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New nasa news about alien life12/2/2023 Navy released footage captured by pilots that showed odd wingless aircraft traveling at hypersonic speed, looking for all intents and purposes like bizarre alien machinery. True believers received a boost in April when the U.S. They are convinced that we've been visited by technological beings many times, pointing to stories about UFOs and alien encounters (pretty much all of which have been debunked). Read more: Interstellar visitor 'Oumuamua could still be alien technology, new study hints Navy declassifies UFO videos but don't believe the hypeĪ fair number of Earthlings don't care what ambiguous evidence scientists come up with to show that aliens are out there. It seems the debate might go on for a little longer at least. But in August, Loeb fired back, writing in a study stating that hydrogen ice is very easily heated, even in the cold depths of interstellar space, and should have sublimated away before 'Oumuamua reached our system. Other scientists have thrown cold water on Loeb's idea, pointing out that hydrogen ice could have melted off the object in a way that was similar to a rocket engine or other propulsion method. Avi Loeb, a Harvard University astrophysicist has proposed that, instead of a comet, the interstellar visitor could have been an alien probe pushed by a lightsail - a wide, millimeter-thin piece of material that accelerates as it's pushed by solar radiation. But close observations showed that 'Oumuamua was accelerating, as if something were propelling it, and scientists still aren't sure why. Dubbed 'Oumuamua, the entity is considered by most to be an interstellar comet flung out from around another star. Two years ago, scientists spotted a cigar-shaped object hurtling through the solar system. The research team doesn't claim that it is airtight evidence of space bugs, and many in the community aren't quite convinced, but if nothing else it will mean more funding in the hunt for life in unlikely places. Terrestrial bacteria are known to thrive in some pretty tough conditions, making the biological explanation a not unreasonable one. But a team aimed both the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope in Hawaii and the Atacama Large Millimetre/submillimetre Array in Chile at Venus and picked up phosphine's signature in a Venusian cloud layer with downright Earth-like temperatures and pressures. With its hellish surface temperature, outlandish pressure and sulfuric-acid clouds, Venus has long played second fiddle to the seemingly more potentially habitable Mars. The announcement pointed to the presence of phosphine, a rare and often poisonous gas that, on Earth at least, is almost always associated with living organisms. Read more: Alien hunters detect mystery signal from the closest star systemĪstrobiologists were a-twitter with anticipation and skepticism in September when news broke of potential evidence of life in the upper clouds of Venus. The unexplained signal reportedly shifted slightly while it was being observed, in a way that resembled the shift caused by the movement of a planet. Researchers are excited but cautious, explaining that they will need to figure out if more mundane sources, such as a comet, hydrogen cloud or even human technology, could be mimicking an alien signal, and that it will likely take time before they know one way or another if E.T. Proxima Centauri, which is just 4.2 light-years away, hosts one gas giant and one rocky world 17% larger than Earth that happens to be in its star's habitable zone, meaning liquid water could exist there. Earlier this month, researchers announced that they had captured a very mysterious beam of energy in the radio part of the electromagnetic spectrum at 980 megahertz, coming from the closest star to our own. The answer to weird signals happening in the universe is never aliens, until maybe it is.
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