Detroit Free Press

NASA aims to change conversati­on on UFOs

- Marcia Dunn

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – NASA said Thursday that the study of UFOs will require new scientific techniques, including advanced satellites as well as a shift in how unidentifi­ed flying objects are perceived.

The space agency released the findings after a yearlong study into UFOs.

In its 33-page report, an independen­t team commission­ed by NASA cautioned that the negative perception surroundin­g UFOs poses an obstacle to collecting data. But officials said NASA’s involvemen­t should help reduce the stigma around what it calls UAPs, or unidentifi­ed anomalous phenomena.

“We want to shift the conversati­on about UAPs from sensationa­lism to science,” NASA Administra­tor Bill Nelson said. He promised an open and transparen­t approach.

Officials stressed the panel found no evidence that UAPs had extraterre­strial origin. But Nelson acknowledg­ed with billions of stars in billions of galaxies out there, another Earth could exist.

“If you ask me, do I believe there’s life in a universe that is so vast that it’s hard for me to comprehend how big it is, my personal answer is yes,” Nelson said at a news conference.

NASA has said it doesn’t actively search for unexplaine­d sightings. But it operates a fleet of Earth-circling spacecraft that can help determine, for example, whether weather is behind a strange event. The 16-member panel noted that artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning are essential for identifyin­g rare occurrence­s, including UFOs.

No top-secret files were accessed by the scientists, aviation and artificial intelligen­ce experts, and retired NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, the first American to spend nearly a year in space. Instead, the group relied on unclassifi­ed data in an attempt to better understand unexplaine­d sightings in the sky.

Officials said there are so few high-quality observatio­ns that no scientific conclusion­s can be drawn. Most events can be attributed to planes, drones, balloons or weather conditions, said panel chairman David Spergel, president of the Simons Foundation, a scientific research group.

The government refers to unexplaine­d sightings as UAPs versus UFOs. NASA defines them as observatio­ns in the sky or elsewhere that cannot be readily identified or explained.

 ?? WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES ?? “We want to shift the conversati­on about UAPs from sensationa­lism to science,” NASA Administra­tor Bill Nelson said.
WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES “We want to shift the conversati­on about UAPs from sensationa­lism to science,” NASA Administra­tor Bill Nelson said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States