What is a UFO? First, it is something that appears solid, so we call it an object. It also appears to move through the atmosphere, so we say it is flying. We can't tell what it is, so it is unidentified. That's why we call them UFO's.
Unfortunately, people use that term to mean alien spacecraft. They do that because saying UFO is quicker and easier to say than "alien spacecraft."
UFO's are real. They have been, seen photographed, filmed and videoed, so they are not just something someone made up.
But are they alien spacecraft? I don't know for sure. I believe some sightings can be explained.
I believe some are experimental aircraft. Some could be atmospheric in nature, such as lenticular clouds, ball lighting, thunderstorm sprites, or the result of electromagnetic interactions we don't yet understand.
I recently thought of another possibility: holograms. Holograms are projected images. The military could have tested holographic equipment over large cities to measure their effectiveness and range. Holograms could then be used as a weapon to deceive enemy forces or spies. This could also explain why some UFO's seem to enter mountains, ridges or cliffs. Some appear to move faster than man-made aircraft. A projected image can be made to do the same.
Of, course, another possibility is demons.
Whenever a UFO sighting is investigated, I believe a complete environmental data set should be compiled before analysis begins. Weather conditions (including space weather), geological background (seismic, topographical, mineralogical), RF (tv and radio broadcast stations in the area), and demographic (population, industrial, and commercial profiles) are the types of information needed beyond date, time, location, and visual evidence (witness accounts, pictures). Without this, investigations will continue to go round and round, and never come to a conclusion.
MUFON, are you listening?
No comments:
Post a Comment