The Guardian (USA)

Nasa forms independen­t team to study unexplaine­d UFO sightings

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Nasa is launching a study of UFOs as part of a new push toward high-risk, high-impact science.

The space agency announced on Thursday that it was setting up an independen­t team to see how much informatio­n is publicly available on the matter and how much more is needed to understand the unexplaine­d sightings. The experts will also consider how best to use all this informatio­n in the future.

Nasa’s science mission chief, Thomas Zurbuchen, acknowledg­ed the traditiona­l scientific community may see Nasa as “kind of selling out” by venturing into the controvers­ial topic, but he strongly disagrees.

“We are not shying away from reputation­al risk,” Zurbuchen said during a National Academy of Sciences webcast. “Our strong belief is that the biggest challenge of these phenomena is that it’s a data-poor field.”

Nasa considers this a first step in trying to explain mysterious sightings in the sky known as UAPs, or unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena.

The study will begin this fall and last nine months, costing no more than $100,000. It will be entirely open, with no classified military data used.

Nasa said the team will be led by astrophysi­cist David Spergel, president of the Simons Foundation for advancing scientific research. In a news conference, Spergel said the only preconceiv­ed notion going into the study is that the UAPs will probably have multiple explanatio­ns.

“We have to approach all these questions with a sense of humility,” Spergel said. “I spent most of my career as a cosmologis­t. I can tell you we don’t know what makes up 95% of the universe. So there are things we don’t understand.”

 ?? Photograph: DoD/AFP/Getty Images ?? In this 28 April 2020 file photo, a video grab image courtesy of the US Department of Defense shows an ‘unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena’.
Photograph: DoD/AFP/Getty Images In this 28 April 2020 file photo, a video grab image courtesy of the US Department of Defense shows an ‘unidentifi­ed aerial phenomena’.

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