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.
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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!!!
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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...
01-07-2020
Astronomen staan versteld: monsterster mysterieus verdwenen - HLN.be
Astronomen staan versteld: monsterster mysterieus verdwenen - HLN.be
WETENSCHAPWaar is toch die massarijke ster gebleven, een ster maar liefst 2,5 miljoen keer helderder dan de zon? Astronomen staan versteld. In 2011 hadden collega’s de ster ver weg in het Kinman-dwergstelsel nog - indirect - gespot, vorig jaar was ze plots verdwenen. Mogelijk is de ster ingestort tot een zwart gat, zónder voorafgaande supernova-explosie. “Dat zou dan de eerste directe waarneming zijn van een monsterster die zijn leven op deze manier afsluit”, weet de Ierse onderzoeksleider, Andrew Allan.
Doctoraatsstudent Andrew Allan van het Trinity College Dublin in Ierland en zijn team vragen zich af waar de ster gebleven is die zich op zo’n 75 miljoen lichtjaar van ons bevindt - of bevond - in het Kinman-dwergstelsel in het sterrenbeeld Waterman. Collega-astronomen hadden de zware ster nog bestudeerd tussen 2001 en 2011. Hun waarnemingen deden veronderstellen dat de ster op haar laatste benen liep, maar een supernova kwam er kennelijk niet.
Het Kinman-dwergsterrenstelsel ligt op 75 miljoen lichtjaar en dat is te ver om aparte sterren te kunnen onderscheiden, maar astronomen kunnen wel de kenmerkende ‘handtekening’ van sommige ervan ontwaren. Het onderzoek tussen 2001 en 2011 liet zo het bestaan van een lichtsterke blauwe variabele ster vermoeden, ook hyperreus genoemd. Dit type is instabiel, met soms dramatische veranderingen in de helderheid en in de hoeveelheid licht die ze in verschillende golflengtes uitstralen. Maar zelfs dan laten ze sporen achter. Zoals deze ster, ongeveer 2,5 miljoen keer zo helder als de zon.
In 2019 wou het team van Andrew Allan meer te weten komen van hoe dat soort zeer massarijke sterren aan zijn einde komt. Maar zelfs met de Very Large Telescope (VLT) van de Europese Zuidelijke Sterrenwacht (ESO) konden ze de vroegere aanwijzingen die wezen op het bestaan van de bewuste ster niet meer terugvinden. “We stonden versteld: de ster was weg”, aldus Allan. Wat was er gebeurd? “Het zou erg ongewoon zijn dat zo’n massarijke ster verdwijnt zonder een heldere supernova-explosie”, voegde hij eraan toe. “Mogelijk hebben we een van de meest massarijke sterren in het lokale heelal als een nachtkaars zien uitgaan”, zei teamlid Jose Groh, ook van het Trinity College Dublin.
De gegevens van de oude waarnemingen wezen op gigantische erupties, waarbij materiaal van de ster verloren gaat. Die moeten ergens na 2011 opgehouden zijn. Zulke uitbarstingen zijn niet ongewoon voor lichtsterke blauwe variabele sterren, die zo in korte tijd veel massa verliezen, waardoor hun helderheid fel toeneemt.
In dit geval zou de bewuste zware ster door de uitbarstingen kunnen zijn getransformeerd in een minder heldere ster, die bovendien nog eens deels verduisterd kan zijn door stof. Dat zou een reden - waarschijnlijk de meest plausibele - kunnen zijn waarom de ster verdwenen lijkt.
Een andere verklaring volgens het wetenschapsteam rond Allan is dat de ster wel degelijk is ineengestort tot een zwart gat, maar dan zonder dat er eerst een supernova-explosie plaatsvond. Dat zou uiterst zeldzaam zijn en indruisen tegen de huidige kennis over het einde van massarijke sterren die stelt dat zij hun bestaan wel degelijk afsluiten met een supernova.
De studie van het onderzoeksteam is gepubliceerd in de Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
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- Gemiddelde waardering: 0/5 - (0 Stemmen) Categorie:HLN.be - Het Laatste Nieuws ( NL)
Chance Encounter with Mysterious Orb Changed Man's Life Forever
Chance Encounter with Mysterious Orb Changed Man's Life Forever
COAST TO COAST AM – Preston Dennett shared the case of Jim Schaffer, whose medical records show he had been diagnosed with cancer. After an encounter with an orb that entered his body, Schaffer’s neck tumor disappeared. Surgery to remove tissue there showed no trace of cancer, Dennett reported, adding he has seen 40 documented cases of patients healed of cancer by the power of UFOs.
He shared the case of a police officer in Texas struck by a beam of light which healed an animal bite he had on his arm. There are numerous other incidents of people hit by beams of light and healed of everything from the common cold to major injuries, and in one instance a man even grew new teeth, Dennett revealed.
There appears to be a large disk shaped craft leaving from within our sun. The object is huge and as it moves out its form is clearly a huge round object, but as it moves away, the object fades and vanishes as if it soon cloaked the ship to go undetected. Interesting video and very difficult to tell for sure for or against it due to the poor video quality that NASA puts out. Scott C. Waring - Taiwan
Disk Craft Caught Over Mountains In Puerto Rico, June 29, 2020, UFO Sighting News.
Disk Craft Caught Over Mountains In Puerto Rico, June 29, 2020, UFO Sighting News.
Date of sighting: June 29, 2020 Location of sighting: Caguas, Puerto Rico Source: MUFON #109789 This is an interesting sighting just in from Puerto Rico. A person caught a disk craft in the distance passing as he took photos. It might have been moving slowly and cloaked, so was invisible to the human eye. Often certain tinted lenses can allow the human eye or camera to capture the image, some sunglasses have such lenses. Absolute proof that aliens are highly interested in the island nation of Puerto Rico. Scott C. Waring Eyewitness states:
After taking photos with my drone I observed an unusual dark silhouette in the photo. I showed my wife who thought it was a small cloud but the clouds were way up, I said.
The next to screenshots below are in negative format.
Missing 411 and The Spontaneous Formation of Portals
Missing 411 and The Spontaneous Formation of Portals
As part of his continuing Missing 411 investigations, David Paulides relays recent findings on some of the most bizarre missing person cases that he has investigated; many of which have left more questions than answers.
He has found that many areas in which people have mysteriously disappeared are prone to the spontaneous formation of portals.
In addition, some insiders have revealed that technology exists which can direct these portals upon targeted individuals.
AMAZING triangle UFO over Ontario, California 2020
AMAZING triangle UFO over Ontario, California 2020
asd
Witness report:
Skywhatching the nigth using my Night Vision intesifier tube gen3 from my back yard. April 22, 2020 11:13 pm. After almost more than 3 hrs of being skywatching the clear night sky, minutes before midnight and about to abort mission… Suddenly, this SPECTACULAR triangular formation of lights appears on the screen!!!Fast and without any sound…the three ligths like a triangule were heading towars the West… I mean LAX area.
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Donald Trump Hints About Interesting Things He Heard On Alleged UFO Crash Site
Donald Trump Hints About Interesting Things He Heard On Alleged UFO Crash Site
US President Donald Trump has said he’d heard things about Roswell that are “interesting.” He made the statement during the Father’s Day-interview hosted by the president’s re-election campaign.
The president’s answer came after his son asked if the White House incumbent could let the public knows what’s really going on. Trump replied he wouldn’t talk about what he knows about it, but said it’s very interesting.
In 1947, a rancher found mysterious debris in his sheep pasture outside Roswell, New Mexico. According to Air Force officials, it was a crashed weather balloon, but sceptics questioned whether it was, in fact, a space UFO.
A few decades later, the UFO theory has flourished as the US military acknowledged a top-secret atomic project had caused the debris.
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In the past, the president has talked sceptically on the possibility that there’s life out there. After the president told his son that he heard some interesting things about Roswell, Mr Trump Jr asked him if the president might declassify that information in the future. The president responded he’ll have to think about that one.
Ancient Aliens: The Mystery of Skinwalker Ranch S15E10
Ancient Aliens: The Mystery of Skinwalker Ranch S15E10
Ancient Aliens – The Mystery of Skinwalker Ranch History Channel, Season 15 Episode 10 28th March 2020
The Skinwalker Ranch in Utah is a major point for UFO activity as well as paranormal and supernatural incidents. Researchers believe that Skinwalker Ranch is a doorway to parallel universe.
The observable universe contains an estimated 1×1024 stars. They come in very different sizes, and their masses and brightness can vary dramatically. Even so, researchers have developed a system that managed to look at them all together.
The most common classification system is called the Morgan–Keenan (MK), which classifies stars based on temperature and luminosity. The MK system essentially merges two different systems:
the Harvard classification, where stars are classified on their surface temperature using a single letter of the alphabet: O (the coldest), B, A, F, G, and M (the hottest). These are the so-called main-sequence stars, but as we’ll see, there are also more extreme types of stars (like giant stars, supergiant stars, and white dwarfs). These broad types are also split, so you can have G1 stars, G2 stars, and so on.
the Yerkes spectral classification (sometimes used synonymously with the MK system), which is luminosity, where stars are named using Roman numerals: 0, I (Ia, Iab, Ib), II, III, IV, V, VI, and VII.
In the MK system, stars are defined with a letter from the Harvard classification and a Roman numeral from the Yerkes one (the Sun is a G2-V star).
Over the years, astronomers have created different catalogs where stars are classified in somewhat different ways, and it’s not always a straightforward process, nor is the classification set in stone — it has changed over the years, as our understanding of stars has improved. So if anything, the stellar classification discussed is a general indication more than anything else.
Now, let’s look at things in a bit more detail and see why this matters.
The universe is big, dark, and cold — the vast majority of it, at least.
But if you were to wander this universe, you’re bound to come across something that’s hot and bright. Stars, as these objects are called, are giant thermonuclear reactors. They’re responsible for heating up some planets to a livable temperature, they produce the vast majority of the chemical elements we know of, and they’re basically the reason why the universe is not a completely frozen and barren place.
A star’s life begins when a gaseous nebula of material starts to collapse on its own gravity.
Just like planets, all stars are round, because of this gravitational collapse. When the stellar core gathers sufficient mass, it starts to develop a significant gravitational attraction, which packs the particles even more tightly, increasing the density. Then, once a crucial point is reached and the stellar core becomes sufficiently dense, hydrogen starts to be converted into helium through nuclear fusion, releasing energy in the process — and thus, a star is born.
This hydrogen-helium fusion is the fuel of the star, and the heat it produces also creates a pressure that prevents stars from collapsing on themselves. Depending on how massive they get, stars will also end up on a different course.
In general, larger stars have a shorter lives, although we’re still usually talking about billions of years. However, their lifecycle greatly depends on their mass.
For instance, a star with a mass greater than 0.4 times the Sun will expand and turn into a red giant. Then, as it ejects much of its mass violently across the galaxy, the star would become a white dwarf. Based on its mass, the star might also become a brown dwarf, a neutron star, or, if it is sufficiently massive, a black hole. So already, we’re seeing that different types of stars can turn into different things after they use up their fuel.
Average stars become white dwarfs. They eject their outer layers but still maintain a hot core comparable in size to the Earth. Counterintuitively, the smaller the white dwarf, the larger its mass — this happens because it’s the pressure from fast-moving electrons that keeps these stars from collapsing, so the more massive the star, the more it is able to overcome this pressure, and thus, massive white dwarfs tend to become smaller.
White dwarfs can become active stars once again. If a white dwarf is close enough to a companion star, it can start sucking material from the second star, and if it acquires enough, it can produce a burst of nuclear fusion, causing it to brighten and turn into a nova. This typically lasts a few days, after which the process starts again. If enough material is gathered in one go, the white dwarf can erupt into a supernova.
Larger stars become supernovae. A supernova is not only a big nova. In a nova, the star’s surface explodes but in a supernova, the core also collapses and explodes. The supernova-generating process is cataclysmic — in mere seconds, the core shrinks from thousands of miles to only a few dozen, and the temperature can spike by over 100 billion degrees. A supernova eruption can outshine an entire galaxy. Every year, we discover 20-40 supernovae in other galaxies.
Supernovae can become neutron stars . After this ungodly process, the core collapses. If the collapsing stellar core has a mass of 1.4-3 solar masses, what’s left behind is a neutron star. Neutron stars are the smallest and densest stars, if we exclude black holes or hypotheticals such as white holes. Neutron stars have a radius on the order of 10 kilometers, and the ones we’ve observed so far seem very hot, although they don’t actually produce heat anymore and slowly cool down over time.
Large supernovae turn into black holes. If the stellar core remaining after the supernova explosion is larger than three solar masses, it will collapse into a black hole. Black holes are the most massive objects we know of in the universe, so massive that even light cannot escape their grasp. Black holes are so exceptional that they start to break our current understanding of physics. Black holes are thought to be extremely cold on the inside, but incredibly hot just outside.
Stellar debris often forms new stars. The dust and debris ejected by novae and supernovae are excellent seeds for new stars, recycling the material and potentially forming new generations of stars.
A supernova remnant
Understanding stars
We’ve already seen some types of stars but before we dig into the classification per se, let’s take a brief look at what we know and don’t know about stars.
Outside of the sun, the closest star to Earth is one of the three stars in the Alpha Centauri system, some 4.3 light-years from Earth. That’s very, very far. To get an idea how far it is, the distance from Earth to Mars is around 0.00001 light-years away and, with our best available space ships, it would still take around 7 months for the trip. To get to Alpha Centauri at that speed, it would take over 100,000 years. So while mankind has looked at the stars since forever, we’ve only recently started to look at them closely.
Of course, we’re not physically close to the stars, but with the aid of telescopes, we can get a closer look at them. Ground-based telescopes enable scientists to study stars in different wavelengths of light, including the visible spectrum, radio waves, and even infrared light.
It’s not just observation — researchers also conduct experiments in the lab to infer the properties of stars and investigate the processes that fuel stars. Ultimately, computer modeling has also helped improve our understanding of stars.
With computer models, we can approximate different properties of stars (such as density, pressure, velocity, composition) and see how they influence observations.
Enough chit-chat. Let’s look at some stars.
Main sequence stars — and beyond
In astronomy, the ‘main sequence‘ is a term used to denote stars that fit in the common group of stars on the color versus luminosity charts. These plots, also called Hertzsprung–Russell diagrams after their co-developers, are the common classification tool for stars.
The Hertzsprung–Russell diagram is essentially a square where stars are plotted with color on the horizontal and luminosity on the vertical. Color is dependent on temperature, and brightness depends on size so you can also see it as a temperature-size chart.
The main sequence of stars is exactly what the name says: the main sequence in which these stars are grouped, from top left (bright and blue/hotter) to bottom right (less bright and less hot).
It’s hard to say why stars are grouped along this chart, but about 90% of all the known stars in the universe (including the sun) are main-sequence stars.
That doesn’t mean that main sequence stars are monotonous — quite the opposite. There can be huge variation, ranging from a tenth of the mass of the sun to up to 200 times as massive.
There are also other clusters of stars — to the left we see the less bright white dwarfs, which we’ve discussed already, and above the main sequence, we have the giants and supergiants. Here’s what a real diagram of stars looks like, from 22,000 stars plotted from the Hipparcos Catalogue and 1,000 from the Gliese Catalogue of nearby stars, with the most prominent being the main-sequence diagonal.
So the first stellar classification is into main-sequence stars and non-main-sequence stars. Main sequence are stars are the norm, other types of stars can exist scattered around the diagram (though they also tend to group into clusters).
Types of main sequence stars
As we’ve already mentioned, main sequence stars are also extremely varied, so there is also a separate classification for them.
The traditional classification here is called the Harvard classification, a one-dimensional classification where stars are grouped by their temperature, with a letter representing each category. However, this classification does not distinguish between stars with the same temperature but different luminosities. So a new classification system was devised — the Morgan–Keenan (MK) classification, which also includes the luminosity.
The modern classification system for them is called the Morgan–Keenan (MK) classification and also includes the luminosity.
Each star is assigned a spectral class from the older Harvard spectral classification, as well as a luminosity class using Roman numerals as explained below, forming the star’s classification. So you’d have, for instance, B0 stars, BI, stars, BII, and so on.
So M stars are the smallest, O stars are the biggest, and the luminosity ranges from I (brightest) to VI (less bright) and D (white dwarfs). As mentioned, the Sun is a type G2V star. Alpha Centauri A is also a G2V star, while Proxima Centauri is a type M5.5-V star.
The classification can also be expanded to stars outside of the main sequence. A plot of the stars would look like this:
Why we classify stars
Well, for starters, researchers love to classify all things — that’s how we better understand trends and patterns. That’s how we know, for instance, that M type stars are by far the most abundant in the known universe. The Sun belongs to a relatively rare group of stars.
Astronomers also calculate the habitable zone around different types of stars — the distance at which a planet can exist around the star so that it hosts liquid water, and therefore, could potentially host life.
NASA’s Kepler mission is searching for habitable planets around nearby main-sequence stars less massive than type A stars but more massive than type M — so mostly around K, G, and F types of stars.
Ultimately, we class stars because we want to better understand and define them. We’re still only scratching the surface of a very vast universe of knowledge, and it helps to group things in an orderly, systematic fashion.
More exotic stars
It’s not the only stellar classification, and it’s not entirely fixed and set-in-stone. There are other classifications and talk about changing classifications is not unheard of in the astronomical world, as our understanding progresses and improves.
There are also more exotic types of stars. For instance, recent research has suggested that Class L (small, dark, reddish) stars and Class T (methane dwarf) stars could be more common than all the other classes combined, but they are more difficult to discover.
There is yet another class — Class Y of brown dwarf stars, cooler than those of spectral class T and with different spectral signatures. So far, less than two dozen of these stars have been confirmed. Class C of carbon stars is also discussed, and Class D stars is typically used to denote any stars that are not currently undergoing fusion. It’s estimated that there are 300 billion stars in our galaxy alone, and we have very little idea how many galaxies there are in the universe, but estimates range in the trillions. I’ll let you do the math.
As our detection capacity and image processing power advances, we are likely to keep discovering new stars that improve and challenge our current understanding. There is much, much more to discover.
Take a moment to appreciate what’s going on in this photo. This is Major Jesse Marcel of the Roswell Army Air Base in July of 1947. He knows that something incredible has taken place outside of town because he has seen the crash site with his own eyes and touched the wreckage with his own hands. For almost a day, it’s been breath-taking for Marcel knowing that the world is going to change dramatically, something he knows because his military bosses seem to be trying to level with the American people.
Then, the next day, the door slams shut hard. The policy is now denial and ridicule, and it comes straight down from Washington, D.C. Worse, Marcel gets chosen to be the visual messenger that takes it all back, to say sorry, our mistake, just a weather balloon, nothing to see here.
In this photo, Marcel realizes that at this singular moment in human history his role is to play the joker who screwed up, someone so dumb he can’t tell the difference between a weather balloon from his own military base or a flying saucer from outer space.
That is exactly how Jesse Marcel got to wear the deer-in-the-headlights look on his face in this memorable photo. He is taking the most epic fall in human history. Shakespeare could not have written it better.
With the scene set, let’s get to the breaking news…
The New York Times Running with Fox News?
There’s a rumor buzzing about in the increasingly sophisticated and informed UFO circles that the New York Times has reporters out making calls about actual crash retrievals of unidentified flying objects on American soil.
Take a moment and appreciate what this might mean if it turns out to be true. That would mean the nation’s most famous newspaper may be on the verge of stating that we have recovered materials from crashes, and that the technology is not ours (the U.S.) or theirs (China, Russia), and comes from another source. Do the math on that one.
Why in the world would respectable journalists like Ralph Blumenthal and Leslie Keane, working in the bosom of respectability that the New York Times, want to chase that old canard of crashed saucers out in the desert?
For starters, because there’s always been lots of anecdotal evidence and witness testimony from some key people. Only it just hasn’t been the Smoking Wreckage that proof demands. That, plus you’d be so far out on a limb as a journalist that you might never crawl your way back. And that might have been true until just last year.
That’s when Luis Elizondo, who ran the government’s AATIP, Advanced Aerial Threat Identification Program, said out loud what we knew he was thinking. While talking to Fox’s Tucker Carlson, he said that, yes, the U.S. had the goods, actual physical wreckage. Former military intelligence, Elizondo quit the government’s UFO program to live the activist’s life and advocate for new thinking and transparency out about this reality.
Carlson: Do you believe, based on your decade of serving in the U.S. government on this question, that the U.S. government has in its possession any material from one of these aircrafts?
Elizondo: I do, yes.
Carlson: You think the U.S. government has debris from a UFO in its possession right now?
Elizondo: Unfortunately, Tucker, I really have to be careful of my NDA. I really can’t go into a lot more detail than that, but simply put, yes.
The whole topic just oozes the possibility of rapid Disclosure and change waiting in the wings, just off the stage of transparency. Here’s a great refresher on who’s said what about crash wreckage from an important voice among the New Gods in the UAP research community, Danny Silva. (Note to Self: Write new memo about UFO’s New Gods next month.)
It is possible that the new headlines from The New York Times will be the kick to the barn door of Disclosure that lets all the horses out.
While we wait to see, let’s check in with what the Donald Trumps have to say about Roswell.
Roswell is the Holy Grail
Donald Trump Jr. just asked his dad, repeatedly, about Roswell in a Father’s Day 2020 interview. Red or blue, it is still semi-astonishing to hear the sitting President of the United States admit his awareness of Roswell, and say, “I won’t talk to you about what I know about it, but it’s very interesting.” It just feels like that has got to mean something.
The Question You Just Have to Ask
Quick review of Roswell 101 —
In early July of 1947, the military brass at the Roswell Army Air Base put out a press release that was so forthright that the local paper headlined with “RAAF Captures Flying Saucer on Ranch in Roswell Region.” Here’s the paper.
The next day the same people said that all these trained military people who the U.S. trusted with nuclear weapons got it all wrong and had just misidentified a weather balloon, something they dealt with every day. Here’s that headline:
What if the government accidentally told the truth that first day?
Why Do I Believe the Roswell Crash?
This is clearly a question to be answered cautiously. I start with what we know. We know the Roswell Army Air Base put out a press release saying they had captured a flying saucer and the next day took it all back and said they had only found a weather balloon. That’s shady behavior, but it’s not proof.
We know over the years the U.S. military has variously announced that Roswell was a flying saucer, a weather balloon, crash dummies from a test flight, or a secret Mogul balloon to spy on the Soviets nuclear capability. Those are just the official attempts at explanation. Other interested parties have spun tales of Nazi Mengele-crewed saucers, Soviet saucers, and the work of the Devil. The subject has clearly been one open to interpretation for decades now.
Then, in shocking counterpoint to all of that, there’s a singular, other one. Roswell was exotic technology. We got wreckage and bodies. We don’t talk about Fight Club.
That storyline has hundreds of witnesses testifying to roughly the same fact trail. Some were first hand witnesses to debris and even the recovery of bodies, and several accounts came from death bed confessions. Many more witnesses were family members who learned of the secret their fathers and husbands had kept inside them for decades. There were dozens and dozens who attested to extremely tight security and transportation of material in the aftermath of what crashed at Roswell.
I know this because I worked with the top two researchers — Don Schmitt and the late Stanton Friedman — and I’ve spent dozens of hours going through their research. Stan was the man who found Jesse Marcel back in 1978 and Don was the energetic young researcher who competed with Stan in a bitter 1990s feud. At the end of their competition, though, they became friends. As Don has always asked:
Would hundreds of people be enlisted in such an immense effort to guard the scraps of a mere weather balloon that would be shown later in a news conference?
Those people do not agree on each and every detail, nor were they all direct witnesses, but taken together they tell a very compelling story about essentially the same thing.
It involves a crash in a thunderstorm, a rescue effort to assess and move the intact part of the craft, and a clean-up effort both literally and figuratively that probably yielded one survivor and four dead. Bodies, craft and wreckage were moved, mostly to Wright-Paterson Air Force Base, and to other places, as ordered.
The testimony I’ve seen comes from men and women who were there, at the base, in the field, in the hospitals and funeral homes, and flying cargo and guarding it with care at a level you’d never experienced. There are so many of them.
Not one witness has come forward to say, “well, you know, I never wanted to talk about it in all these years but it really was a weather balloon.”
I believe the Roswell history told by the vast majority of the first and second hand witnesses. Some of the details may feel slippery as would be normal based on memory in a case of this magnitude. Especially one that’s been undermined for years by experts in psychological operations, both in government and out.
There may be an uncomfortable amount of noise in this one but, to me, the signal remains loud and clear.
Roswell is Probably Off-Limts for a While Longer
The media has done a very poor job on the story over the years, preferring to cover people in alien cosplay costumes at the Roswell UFO Festival over actually digging in and doing research and interviewing witnesses.
The full story of Roswell likely won’t be written for years. When it is, the story will gain the respect it deserves. Historians and readers of that age will wonder how it came to be that such a serious matter was swept under the rug for so long. It will seem insane.
It’s doubtful that any imminent New York Times reporting will dare to touch the Roswell story, so tainted by disinformation, abuse, witness intimidation, and the twin pillars of cover-up, denial and ridicule, that to many it appears shaky and unreliable. It’s better for them to go after a fresh target, maybe something more recent, less well known. Roswell, it turns out, has hardly been the only crash. These wingless craft are not regularly falling out of the skies, but there have been a few, here and around the world.
So the Times will have a go at easier targets first. Editors will force reporters to source meticulously. The big game they’re hunting is just one piece of material from a UFO wreck, or a craft itself. They want to know who got it, what they did with it, what we’ve learned from it, and where it is today.
Once they establish it’s happened before, the story of Roswell is on a fast track to investigation and then de-classification. At that point, the game will continue with different rules.
"Fastwalkers" it remains an unsolved mystery! What are those objects flying through our atmosphere at such incredible speed that they are not visible to the naked eye.
“Fastwalker” is a term used by NORAD and branches of armed forces to describe unidentified aerial phenomena moving and/or changing directions at high speed far beyond what current aerospace technology is capable of.
Fastwalkers have only been spotted in recent years and mainly captured by amateur drones from around the world.
Is it secret advanced space technology used by the military or should we think of extraterrestrial origin.
Below fastwalker compilation shows the diversity of fastwalkers captured mainly by amateur drones in recent years. (click image to enlarge).
The latest fastwalker (image above) was caught in China on June 28, 2020 - See video here
This UFO video was filmed back in August 2019 but it was just submitted to MUFON website today. It was filmed over Cardiff, UK.
Witness report:
Two white lights with moon in background filmed on IPhone. During the curfew before the rain, I stepped out onto the balcony and observed a light in the sky near the clouds.
Ancient Aliens – The Shapeshifters History Channel, Season 15 Episode 9 21st March 2020
Alien abduction cases in modern day theorize that alien have the ability to shape shift. The characteristics of shape shifting is mentioned in ancient cultures like vampire, werewolves, etc. And researches focus on the theory that aliens live today shape shifting in the form of humans.
Crop circles 2020: Smeathe’s Plantation, Wiltshire, UK
Crop circles 2020: Smeathe’s Plantation, Wiltshire, UK
This latest crop circle report is coming from a place called Smeathe’s Plantation near Ogbourne St George in Wiltshire, UK. This one was found a few days ago on 25th June 2020.
LIGO and Virgo detected a collision between a black hole and a mystery object
LIGO and Virgo detected a collision between a black hole and a mystery object
Gravitational wave measurements put the object’s mass between a neutron star and a black hole
In a first, the LIGO and Virgo gravitational wave detectors have spotted a collision between a black hole (illustrated left) and a mystery object (right), which could be either the heaviest neutron star ever discovered or the lightest black hole.
Ripples in spacetime have revealed a distant collision between a black hole and a mystery object, which appears too massive to be a neutron star but not massive enough to be a black hole.
At first glance, the event — detected by the LIGO and Virgo gravitational wave detectors on August 14, 2019 — looked like a collision between a black hole and neutron star (SN: 8/15/19). But a new analysis of the gravitational waves emanating from the merger tells a different story. It shows that a black hole about 23 times as massive as the sun crashed into a compact object of about 2.6 solar masses, researchers report June 23 in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
That 2.6-solar-mass object is heavier than the presumed 2.5-solar-mass cap on neutron star size. But it’s smaller than the most lightweight black hole ever observed, which is about five solar masses. “We have [here] either the heaviest known neutron star … or we have the lightest known black hole,” says Cole Miller, an astrophysicist at the University of Maryland in College Park not involved in the work.
Neutron stars, which are dense stellar remnants left behind by stellar explosions, are thought to max out at about 2.5 solar masses because any larger star is liable to crumple under its own weight. Black holes less than about five solar masses are theoretically possible, “we just have had no observational evidence of such low-mass black holes,” says coauthor Vicky Kalogera, an astrophysicist at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. That could mean such objects are very rare, or that they’re just so difficult to spot that they’ve been overlooked in past searches.
Unfortunately, this lone merger did not leave behind enough clues for astronomers to figure out the identity of the enigmatic 2.6-solar-mass object. After the U.S.-based Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, or LIGO, and its sister experiment in Italy, Advanced Virgo, detected the merger, dozens of ground-based and space telescopes scoured the sky for light radiating from the crash site. But they found nothing.
That observation — or lack thereof — fits with the idea that the mystery object is a black hole, because black hole collisions are generally not thought to give off any light. But it could also fit with the neutron star explanation. Although smashups involving neutron stars can throw off a lot of light (SN:10/16/17), it’s possible that this collision — nearly 800 million light-years away —was simply too far away for telescopes to see its radiation. Or perhaps the black hole swallowed its little neutron star companion in a single gulp, causing it to vanish without a trace.
If that last scenario is true, “this means that [the pair of objects] had its moment of gravitational wave glory,” Miller says, and now the larger black hole forged in the merger is “doomed to wander the vast emptiness of space, probably never emitting another peep.”
Observations of similar events in the future might offer evidence in favor of either the small black hole or big neutron star theory, Kalogera says. If midsize objects in future collisions all tend to be between about 2.5 and three solar masses, she suspects that would mean astronomers are uncovering a heavier variety of neutron star that has been seen in the past. If, on the other hand, astronomers detect many objects whose masses run the gamut from about 2.5 to five solar masses, that may point to filling in a population of previously overlooked, petite black holes.
Kalogera and Miller both lean more toward the idea that the mystery object is a lightweight black hole than a heavyweight neutron star. If it is, that raises another question: how such a pint-size black hole got paired up with a partner so much bigger than itself.
Black holes usually team up with partners of similar heft. Most mergers detected by LIGO and Virgo have involved fairly equally matched black holes (SN: 4/20/20). But the larger black hole implicated in this merger was about nine times as massive as its enigmatic counterpart, raising questions about what could have brought such a strange couple together. Here, too, astronomers hope future gravitational wave observations of such oddball pairings may offer answers.
A still from a visualisation of the merging objects, depicted as two black holes and emitting gravitational waves.
(Image: N. Fischer, S. Ossokine, H. Pfeiffer, A. Buonanno (Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics), Simulating eXtreme Spacetimes (SXS) Collaboration)
“What if extraterrestrial intelligences are not like us, but are found in the frigid reaches of the outer solar system, the extreme gravity of neutron stars, the brilliant cores of active galaxies, or the hearts of the richest galaxy clusters?”
The Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia is one of the telescopes used by Breakthrough Listen for SETI. Here, an artist has portrayed a signal from a Fast Radio Burst – or FRB – detected by the telescope. FRBs are one of the sorts of objects on the new Breakthrough Listen Exotica list.
Are we alone in the universe? That’s one of the biggest, still unanswered questions facing humankind. Now, the Breakthrough Listen initiative has announcedthe release of a comprehensive Exotica catalog, listing over 700 objects and phenomena in the known universe of potential interest to scientists searching for technosignatures, that is, evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence beyond just the radio signals focused upon in traditional SETI.
Breakthrough Listen says the targets listed in its Exotica catalog will also be useful for the study of astrophysics in general.
Breakthrough Listen to date has largely focused on the search for ‘life as we know it’ – including Earth-like planets around sun-like stars such as Kepler 160. But what if extraterrestrial intelligences are not like us, but are found in the frigid reaches of the outer solar system, the extreme gravity of neutron stars, the brilliant cores of active galaxies, or the hearts of the richest galaxy clusters? Now we’re announcing an expanded approach, targeting ‘one of everything’ in the universe.
The new Exotica Catalog includes over 700 distinct objects. It has an example of each type in our Prototype sample, extreme objects with record-breaking properties in our Superlative sample, and lingering mysteries in our Anomaly sample. A small Control sample rounds out the list with sky locations we do not expect to be special as a comparison.
With the Exotica catalog, we aim to answer many questions. Have we been looking in the wrong places? Might a few of the objects we think are natural actually be artificial? Could some natural phenomenon or problem with our instruments fool us into thinking we are looking at a signal from an intelligence? What can we learn by using the unique Breakthrough Listen backend to observe the natural world?
Graph depicting what kinds of target selections are included in the catalog.
The intention of the catalog is to include “one of everything” in the observable universe. It is the first catalog in recent years to cover the entire vast array of exotic phenomena, from distant galaxies to objects in our own solar system. The idea is that it will serve as a guide for researchers searching for evidence of extraterrestrial life, as well as studying natural astrophysical phenomena. Brian Lacki, a graduate student at Ohio State University and lead author of the new catalog, said in a statement:
Many discoveries in astronomy were not planned. Sometimes a major new discovery was missed when nobody was looking in the right place, because they believed nothing could be found there. This happened withexoplanets, which might have been detected before the 1990s if astronomers looked for solar systems very different than ours. Are we looking in the wrong places for technosignatures? The Exotica Catalog will help us answer that question.
The catalog is not just limited to SETI, though. My hope is that any program with a new capability may use the Exotica catalog as a shakedown cruise around the universe.
Artist’s concept of a Dyson sphere megastructure, one type of hypothesized alien technosignature.
While the catalog has over 700 listings, those listings are grouped into four main categories:
Prototypes: a list containing at least one example of every known kind of celestial object (apart from those too transient to present realistic observation targets). Planets and moons, stars at every point of their life cycle, galaxies big and small, serene star clusters and blazing quasars, and more are all included in the list.
Superlatives: objects with the most extreme properties. These include examples like the hottest planet, stars with unusually high or low metal content, the most distant quasar and fastest-spinning pulsar, and the densest galaxy.
Anomalies: enigmatic targets whose behavior is currently not satisfactorily explained. For instance, the famous “Tabby’s Star” with its bizarre dimming behavior; ’Oumuamua, the interstellar object that passed near Earth in 2017; unexplained optical pulses that last mere nanoseconds; and stars with excess infrared radiation that could conceivably be explained as waste heat from alien megastructures.
Control sample: a list of sources not expected to produce positive results.
Artist’s concept of a pulsar. When pulsars were first discovered, it was thought they might be artificial beacons, but they turned out to be a natural phenomenon. The new catalog will help to better differentiate between natural phenomena and actual artificial artifacts.
There is also a new classification system for anomalies and new plans for observations of some of these objects based on the catalog.
This catalog is an innovative and welcome addition to the overall SETI effort, as it broadens the focus to many other celestial objects and phenomena, while traditional SETI tended to search only for radio signals, and more recently, light or laser signals. Technosignatures are the new big thing in the search for intelligent extraterrestrial life. But even the search for those until now has focused primarily on looking for evidence of “life as we know it” around nearby stars. According to Andrew Siemion, leader of the Breakthrough Listen science team:
Technosignature searches to date have largely focused on the search for ‘life as we know it’: nearby stars, in particular those known to host planets with the potential for liquid water on their surfaces. The expanded search capabilities that Breakthrough Listen has made possible allow us to consider a much wider range of possible technology-laden environments.
The Exotica Catalog will include “one of everything” of a wide range of known objects and phenomena in the universe.
Yuri Milner, the founder of Breakthrough Initiatives, also said:
Breakthrough Listen has already greatly expanded the breadth and depth of its search. The publication of this catalog is a new and significant step for the program.
When it comes to the search for intelligent life, it’s vital to have an open mind. Until we understand more about the forms another civilization and its technology could take, we should investigate all plausible targets. Cataloging them is the first step toward that goal.
No confirmed technosignatures have been found yet, but the new, expanded search is really just beginning. The universe is vast, so it’s logical that finding something conclusive, if it’s out there, might take a long time. The Exotica Catalog will help to narrow down the search to some of the most interesting candidates and locations, and of course, new ones are always been discovered as well. The guiding principle behind it is the concept of “survey breadth,” i.e., the diversity of objects observed during a program. This will help astronomers constrain the project’s focus to the most interesting or promising targets and weed out natural phenomena that could be mistaken for artificial, and vice-versa.
Brian Lacki of Breakthrough Listen and lead author of the new catalog.
Last February, the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) also announced an outline for new approaches to the question of alien intelligence, and how best to look for it. This was a big step away from the old SETI paradigm, and could now be referred to as SETI 2.0.
We don’t know what surprises the new catalog will yield, but it is an exciting venture that just may help scientists determine whether humanity has any intelligent companions out among the stars and galaxies.
Are we alone? Breakthrough Listen’s new Exotica Catalog will help scientists search for technosignatures: signs of past or present intelligent extraterrestrial life.
Image via Breakthrough Listen/ Danielle Futselaar/ SETI Institute.
Bottom line: The Breakthrough Listen project has released a new Exotica Catalog with over 700 “one of everything” targets in the universe.
These events have happened before, according to Marshall Shepherd, director of the University of Georgia's Atmospheric Sciences Program. Hundreds of millions of tons of dust from the giant North African desert collect in plumes and move west every year, and those plumes have long helped build up Caribbean beaches and fertilize soil in the Amazon, Shepherd wrote for Forbes. The dust also routinely poses respiratory issues for people in impacted areas.
But this plume, which the National Weather Service (NWS) expects to blanket the U.S. Southeast and Puerto Rico through the weekend, is the biggest in at least the past 50 years.
The dust outbreak is "by far the most extreme of the MODIS satellite record — our most detailed, continuous record of global dust back to 2002," tweeted Michael Lowry, an atmospheric scientist at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). MODIS (the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) is a NOAA satellite instrument that takes daily pictures of the Earth to track weather events.
The plume is 3,500 miles (5,600 kilometers) long, according to Reuters, and will impact regions as far flung as Puerto Rico, Texas and North Carolina over the weekend, according to the NWS. The Weather Channel reported that some of the dust might reach thelower Midwest and as far north as the Chesapeake Bay before receding back to the Atlantic on Monday (June 29). The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said the dust plume extends vertically 5,000 to 20,000 feet (1,500 to 6,000 meters) into the atmosphere, which is just about as tall as Denali (20,310 feet or 6,190 m) in Alaska, the tallest mountain in North America.
One impact of the dust is that it will prevent rainstorms from forming, according to the NWS. The dense, dry air of the plume can stop or slow the formation of hurricanes and tropical storms, and the dust itself can trigger toxic algae blooms, according to NOAA.
The brown haze should produce brilliant sunsets, according to The Weather Channel, but its most immediate impact will be reduced air quality, which can hurt anyone but is of particular concern to anyone with a chronic respiratory illness such as asthma.
Watch for the violent solar maximum in 2014 — you can't miss it.
What does 10 years mean to our 4.6 billion-year-old sun? Probably about as much as the last millionth of a second meant to you. Still, every decade that our old sun burns on is a decade of turbulent, sometimes violent change — a fact that becomes beautifully evident in a new time-lapse video from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO).
In the stunning video, titled "A Decade of Sun," astronomers compiled 425 million high-definition images of the sun, snapped once every 0.75 seconds between June 2, 2010 and June 1, 2020. Each second of the video represents one day in the sun's life, and the entire decade blazes by in about 60 minutes (though you can see our 6-minute highlight reel above).
During that decade, the sun undergoes a sea change, slowly bubbling with enormous magnetic ripples known as sunspots, which peaked around 2014 before fading away again. The sun's quiescence wasn't a surprise; every 11 years or so, the sun's magnetic poles suddenly switch places; North becomes South, solar magnetic activity begins to wane, and the sun's surface starts to look like a tranquil sea of yellow fire. This period of relative calm is called a solar minimum (and we are currently in the midst of one).
Halfway between one decade's flip-flop and the next, however, a violent shift occurs. Magnetic activity increases to a vibrant high, known as a solar maximum, and the star's surface ripples with gigantic sunspots, bristles with lashing magnetic field lines and pops with plasma explosions known as solar flares. Each maximum peaks with another magnetic pole reversal, signaling the start of a new solar cycle.
These changes are hard to spot from Earth with the naked eye (though solar maxima do result in more visible auroras at lower latitudes around the world), but NASA's SDO satellite sees them clearly as it monitors our star in extreme ultraviolet light. These ultra-energetic wavelengths cut through the sun's glare and reveal the abundant magnetic changes in the sun's outermost atmosphere, or corona. It's a stunning spectacle to see — even if the sun has probably already forgotten all about it.
Using an innovative camera, researchers have discovered a deep-sea soft coral garden in Greenland, the first of its kind to have been identified and assessed in Greenlandic waters. This could have implications for the management of deep-sea trawl fisheries that are close to the habitat.
The soft coral garden is located at 1,600 feet below sea level (almost 500 meters), where the pressure is 50 times greater than at the surface. The habitat, delicate and diverse, is full of life with abundant cauliflower corals, feather stars, sponges, anemones, brittle stars, hydrozoans, bryozoans, and other organisms.
The researchers found it using a low-tech rig called a “benthic sled,” which consists of a GoPro camera, lights, and laser pointers, which they set into special pressure-proof cases, mounted on a steel frame and hung from their research vessel. They recorded video at 18 locations and discovered the garden.
“The deep sea is often over-looked in terms of exploration. In fact we have better maps of the surface of Mars, than we do of the deep sea,” said Stephen Long, first author of the study. “The development of a low-cost tool that can withstand deep-sea environments opens up new possibilities for our understanding and management of marine ecosystems.”
The seafloor is a very dark place and that’s why the team needed lights on the rig. The algae that is usually found in corals in shallow waters, giving them their bright colors, can’t survive in the deep sea. But corals can, as well as other organisms that depend on them for shelter. The researchers found over 44,000 individual organisms there.
Surveying the deep sea has so far proved difficult and expensive. This is partly explained by the ocean pressure, which increases by one atmosphere (which is the average atmospheric pressure at sea level) every 10 meters of descent. That’s why surveys in the deep-sea rely on expensive remote operating vehicles and manned submersibles that can tolerate the pressure.
“Given that the ocean is the biggest habitat on earth and the one about which we know the least, we think it is critically important to develop cheap, accessible research tools. These tools can then be used to explore, describe and crucially inform management of these deep-sea resources,” Chris Yesson, co-author, said in a statement.
The discovery is particularly significant as the deep sea is the most poorly known habitat on Earth, despite it covering 65% of the planet. Until very recently, very little was known about Greenland’s deep-sea habitats, their nature, distribution, and how they are impacted by human activities.
Although it’s not that well understood, the deep-sea is crucial to the economy of Greenland. Up to 90% of the exports of the country are owed to fisheries, which is also a crucial source of jobs and food in the country. But the recently found garden and many others could be at risk in the future due to deep-sea mining and bottom trawling.
That’s why the authors call for the garden they discovered to be protected as a Vulnerable Marine Ecosystem under United Nations guidelines. They are also working with the Greenland government and the local fishing industry, who have been receptive to putting protections for the garden in place.
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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.