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NASA's Next UFO Report

For Americans (and everyone else) desperate for even more UFO information than the testimony from intelligence whistleblower David Grusch last week at the Congressional hearing, NASA has some good news. In a trip to Argentina last week, NASA administrator Bill Nelson reiterated his agency’s commitment to delivering a report on unidentified foreign objects next month.


Bill Nelson, head of NASA
Bill Nelson | Wikipedia

“I decided as the head of NASA, since there are so many suspicions about aliens, that I would appoint a committee of very distinguished scientists,” Nelson told reporters. “That committee is deliberating, and they will make their report publicly next month. Now I can tell you in the meantime, until you hear the report, and they will consider using our scientific sensors in space in trying to determine this phenomenon.”


Nelson’s UFO panel includes 16 scientists and other space experts. It feels like more of the same as, back in June, NASA delivered its first public hearing on the matter. Not much was new. But Nelson’s statement that NASA is now employing its sensors in space may be a new frontier for UFO researchers.


In an interview with the BBC, astrophysicist and NASA’s UFO panel chair David Spergel said that he hopes citizen science can come into play to help pin down the origin of the few UFO encounters that can’t be explained. “We’ve got three to four billion cell phones distributed around the planet, they take good pictures, and can record the local time, the GPS position, local magnetic fields, and gravitational fields,” he said. Together with government radar, he noted that “you can get multi-wavelength data and learn more about the properties of the object. And again, most of the time, as you get more data, it will turn out to be something conventional. But the exciting possibility is it [could be] something we don’t understand.”

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