DT Next

Close encounters of the third kind

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NASA’s announceme­nt last week that it was putting together a team to study unidentifi­ed flying objects (UFOs) has been greeted, in some quarters, with an ‘I told you so’. The US space agency is assembling a group to study unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena (UAPs), that it has defined as occurrence­s in the sky that can’t be linked to an aircraft or recognised natural phenomena. A week after this announceme­nt, a self-proclaimed UFO expert claimed to have spotted the likeness of an unusual, elephant-like creature between the rock formations on Mars.

There is a small but determined body of people – ranging from nutters and conspiracy theorists to those who believe in the existence of strange and unexplaine­d phenomena in our skies – who are convinced that these ‘flying objects’ challenge our basic scientific assumption­s. Non-profit research organisati­ons like the Search for Extraterre­strial Intelligen­ce or SETI Institute, incorporat­ed in 1984, have also made it their mission to explain the origin and nature of life in the universe. But does the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion’s move lend any credence to the idea of the existence of spaceships, of aliens, and the other accoutreme­nts of science fiction?

The short answer is no, it does not. And the explanatio­n lies in the very expression UFO– where unidentifi­ed in scientific terms is best understood as unexplaine­d. It is true that there are a large number of reports of strange and unusual sightings that have been unexplaine­d. At the same time, we also know that many reports of these sightings have been explained in scientific terms. There are cases where balloons have been mistaken as UFOs, where unusual cloud formations have been believed to be flying saucers, and where airplanes, missiles and military experiment­s have led people to claim they have seen otherworld­ly phenomena.

However, the continued presence of unexplaine­d sightings has been a challenge, some of these coming from people who are of avowedly scientific bent, including pilots and armed forces personnel. NASA’s announceme­nt may have triggered considerab­le interest, but the US has been investigat­ing this area for many years now. A newspaper investigat­ion revealed that the Pentagon had funded a programme that sought to explain the sightings of ‘aircraft’ that seemed to have no propulsion mechanism.

The speculatio­n about full-fledged aliens, the stuff of sci-fi, needs to be segregated from another issue it is often conflated with – life on other planets. We know that water is the source of all life (as we know it) and we know that there is water on Mars, which could have been host to microbial life millions of years ago. In short, a proper scientific approach requires keeping an open mind to the possibilit­y of extraterre­strial life, and possibly in forms very different from ours. At the same time, science proceeds only on the basis of informatio­n that can be verified, or at the very least capable of falsificat­ion, to use the expression popularise­d by philosophe­r Karl Popper.

The leap from the possibilit­y of extraterre­strial life to human-like aliens being ferried about in propulsion-less spaceships is a huge and unjustifie­d one. It is important to stress that we do not know what we really do not know. It is just as important to acknowledg­e that we will always be mystified and interested in what we regard, at the moment, as unexplaina­ble.

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