‘Normalizing’ UFOs – retired U.S. Navy pilot recalls Tic Tac encounter0
- From Around the Web, UFO News
- June 26, 2021
A government report on unidentified flying objects is coming soon. Texas A&M astronomer Nick Suntzeff weighs in.
A government report on unidentified flying objects is coming soon. Texas A&M astronomer Nick Suntzeff weighs in.
It’s one small step for stains…
Fossils from tiny baby dinosaurs discovered in northernmost Alaska offer strong evidence that the prehistoric creatures lived year-round in the Arctic and were likely warm-blooded, according to a study published in the journal ‘Current Biology’.
A stellar structure known as the ‘Hand of God’ is a nebula of energy and particles blown by a pulsar left behind after a star exploded in our Milky Way Galaxy. Otherwise known as MSH 15-52 or G320.4-1.2, the object is located some 17,000 light-years away in the constellation of Circinus. Astronomers estimate that light from the supernova explosion reached Earth about 1,700 years ago, or when the Mayan empire was flourishing and the Jin dynasty ruled China. Previously, astronomers had released a full view of the structure. In a paper in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, they report how quickly the supernova remnant associated with the hand is moving, as it strikes a cloud of gas called RCW 89; the inner edge of this cloud forms a gas wall located about 35 light-years from the center of the explosion.
A cosmic analog of tree rings hints at how the bar’s spin slowed over time
With the Ingenuity helicopter continuing to demonstrate its abilities on Mars, NASA engineers are examining concepts for larger, more capable rotorcraft that could be flown on future missions.
A subject often dismissed as fantasy has found new legitimacy in an upcoming U.S. report into UFOs. Those who have spent their lives studying the subject say it will be a game-changer.
A previously unknown Stone Age population further complicates the human family tree
Stargazers around the world will be able to enjoy the glow of the Strawberry Moon on Thursday night.
It is “reasonable” to conclude that the U.S. government thinks some unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) are not human-made, a Harvard astrophysicist has said.