND P. LEE/ASTROBIOLOGY 2015
The International Space Station may be an even better place to study what happens when inhabited space vessels leak microbes. Michelle Rucker, an engineer at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, and her colleagues are testing a tool for astronauts to swab the outside of their spacesuits and the space station, and collect whatever microbes are already there.
“At this point, no one has defined what the allowable levels of human contamination are,” Rucker says. “We don’t know if we’d meet them, but more importantly, we’ve never checked our human systems to see where we’re at.”
Rucker and colleagues have had astronauts test the swab kit as part of their training on Earth. The researchers plan to present the first results from those tests in March in Big Sky, Mont., at the IEEE Aerospace Conference. If the team gets the tool flight-certified to test it on the ISS, the results could fill a knowledge gap about how much spaceships carrying humans will leak and vent microbes.
A Russian experiment on the ISS may be giving the first clues. In November 2017, Russian cosmonauts told TASS news service that they had found living bacteria on the outside of the ISS. Some of those microbes, swabbed near vents during spacewalks, were not found on the spacecraft’s exterior when it launched.
Blowing in the wind
These results are important, says Conley, but they don’t give enough information alone to write quantitative contamination rules.
That’s partly because of another knowledge gap: how dust and wind move around on Mars. If Martian dust storms carry microbes far enough, the invaders could contaminate potential special regions even if humans land a safe distance away.
To find out, COSPAR’s Kminek suggests sending a fleet of Mars landers to act as meteorological stations at several fixed locations. The landers could measure atmospheric conditions and dust properties over a long time. Such landers would be relatively inexpensive to build, he says, and could launch in advance of humans.
But these weather stations would have to get in line. There’s a launch window between Earth and Mars every two years, and the next few are already booked. Weather stations would have to be stationary, so they couldn’t be added to rover missions like ExoMars or Mars 2020.
That means it’s possible that SpaceX or another company will try to send humans to Mars before the reconnaissance missions necessary to write rules for planetary protection are even built. If COSPAR is the tortoise in this race, SpaceX is the hare, along with a few other private companies. Only SpaceX has a stated timeline. Other contenders, including Washington-based Blue Origin, founded by Amazon executive Jeff Bezos, and United Launch Alliance, based in Colorado, are developing rockets that some analysts say could be part of a mission to the moon or Mars.
SpaceX hopes to build human habitats on Mars (illustrated here along with SpaceX’s latest BFR spaceship). Scientists are just starting to figure out how to keep microbes from leaving such habitats and potentially harming native life.
SPACEX
Now or never
Those looming launches prompted Fairén and colleagues to make a controversial proposal. In an article in the October 2017 Astrobiology, provocatively titled “Searching for life on Mars before it is too late,” the team suggested sending existing or planned rovers, even those not at the height of cleanliness, to look directly for signs of Martian life.
Given the harsh Martian conditions, rovers are unlikely to contaminate regions that might turn out to be special on a closer look, the group argues. The invasive species argument is misleading, they say: Don’t compare a microbe transfer to taking Asian parrots to the Amazon rainforest, where they could thrive and edge out local parrots. It would be closer to taking them to Antarctica to freeze to death.
In a sharp rebuttal, published in the same issue of Astrobiology, Rummel and Conley disagreed. “Why would you want to go there with a dirty spacecraft?” says Rummel, who was NASA’s planetary protection officer before Conley. “To spend a billion dollars to go find life from Florida on Mars is both irresponsible and completely scientifically indefensible.”
There’s also concern for the health and safety of future astronauts. Conley says she mentioned the idea that scientists shouldn’t worry about getting sick if they encounter Earth organisms on Mars to a November meeting of epidemiologists who study the risks of Earth-based pandemics.
“The room burst out laughing,” she says. “This is a room full of medical doctors who deal with Ebola. The idea that we know about Earth organisms, and therefore they can’t hurt us, was literally laughable to them.”
Fairén has already drafted a response for a future issue of Astrobiology: “We acknowledge [that Rummel and Conley’s points] are informed and literate. Unfortunately, they are also unconvincing.”
The issue might come to a head in July in Pasadena, Calif., at the next meeting of COSPAR’s Scientific Assembly. Fairén and colleagues plan to push for more relaxed cleanliness rules.
That’s not likely to happen anytime soon. But with no concrete rules in place for humans, would a human mission even be allowed off the ground, whether NASA or SpaceX was at the helm? Currently, private U.S. companies must apply to the Federal Aviation Administration for a launch license, and for travel to another planet, that agency would probably ask NASA to weigh in.
It’s hard to know if anyone will actually be ready to send humans to Mars in the next decade. “You’d have to actually believe them to be scared,” says Rummel. “There are many unanswered questions about what Elon Musk wants to do. But I think we can calm down about people showing up on Mars unannounced.”
But SpaceX has defied expectations before and may give slow and steady a kick in the pants.
This article appears in the January 20, 2017 issue of Science News with the headline, "Mucking up Mars: Microbes from Earth may complicate human junkets to the Red Planet ."
Editor’s note: This story was updated on January 11 to include recent findings about water ice from Colin Dundas and his team.
Humans are naturally inclined to think towards the future. We find ourselves wondering about the next steps in our lives, imaging the potential consequences of advances today, even fictionalizing them to their most extreme forms as a sort of sandbox for possible futures.
Scientists might be one of the few groups to actively suppress that desire to predict the future. Conservative and data-driven by nature, they might be uncomfortable making guesses about the future because that requires a leap of faith. Even if there’s a lot of data to support a prediction, there are also infinite variables that can change the ultimate outcome in the interim. Trying to predict what the world will be like in a century doesn’t do much to improve it today; if scientists are going to be wrong, they’d rather do it constructively.
Indeed, the world has changed a lot in the past 100 years. In 1918, much of the world was embroiled in the first World War. 1918 was also the year the influenza pandemic began to rage, ultimately claiming somewhere between 20-40 million lives — more than the war during which it took place. Congress established time zones, including Daylight Saving Time, and the first stamp for U.S. airmail was issued.
Looking back, it’s clear that we’ve made remarkable strides. Today, it’s rare to die from the flu, or from a slew of other communicable diseases that were once fatal (such as smallpox, which was eradicated in 1977). That’s mostly due to the advent of prevention tactics such as vaccines, and treatments like antibiotics.
The pace at which technology is evolving can feel dizzying at times, but it’s not likely to slow down anytime soon. Here are some of the ways we suspect the technology of today will shape the world in the century to come.
Quantum Computing Will Come Of Age
As the internet transformed society over the past few decades, quantum computing will forever alter our view of the world and our place in it. It will give us the capacity to process more data about ourselves, the planet we live on, and the universe than has ever before been possible.
No one is totally sure yet what we’ll do with that data. We’ll likely find some answers to longstanding questions about physics and the universe, but it’s also likely there are answers to be found that we don’t even have the ability to fathom.
We’ll Hack Our Brains
We may not even have to wait a century to have our brains fully integrated with our devices, as research into brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) is now firmly out of the realm of science fiction. Early prototypes have already helped patients recover from strokes and given amputees the ability to experience touch again with the help of a sensor-covered prosthesis. If and when they become commonplace, the human-machine mashup could irrevocably alter the course of human evolution. Prototypes for non-invasive BCIs in which electrode arrays pick up brain signals through the skull are already in development, and may serve as stepping stones toward the full-on “brain mesh” proposed by Elon Musk.
We’ll Zoom Around Our Revamped Cities in Autonomous Cars
The world of 2118 will have improved infrastructure and better ways of getting around. Our automobiles are becoming smarter and greener; by 2118, there’s a good chance that electric cars will be able to drive themselves, along with those most in need. The current consensus in the automotive industry is that fully autonomous vehicles are still theoretical at best (and may not be possible at all), but Tesla alone aims to achieve so-called level 5 autonomy — a world in which our cars would drive us — by about 2019.
In some parts of the world, cities themselves are also becoming more sophisticated. In China, a solar-powered highway could one day charge electric cars as they drive. Cities of the future could also fix themselves — engineers today are busy designing self-healing concrete structures and potholes that fill themselves.
AI Will Change How Humans Work
In the decades to come, technology that’s changing our homes, our devices, and our vehicles is also going to change our lives in other major ways. Artificial intelligence (AI) will almost certainly automate some jobs, particularly those that rely on assembly lines or data collection. To offset the unemployment of human workers that would result from automation, some nations may adopt a universal basic income (UBI), a system which regularly pays citizens a small stipend with no requirement to work.
In some fields, such as medicine, robots probably won’t completely replace humans. The more likely scenario, some experts predict, is that AI will continue to augment the work experience for humans — even augmenting us physically. AI technology has already been paired with wearable exoskeletons, giving factory workers superhuman strength — perfect for those whose jobs require heavy lifting, which could increase their risk of job-related accident or injury.
3D Printing the World
3D printers are already being used in labs around the world and, increasingly, by consumers. While the printers may be costly up front, they are often seen as a long-term investment, since they can often print their own replacement parts.
As 3D printers become capable of printing everything from viable organsto buildings, we’ll likely find use for them in different aspects of our lives, as well as many different fields of industry.
Medicine Gets a High-Tech Upgrade
New procedures, aided by technological advances, are poised to transform medicine. Using a precision medicine approach (which uses a patient’s genetic data, lifestyle, and environmental surroundings to inform treatment), scientists are developing treatments for cancer that are tailored to an individual patient’s genes.
Oncology is not the only area with potentially life-saving (or in some cases, life-giving) applications; the evolution of reproductive medicine has already begun right before our very eyes. In 2017, researchers grew lamb fetuses in what could be the first prototype of an artificial womb, one woman gave birth after a uterus transplant for the first time, and another to a baby that began as an embryo frozen 24 years ago. The much-hyped gene editing technology CRISPR could mean that by 2118, many genetic diseases could become a thing of the past: scientists used CRISPR to edit the gene for a fatal blood disorder out of human embryos. Stem cells continue to prove useful for developing novel treatments, even for conditions that were once believed to be untreatable.
A century from now, major diseases such as cancer, immune and inflammatory disorders, and genetic conditions “will very likely be long gone by either prevention or effective therapy,” Phil Gold, a professor at the McGill University Clinical Research Centre, told Futurism.
But that’s not to say we’ll live in a future of perfect health — external factors, from global warming to infectious diseases and even warfare, could depress the life expectancy of people in 2118.
The good news is, diagnostic technology is also dramatically improving. Shu Chien, bioengineer and winner of National Medal of Science at the University of California, San Diego, told the San Diego Tribune that he predicted that scientists would invent Star Trek‘s famous medical tricorder, capable of “non-invasive early detection of cancer,” in the next century. He’s not the first to make the prediction over the last few decades, but this time could be different: Science and technology have delivered on some other sci-fi tech, such as super-materials and object replicators.
The Planet Will Get a Lot Hotter
Climate change is already transforming our world. One 2015 study predicted that Greenland’s usually cold summers could become completely ice-free by 2050. Extreme weather events are becoming more frequent and fatal. The world’s sea levels are on track to rise 2 to 3 feet (0.6 to 0.9 meters) by 2100, which could displace up to 4 million people worldwide.
Earth is in the midst of a climate crisis that will not improve without deliberate and sustained action.
Over the past few decades, that progress has been slow. When it was developed in 2015, the Paris Climate Agreement aimed to limit global warming to 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit (1.5 degrees Celsius). Recent research from the University College of London revealed that we could have a 66 percent chance of hitting the 1.5-degree C target in 2100 — but we’d need to limit our carbon pollution to 240 billion tons to pull it off. Hopefully we will be able to quit our carbon habit over a longer period of time instead of making drastic cuts immediately, which would not be an easy feat to achieve in either the technical or political sense.
In the U.S., one of the biggest carbon contributors in the world, some fear we’re not doing our part. In June, President Trump withdrew the United States from the Paris Climate Agreement. In an interview with Futurism last year, Al Gore said the Trump administration’s environmental policies are “reckless and indefensible.”
But he is not devoid of hope. Gore told Futurism that he believes in the strength of the grassroots movement toward a more sustainable future, and that “we can and will win” the fight if we stay committed to the cause.
If humanity wants to remain on Earth, it’s a cause worth fighting for. We are beyond the point of preventing it from happening, but we can take steps to slow it down.
Humans Will Explore Our Solar System and Beyond
Although we’ve made monumental progress since 1918, we are still endlessly fascinated (and vaguely terrified) by the prospect of what might exist in space. Over the next century, perhaps nothing will thrill, challenge, and transform humanity more than the advances we make in space exploration.
Big-idea people, from Elon Musk to Donald Trump, are loudly planning to send humans to Mars and beyond, potentially setting up colonies on the Red Planet in the next century. One hundred years is not a long time to prepare for such a move, however, especially when we’re still not that sure what our living situation would be on Mars. While terraforming may allow us to adapt the planet to better suit our needs, we still have to get there first.
First, we’ll catch a better glimpse of distant celestial bodies through increasingly powerful infrared telescopes here on Earth. As space travel becomes more affordable (and even a tourist destination), we’ll be able to use what we see from down here on Earth to traverse the universe. The biggest question is, what — or who — might we meet when we do?
“By the year 2118, extraterrestrial life won’t be news but historical fact,” Jaymie Matthews, astrophysicist and professor at the University of British Columbia, told Futurism. “What’s harder to predict is how humanity will respond, and adapt, to knowing we are not alone in the Universe. Will it make us humbler? (“We are one of many.”) More arrogant? (“We are the peak of evolution in the Galaxy.”) More fearful? (“Microbes are just the tip of the alien iceberg. And Earth is the Titanic!”) Or will it help us to better understand and appreciate our own origins?”
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- Gemiddelde waardering: 0/5 - (0 Stemmen) Categorie:SF-snufjes }, Robotics and A.I. Artificiel Intelligence ( E, F en NL )
Supercomputer provides black hole breakthrough
Supercomputer provides black hole breakthrough
Scientists have gained insights into the most mysterious phenomena in modern astronomy, the relativistic jets from black holes.
Video:Black hole 'relativistic jets' seen wobbling
Using supercomputer simulations, astronomers have discovered more about how black holes interact with space-time.
Black holes are regions of space-time whose gravitational effects are so strong that even electromagnetic radiation such as light cannot escape from inside of them.
As such they are incredibly difficult to study, although a collaboration between researchers from Northwestern University and the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands has managed just that.
They were examining the "relativistic jets" from black holes, the material that actually does manage to escape from them - one of the most mysterious phenomena in modern astronomy.
As explained by Northwestern University: "Similar to how water in a bathtub forms a whirlpool as it goes down a drain, the gas and magnetic fields that feed a supermassive black hole swirl to form a rotating disk - a tangled spaghetti of magnetic field lines mixed into a broth of hot gas.
"As the black hole consumes this astrophysical soup, it gobbles up the broth but leaves the magnetic spaghetti dangling out of its mouth. This makes the black hole into a kind of launching pad from which energy, in the form of relativistic jets, shoots from the web of twisted magnetic spaghetti."
The scientists ran complicated simulations on one of the world's most powerful supercomputers and discovered that these relativistic jets actually changed direction as a result of space-time itself being dragged into the rotation of the black hole.
"Understanding how rotating black holes drag the space-time around them and how this process affects what we see through the telescopes remains a crucial, difficult-to-crack puzzle," according to one of the researchers.
Alexander Tchekhovskoy, assistant professor of physics and astronomy at Northwestern's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, said: "Fortunately, the breakthroughs in code development and leaps in supercomputer architecture are bringing us ever closer to finding the answers."
The researchers discovered that where previously simulations considered the disks and the axis of the black hole's rotation were aligned, in reality they are unlikely to be parallel.
The study confirmed that these tilted disks, which are likely to include the disk of the black hole at the centre of our own galaxy the Milky Way, change direction, much like a spinning top, causing the direction of the relativistic jets to change too.
"The high resolution allowed us, for the first time, to ensure that small-scale turbulent disk motions are accurately captured in our models," Mr Tchekhovskoy said.
To the researcher's surprise the motions turned out to be so strong that they caused the disk to fatten up and the direction changing to stop.
The results of their research are now being applied to interpreting the observations of the Event Horizon Telescope examining the black hole at the centre of the Milky Way.
A repeating fast radio burst 3 billion light-years from Earth may be coming from a neutron star
The strong magnetic field around it could be the result of a black hole or powerful nebula
(CNN) The only known repeating fast radio burst in the universe just got more extreme.
These radio flashes usually last a millisecond and have an unknown physical origin. People love to believe that they're from an advanced extraterrestrial civilization, and this hypothesis hasn't been ruled out entirely by researchers at Breakthrough Listen, a scientific research program dedicated to finding evidence of intelligent life in the universe.
Fast radio bursts in space themselves are not rare, but FRB 121102 -- first detected in 2012 -- is the only one that has been known to repeat. And the repetition is sporadic.
Last year, its host galaxy, a star-forming dwarf galaxy 3 billion light-years from Earth, was also identified.
Now, researchers have used the newest detections to learn more about the extreme environment for the source of this mysterious burst. The details were revealed in a study published in the journal Nature as well as at this week's 231st meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Washington.
The radio burst itself releases a "monstrous" amount of energy in each millisecond, comparable to what our sun releases in an entire day, the researchers said.
The newest detections allowed researchers to discover that the radio bursts themselves are polarized and coming from an environment that contains an incredibly strong magnetic field. They were also able to detect the radio bursts at a higher frequency than ever.
Data from the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico helped with new research about fast radio bursts.
When the radio waves pass through the magnetic field, they are twisted in a way known as Faraday rotation. The stronger the magnetic field, the greater the twist. The degree of twist for the latest detections of FRB is among the largest ever measured in a radio source.
"FRB 121102 was already unique because it repeats; now, the huge Faraday rotation we have observed singles it out yet again. We're curious as to whether these two unique aspects are linked," said Daniele Michilli, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Amsterdam and ASTRON, the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy.
The causes of such a strong magnetic field provide two intriguing possibilities: proximity to a massive black hole in the galaxy or within a powerful nebula.
These hypotheses both support some factors of the radio bursts but also raise questions.
Jason Hessels, study author and associate professor at the University of Amsterdam and ASTRON, described the possibilities.
If it's near a massive black hole, that would explain the persistent radio source and create the right kind of environment, but the researchers aren't entirely confident that such a massive black hole would exist in a dwarf galaxy.
If it's within a powerful nebula, an interstellar cloud of gas or dust, it would also explain the persistent radio source and remain consistent with the fact that astronomers believe the source of the bursts is "young." But it's a million times brighter than the Crab nebula in our own galaxy, which is already massively bright. How could the nebula be that bright?
As for the direct source itself, the latest findings support the idea that it's a neutron star or a pulsar, a highly magnetized and rotating neutron star.
The fact that the source throws out short bursts, ranging from 30 microseconds to 9 milliseconds, supports a source that is just over 6 miles across. That's the right size for a neutron star.
A 3-D-printed version of the variation in fast radio bursts.
Or it could be something undiscovered.
"We can not rule out completely the ET hypothesis for the FRBs in general," said University of California, Berkeley, postdoctoral fellow Vishal Gajjar of Breakthrough Listen and the Berkeley SETI Research Center.
The researchers are eager to use a number of observatories with new radio telescopes coming online to observe more fast radio bursts. They estimate that there are 10,000 fast radio bursts happening per day in each area of the sky that telescopes around the world are able to monitor. That's a radio flash every 10 seconds, and radio telescopes will be able to find them.
They hope to learn whether the bursts have their own periodicity, or intervals at which they recur, as well as discovering the true nature of the persistent radio source.
"We are continuing to monitor how the properties of the bursts change with time," Hessels said. "With these observations, we hope to distinguish between the two competing hypotheses of a neutron star either near a black hole or embedded in a powerful nebula."
Is this the US Air Force's secret 4,600mph spy plane? Mystery 'hypersonic aircraft' is captured in Google Earth images of a Florida airbase, claims conspiracy theorist
Is this the US Air Force's secret 4,600mph spy plane? Mystery 'hypersonic aircraft' is captured in Google Earth images of a Florida airbase, claims conspiracy theorist
US Air Force is believed to be developing a spy plane that travels at 4,600mph
Secretive hypersonic plane is being developed by defence firm Lockheed Martin
Google Earth images show an object that looks similar to the artist's impression
Pictures were taken by UFO conspiracy theorists from SectureTeam10
Many have dismissed the latest footage, saying it just shows a high speed boat
The US Air Force is understood to be developing a spy plane that travels at more than 4,600mph (7,400km/h).
Now, a conspiracy theorist claims he has spotted an image of the mystery craft on Google Earth's view of Florida.
The satellite image appears to show an object similar to the artist's impression of the secretive hypersonic plane being developed by defence firm Lockheed Martin.
It comes a day after Lockheed Martin's secretive Skunk Works unit said it had already finished making the radical hypersonic update of the long-retired Mach 3 SR-71 Blackbird spy plane.
Images from Google Earth show an object that looks similar to the artist's impression of the secretive hypersonic plane being developed by defence firm Lockheed Martin
SECURETEAM 10 CONTROVERSY
SectureTeam10 is one of the most viewed YouTube channels, with over 785,000 people subscribing to its conspiracy videos.
But the channel has come under fire, as Lions Ground, a rival channel, claims that it has been intentionally fooling its viewers.
According to Lions Ground, SecureTeam10 has been raking in an estimated £600 ($745) a day by posting fake videos that 'outsmart UFO believers.'
Lots of people were sceptical of their latest claims, with many saying the footage showed a high speed boat.
The Google satellite images were compiled in a video by Tyler Glockner, known for uploading images of UFO sightings to his YouTube channel Secureteam10.
Whoever created the craft has a 'main foothold in designing aircraft engines that are widely used in civilian and military aviation', Mr Glockner claimed.
'What you're seeing is a very secretive object... I haven't been able to work out what it is', he said.
More than 400,000 people viewed the video which shows a series of screen shots from Google Earth.
'It is no public aircraft that has been disclosed', Mr Glockner claimed.
'You can see that this thing looks like a hypersonic aircraft or spacecraft'.
The shape is similar to the SR-72 hypersonic plane - which is set to be a strike and reconnaissance aircraft that tops Mach 6, writes Daily Star.
The strange footage was captured by Tyler Glockner, known for uploading images of UFO sightings to his YouTube channel secureteam10
US Air Force is understood to be developing a spy plane that travels at speeds of 4,600mph (7,400kmh) (artist's impression) and new footage could give a glimpse of the new craft
The shape is similar to the SR-72 hypersonic plane (pictured) - which is set to be a strike and reconnaissance aircraft that tops Mach 6
THE SR-72 HYPERSONIC PLANE
The US Air Force is understood to be developing a spy plane that travels at speeds of over 4,600mph (7,400kmh) and new footage could give a glimpse of the new craft.
The shape is similar to the SR-72 hypersonic plane - which is set to be a strike and reconnaissance aircraft that tops Mach 6.
The defence firm Lockheed Martin firm has been working on the project since the early 2000s.
Earlier this week reports suggested the radical hypersonic update of the long-retired Mach 3 SR-71 Blackbird spy plane might have already been finished.
However, lots of people were sceptical of the claims, which many saying the footage showed a high speed boat.
The defence firm Lockheed Martin firm has been working on the project since the early 2000s.
However, many people were skeptical of the claims, with many saying the footage showed a high speed boat.
'It honestly looks like one of those racing jet boats', wrote YouTube user 'Kody Read'.
'It looks like a powerboat I live next to the ocean seen this shape before and it is next to swamp land and water', wrote another user 'Jamie Lynn'.
One user, called 'Leo Pokat' said it was a 'UPO - unimaginable parked object'.
Earlier this week reports suggested the radical hypersonic update of the long-retired Mach 3 SR-71 Blackbird spy plane might have already been finished.
Jack O'Banion, Vice President of Strategy and Customer Requirements, Advanced Development Programs for Lockheed Martin, let slip at a conference the unmanned aircraft has already been made.
More than 400,000 people viewed the video which shows a series of screen shots from Google Earth of the strange object
SectureTeam10 is one of the most viewed YouTube channels, with over 785,000 people subscribing to its conspiracy videos. Pictured is their latest Google Earth footage
The footage was taken from Palm Beach County Florida. Lots of people were sceptical of the claims, which many saying the footage showed a high speed boat
Speaking at the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics SciTech Forum, he showed a slide of a digital mockup of the craft, and said 'Without the digital transformation, the aircraft you see there could not have been made.'
Mr O'Banion also said the aircraft will have a 'digital twin' that knows every part on the aircraft.
'Talking about speed, you're talking about hypersonics, aircraft that operate above Mach 5,' he said.
Most people say that history began 10,000 years ago, when humans began writing things down. If Ancient Aliens is to be believed, we were all grunting, stupid apes prior to that. The former is a reasonable guess. The latter is little more than snake oil meant to sell books and advertising on the History Channel.
But historian Yuval Noah Harari suggests history actually began 70,000 years ago, when an unremarkable primate we now call Homo sapiensunderwent what he terms “the cognitive revolution.” To Harari, this explains why other humans – Neanderthals, Dinosevians, and so on – no longer walk among us. Something changed in the brains of the sole remaining human species that allowed it to leap frog its way up the food chain and spread out across the world.
The change was the ability to create fiction. Mythmaking. And while many profess that they have no need of religion, Harari suggests this is self delusion. To illustrate, he explains that the car company Peugeot does not really exist. Nor does the United States, human rights, or much anything else we take for granted. Peugeot (or you can take GM, Tesla, Toyota. In fact, any large or small corporation will do.) is not its employees. If the employees all quit tomorrow, Peugeot could simply replace them with new workers or robots. The company is not its cars. If every Peugeot car in existence were scrapped in a day, Peugeot would simply build new cars. Peugeot is not its management. If Peugeot’s management all resigned or were killed or sent to prison, stockholders and employees would simply hire new management. In fact, the only way for Peugeot to cease to exist is if either the stockholders and management dissolve the company or the courts, for whatever reason, order it to disband. Peugeot is a collective fiction designed to facilitate the building of cars. Neanderthals could not do that. Humans can. They do it with everything from corporations to religion to nation states to concepts like rights and property, and especially money. None of these things exist in reality, and yet they do. Because we all agree that they do.
This, Harari posits, is what makes Homo sapiens special. He divides the history of the species into three revolutions: The first is the cognitive, in which humans learned to gossip, trade, tell stories, and create ideas that made bands of hunter-gatherers something more than a collection of hominids roving in highly intelligent packs. The second is the agricultural revolution, in which humans found it more efficient to pen in animals and grow crops in fields. This gave rise to empires, money, writing, and cities. The last is the scientific revolution, and it explains why a backwater continent like Europe was suddenly able to conquer the world. Modern commerce, complex technology, and the computer age arose from this.
Harari says that one should not consider one age better than the other. For instance, hunter-gatherers actually worked fewer hours to survive than most modern humans. And because the only animals they lived with domestically were dogs, they were less prone to disease than we would be later. But we also were not an apex predator quite yet. The agricultural revolution found humans more self-sufficient and safer from predators. And one need only watch an episode of Game of Thrones to see how irrelevant the average empire was to the life of a peasant, who could grow his own food. But it also made us dependent on limited food sources and put is in close proximity with livestock that could transmit diseases that, before and since, were not much of an issue for us. And the scientific revolution, while ultimately reducing violence (you’re more likely to commit suicide or get hit by a car than die in a war or be murdered today), disease, and starvation, also has wrecked the environment. And humans, despite their adaptability, have a tendency to drive large mammals to extinction. We haven’t been killing off every animal on the planet, but hunter-gatherers wiped out the mastodon and giant sloth, and right now, the only animals that seem to be thriving are microbes, domestic pets, and livestock and poultry. Harari’s conclusion is that humans’ ability to think and adapt is amazing, but it also has caused changes in our species that evolution cannot keep up with. We’ve not had time to get our DNA out of the African savanna, and that has consequences, both good and bad.
New research raises an intriguing possibility — that of an alien ocean world seeding life throughout space.
One of the meteorites’ tiny crystals bearing organic compounds. Image credits Queenie Chan / The Open University.
In 1998, a group of friends had to cut their basketball game short for a somewhat unexpected reason — a meteorite decided to crash just yards away from the hoop.
Seeds of life
But that seems to have been fortune’s plan all along, as the rock seems to be a harbinger of life rather than death. Initial analysis of the chunk of meteorite, along with another that fell in Morocco the same year, revealed traces of liquid water and other organic components that underpin life. Now, an in-depth chemical analysis points to an ancient ocean world as the likely cradle of these organic compounds. It’s possible that such material could seed life on planets they land on, including the early Earth.
Initial analysis revealed that the main elements inside the meteorites include liquid water and amino acids. Taken together, that’s not really news — we’ve found such compounds in meteorites and in space before. They might not be as rare as we tend to believe. However, we’d never seen them together in a single alien sample before these two bits of space rock were first analyzed.
That made the meteorites really special, so they were preserved at NASA’s Johnson Space Center. Keen to find out more, an international team of researchers has recently sampled the organic compounds locked away in these meteorites’ 2-mm long salt crystals using an X-ray beamline and microscope, as well as other chemical experiments.
Along with traces of liquid water, they report finding organogenic elements like carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen, along with more complex organic compounds such as hydrocarbons and amino acids. In other words, we’ve found the fundamental building blocks of life as we know it right next to water — in a space rock.
“This is really the first time we have found abundant organic matter also associated with liquid water that is really crucial to the origin of life and the origin of complex organic compounds in space,” says study lead author Queenie Chan.
“We’re looking at the organic ingredients that can lead to the origin of life.”
After discovering this exciting chemical cocktail, the next step was to see where the meteorites came from, and where they inherited their organic matter. Their complex chemistry (in comparison to other meteorites) makes it unlikely that they’re simply left-over bits from the creation of the Solar System. Instead, the team narrowed their search to an ancient ocean world — similar to today’s Enceladus or Ceres. Water and ice plumes (which are relatively commonly-seen on such bodies) shooting out into space could have doused the meteorites, locking the planet’s organic compounds in the salt crystals.
According to co-author Yoko Kebukawa, the organic matter seen in these samples is “somewhat similar” to what we’ve previously found in primitive meteorites. The results of the analysis support the idea that the “organic matter originated from a water-rich, or previously water-rich parent body”, she explains, adding that it’s “possibly Ceres“.
Encased in the salt crystals, such biomolecules could safely make it across the cosmos. Even microscopic life could survive on a space-cruise within a similar system, the team says. Once in space, all kinds of things could happen to help spread these seeds of life around — collisions between asteroids, for example, would push them along or shatter them into even more ‘seeds’. After making it to a planet, such rocks could jump-start life on the surface.
“Everything leads to the conclusion that the origin of life is really possible elsewhere,” Chan adds. “There is a great range of organic compounds within these meteorites, including a very primitive type of organics that likely represent the early solar system’s organic composition.”
Next, the team plans to look at other crystals embedded in the meteorites that haven’t yet been analyzed. Who knows what we may find? Maybe a tiny alien bacterium swimming around?
The paper “Organic matter in extraterrestrial water-bearing salt crystals” has been publishedin the journal Science.
WETENSCHAP & PLANEETEen Japanse astronaut is bezorgd omdat hij al 9 centimeter is gegroeid sinds hij drie weken geleden aankwam in het internationale ruimtestation ISS.
Norishige Kanai schreef op sociale media dat hij bang is dat hij niet meer in een Sojoezraket past als hij in juni terug naar aarde moet komen, meldt de BBC. Astronauten groeien gemiddeld 2 tot 5 centimeter als ze in de ruimte zijn. Dat komt doordat er geen zwaartekracht is die de rugwervels op elkaar drukt. “Ik groeide als een plant in slechts drie weken. Niet meer sinds de middelbare school”, schreef Kanai. Een Sojoezraket heeft plaats voor acht personen. Als astronauten te lang worden, kan dat een probleem opleveren.
De Amerikaan Scott Tingle, de Rus Anton Tsjkaplerov en de Japanner Norishige Kanai vormen het nieuwe gezelschap van drie ruimtevaarders die al in september zijn vertrokken naar het ISS: de Rus Aleksandr Missoerkin en de Amerikanen Mark Vande Hei en Joseph Acaba. Voor de 52-jarige Tingle en de 40-jarige Kanai is het een eerste missie. Hun 43-jarige Russische collega heeft in totaal al een jaar in de ruimte doorgebracht.
De drie nieuw aangekomen astronauten zullen naar verwachting ongeveer vier maanden wonen en werken in de spacemeccano. Ze zullen 51 wetenschappelijke experimenten uitvoeren, en maken druk aankomend en vertrekkend verkeer mee. Voor februari staat een ruimtewandeling ten behoeve van het Russisch segment op de agenda.
EPAAstronauten Anton Tsjkaplerov (C), Scott Tingle (R) en Norishige Kanai (L) voor hun vertrek naar het ISS.
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UFOs surprise Kiwi farmer
UFOs surprise Kiwi farmer
Dan Satherley
The three lights spent a couple of minutes zipping about.
Credits: UFO Today
A Kiwi farmer looking after a cow in labour has caught three UFOs on camera.
Popular YouTube account UFO Today uploaded the footage, saying it was sent in by a subscriber.
"She was watching out for a cow that was about to [give] birth when she suddenly saw this weird light outside over the field," the description reads.
"Her first thought was that these lights were part of a military operation, but after a minute or two realised she was witnessing something else. After the sighting the cow gave birth to 2 young calves.
"She [sent] us the footage and she hopes we can find out what it was she saw."
Viewers were impressed with the clarity of the video, even if they couldn't decide what the lights were.
"Continue watching the trajectory after the light blinks out," wrote TheyLive YouSleep.
"You'll see a BLACK shadowy residual form collect in the area and then disappear. If this isn't CGI...then this looks more like an interdimensional shift/being than a physical ship from space."
"None are moving fast - so why couldn't these be drones?" said Tod C Steele. "That's the problem anymore, too many knuckleheads out goofing around."
"Nothing more than stoned skydivers," suggested Paul Kremastiotis.
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Nieuw-Zeelandse boerin verrast door UFO’s. Wat zijn dit voor vreemde lichtbollen?
Nieuw-Zeelandse boerin verrast door UFO’s. Wat zijn dit voor vreemde lichtbollen?
Een boerin uit Nieuw-Zeeland heeft drie UFO’s vastgelegd op camera terwijl één van haar koeien aan het bevallen was.
De beelden zijn op internet gezet door YouTube-kanaal UFO Today. Volgens het kanaal is het materiaal ingezonden door een abonnee.
“Ze was bij een koe die op het punt stond te bevallen toen ze plotseling dit vreemde licht boven het weiland zag,” aldus de beschrijving onder de video.
Iets anders
“Ze dacht in eerste instantie dat de lichten onderdeel waren van een militaire operatie, maar na een minuut of twee besefte ze dat ze getuige was van iets anders. Na de waarneming gaf de koe geboorte aan twee kalfjes.”
“Ze heeft ons de beelden opgestuurd en hoopt dat we kunnen achterhalen wat ze heeft gezien.”
Mensen waren onder de indruk van de beelden, hoewel ze niet konden bepalen wat de mysterieuze lichten waren.
Niet bekend
“Als dit geen CGI is lijkt het meer op een interdimensionaal wezen dan een fysiek schip uit de ruimte,” reageerde TheyLive YouSleep.
“Ze bewegen niet snel, dus waarom zouden het geen drones kunnen zijn?” vroeg Tod C Steele.
Paul Kremastiotis dacht aan parachutespringers.
Het is niet bekend waar de lichten precies zijn waargenomen, meldt Newshub.
Deze bizarre ruimtesteen bevat iets wat nergens anders in ons zonnestelsel wordt gevonden
Deze bizarre ruimtesteen bevat iets wat nergens anders in ons zonnestelsel wordt gevonden
Een steen die in Egypte is gevonden, komt niet alleen niet van de aarde, maar bevat ook micromineralen die nergens anders op aarde, in andere meteorieten of waar dan ook in het zonnestelsel worden gevonden.
De ontdekking van de steen doet vragen rijzen over het ontstaan van het zonnestelsel.
De zogeheten Hypatia-steen werd in 2013 ontdekt in het zuidwesten van Egypte en vernoemd naar wetenschapper Hypatia van Alexandrië.
Helemaal uniek
Uit een analyse bleek dat de met diamant gevulde steen niet afkomstig was van een komeet of meteoriet en helemaal uniek was.
Onderzoekers van de Universiteit van Johannesburg hebben de steen opnieuw onderzocht en ontdekt dat de samenstelling van het materiaal anders is dan die van ander interplanetair materiaal dat op de aarde terechtgekomen is.
Ze stuitten daarnaast op mineralen die ouder lijken te zijn dan onze zon.
De steen moet onderdeel zijn geweest van een groter stuk rots dat een doorsnee heeft gehad van enkele meters.
Nog vreemder
Bijna alle meteorieten die op aarde vallen zijn chondrieten, die veel koolstof en veel silicium bevatten.
Hypatia bevat daartegen veel koolstof, maar zeer kleine hoeveelheden silicium.
“Nog vreemder is dat de matrix grote hoeveelheden zeer specifieke koolstofverbindingen bevat, die polyaromatische koolwaterstoffen worden genoemd,” zei hoofdonderzoeker Jan Kramers.
“Die maken onderdeel uit van interstellair stof, wat al bestond voordat ons zonnestelsel werd gevormd,” voegde hij toe.
Nóg vreemder
Andere ontdekkingen waren nóg vreemder. De onderzoekers troffen aluminium in zijn pure vorm aan, wat voor zover bekend zelden tot nooit voorkomt in het zonnestelsel.
Ze vonden bovendien een verbinding die grotendeels bestaat uit fosfor en nikkel, maar die geen ijzer bevat, een samenstelling die nog nooit eerder is gezien, niet op aarde en niet bij ander materiaal uit de ruimte.
A pebble found in a field of Libyan desert glass in southwest Egypt has proven to be quite a mystery, and may even shake up our very understanding of the history of our solar system. The pebble is known as the Hypatia Stone, named after 4th century Greek philosopher and mathematician Hypatia who is remembered as being one of the first notable female mathematicians. The pebble appears unremarkable on the surface, measuring just a few centimeters across and dark grey in color. What makes the pebble unique is its chemical composition, one that is unlike any other known substance on Earth or in space. Where did the Hypatia stone come from?
Fragments of the pebble.
Most planets and known meteorites contain silicate minerals and a small amount of carbon, but the Hypatia pebble has been found to have a nearly opposite composition of mostly carbon with very little silicon. Even stranger, the pebble contains a high amount of polyaromatic hydrocarbons, a major component of interstellar dust which existed before our own solar system formed. Georgy Belyanin, a geologist at the University of Johannesburg and one of the authors of the study of the hypatia stone, says this unique composition may date it to before the birth of our own Sun and place its origin outside of our own solar system:
In the grains within Hypatia the ratios of these three elements to each other are completely different from that calculated for the planet Earth or measured in known types of meteorites. As such these inclusions are unique within our solar system. We think the nickel-phosphorus-iron grains formed pre-solar, because they are inside the matrix, and are unlikely to have been modified by shock such as collision with the Earth’s atmosphere or surface, and also because their composition is so alien to our solar system.
If confirmed, that would make it the only own fragment from this period of the universe’s history. It’s still unknown from where the pebble originated, however. There is a chance it could have originated in a comet or meteorite from the far edges of our solar system, but since we haven’t been able study those objects, scientists are still unsure of their compositions. Furthermore, if it came from our solar system, it would challenge our entire understanding of how our solar system formed. Pretty impressive for a pebble.
On January 1, 2018, Matt Beland was working all day and finally he went on his break to smoke. Stared to take a picture of the moon he saw something was going on so he flipped the video on and started to record.
After viewing the video it looks like a bright UFO coming out or leaving the moon till it disappears.
According to Matt, who has filmed the object from an unknown location, he has seen the exact same thing several times before next to the moon.
A YouTube video titled “Alien Ship on the Lunar Surface” depicts a sizeable strange object on the lunar surface. UFO and alien researcher Streetcap1 claims he got pictures of the mysterious object from the Chinese Chang’e 3 lunar rover, which was launched in 2013.
Streetcap1 says that he does not know what else it could be and encourage the viewers to look at the detail. He claims that no colour or brightness adjustments have been made on the photos at all. He stresses that it is precisely how it looks on the Chinese Chang’e 3 photographs.
The video has received mix comments and got thousands of views.
Some say the photos are spectacular and that they are fantastic finds. Others suggest that alien ship or not, it is something that should not be ignored.
Others have accused the uploader as a hoaxer and that the footage is fake.
A day after the video was uploaded, he uploaded another footage revealing that suspicious viewers bombarded him. He claimed to have been getting a lot of hassle from non-believers and trolls on his last video.
He insisted that no point of uploading fake rubbish unless you’re in it for money. He explained he is in it for the Kudos, which he considered worth a lot more than money.
He added that he is proud of his work and it makes him angry when people accused his channel fake.
The declassification of the final three documents among a series of reports dating from the 1970s brings to an end a 10-year campaign for transparency by ufologists.
The Ministry of Defence (MoD) papers have been trickled out over a series of releases to the National Archives, with many delays along the way.
There are still complaints that they have been made deliberately hard to access, as they are not available online, and require a visit to the National Archives in London to pour through hard copies.
The papers include UFO witness accounts, photos and sketches of mystery objects, and MoD and official reports of sightings.
However, so far there does not appear to be the smoking gun evidence of alien life so-called truth seekers were hoping for.
Getty*Nick Pope
UFO DISCLOSURE: Nick Pope has welcomed the release of the last batch of British X-Files.
Coming so soon after the revelations about the Pentagon's UFO program, this will raise suspicion in the UFO community that there's been co-ordination between the US and UK government on this.
Nick Pope
Nick Pope, former UFO investigator at the MoD, has suggested that alien enthusiasts won't be too chuffed with this final release.
The last three documents all date from 1986, and were released on New Year’s Day.
Mr Pope said: "This looks suspiciously as if The National Archives tried to sneak out this release when nobody was looking."
The timing of the release, just weeks after the US Pentagon confirmed it had maintained a top-secret UFO investigation program, has also raised suspicions.
Mr Pope added: "Coming so soon after the revelations about the Pentagon's UFO program, this will raise suspicion in the UFO community that there's been co-ordination between the US and UK government on this."
He added: "Having worked on the MoD's UFO investigations in the 90s I'm pleased that these files are finally in the open.
"There's no smoking gun in these files that says UFOs are extraterrestrial, but there are plenty of interesting sighting reports and other related material relating to MoD research on the subject.
"These recent revelations in the UK and the US show that whatever you believe about the UFO mystery, some of us in government took the subject seriously.
"I hope this means that the media, the scientific community and the public can now have a more serious and informed debate about the UFO phenomenon, with less sarcastic comments about little green men."
Being of the Rhesus monkey lineage, around 85 % of the world population inherits the Rh positive blood group. The remaining 10-15 % is Rh negative pointing out their origin being from a different source.
This difference in blood type has attracted various conspiracy theories – linking them to reptilian blood in one and to an alien origin in another.
Our immune system responds to any foreign substance by generating antibodies. The triggering up of these antibodies is a function of antigens. One such important antigen found in Rh positive blood type is the D antigen.The absence of this antigen indicates a person having a Rh negative blood type.
Apart from a difference in certain traits and characteristics, they live a normal life. In fact, as this blood type lacks proteins, it provides them immunity against certain diseases which require proteins as a carrier.
Traits and characteristics
Empathetic
Reddish hair
Green, blue or hazel eyes
Intuitive
Always look for facts
Higher than average IQ
Easily Scared
Lower body temperature
Sense of purpose in life
Compassionate
Unexplained psychic dreams
Interest in space and science
Extra vertebrate
An inclination to healing professions
A feeling of being different
Mothers immune system rejects the fetus
This blood type becomes a cause of concern only during the pregnancy when a Rh negative mother carries a fetus having the Rh-positive blood type.
When the blood of mother comes in contact with that of the fetus blood, it develops antibodies against the Rh D antigen. The mother’s immune system can then prove fatal for the fetus.
But with the advancement in medical science, medications are now available to prevent the fetus from such harm.
Some believe that the evolution of Rh negative blood came about when aliens mated with humans.
As these people are blessed with psychic and intuitive powers, did the aliens desired to create a lineage separate from rest of the humanity? or did they wanted them to act as angels and prevent humanity at the time of need?
Some of the strange things common to the people having this bloodline are
They are doing research on ancient astronauts
Author of the books based on extraterrestrials, space, and science
Are alien abductees
It is no denying the fact that our history has also pointed to alien visitations. These indications come preserved in the form of scriptures, stone carvings, and paintings.
Some examples include
Ancient cave paintings
UFO sightings
Crop circles
The uncanny architectures such as the pyramids of Giza, Nasca lines, stone henge etc
Did the ancient astronauts come here with a purpose?
Various texts have even pointed out that gods came and blessed humans with their sons. Can Rh negative blood type come into existence due to one such blessing?
One of the professors even said that we all as a race came from space.
Prof Wickramasinghe mathematician, astronomer, and astrobiologist said
“ A dark secret lies deeply buried in our DNA. We are all aliens made up of cosmic genes from cosmic bacteria and viruses that drifted down to us in comet dust and meteorites through the depths of space”.
The largest percentage of this bloodline are the Basque people who live near the Pyrenees mountain between France and Spain.They are semi-isolated from the rest of Europe
According to the University of Nevada, center for basques studies
No one knows exactly where the Basques came from. Some say they have lived in that area since Cro-Magnon man first roamed Europe. Estimates of how long they have lived there vary from 10,000 to 75,000 years. Some say they are descended from the original Iberians. More fanciful theories exist, as well. One is that the Basques are the descendants of the survivors of Atlantis.
Scientific explanation
Let us now understand how science tries to clarify this conspiracy.
According to this website, our DNA decides our body characteristics. With a slight change in DNA, our characteristics also change.
These DNA changes can take place either when a cell divides or through outside influences such as radiation.
Mutation, as we know, is the change in the DNA or genome of an individual. Rh negative blood type having no D antigen evolved due to one such mutation.This also changed their appearance and immune system characteristics.
What a Rh-negative mothers immune system is doing is activating its defense system obeying its DNA characteristics.
One of the inherent benefit they have over other individuals is their immunity against the parasite Toxoplasma. Also, as this bloodline is prominent in places having this parasite, it is indicative of a rare mutation took place which aided the people having this mutation to cope well.
As people in Europe account for the maximum percentage having this blood type, maybe this served them to survive in that geography.
CONCLUSION
Whether the Rh negative blood type is of alien origin or a rare genetic mutation, weighs equal.It can be concluded only after science gives us, even more, facts to remove the veil out of its very origin.
If it is only a result of genetic mutation then why does it makes such people more intuitive, psychic healers, being the popular target of aliens, science and space explorers? There are a lot of questions which need to be answered to reach a definite conclusion.
Who knows that the theory of alien mating with humans turns out to be true when science has sufficient data to back up the claims or it turns out to be our random assumption with the concept of genetic mutation winning in the end.
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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.