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Almost identified flying objects - Brazil

Aeronautics releases documents detailing alleged sightings of aliens and cases of people "infected"

By Bruno Abbud of Veja magazine - source here


Flagrante ufológico
Flagrant UFO that triggered the "Operation Saucer"
Monday, June 23, 1969. It was past midnight, it was raining and windy thin weak when Dayse Arantes Carneiro, 42, a stay-at-home mom and former typist, drew the attention of the child to a point that shone in the sky without the stars of the north-central Minas Gerais - more precisely between the towns of Guaraciama and Bocaiúva, about 400 km from Belo Horizonte.

Aboard a Rural Willys truck at 40 mph, Dayse noticed an object floating over the trees, 500 meters away, at the foot of the hill. "It was like a fire," reported at the time. "Or a round building with lighted windows at night." The following day, stay-at-home woke up with swollen eyes and sore. He walked to the mirror and realized they were opaque. The feeling disappeared after a few days. Never felt anything like that.


A month and a half later, Dayse reported the case to an official of the Research System of Unidentified Aerial (SIOANI), an agency of the Air Force created in April 1969 and officially ended three years later by the Medici government. The boy looked at the physical and psychological characteristics of the interviewee - considered healthy - and filled a 22-page report, filed under the acronym of classified information from the military.


Today, the document is among nearly 5,000 pages housed at the National Archive in Brasilia, publicly available, detailing sightings of unidentified flying objects, aliens and suspected cases of people "infected" by spotlights registered in Brazil, 1952 2009. You can access much of the material on the Internet.


Designed by Major-Brigadier Jose Vaz da Silva and the aviator Maj. Gilberto de Mello Zani - both deceased - SIOANI sought and investigated all the cases related to UFOs in Brazil during the three years of existence. Why not be a priority activity for the government, the court ended its activities. The Air Force says it does not have equipment or resources to do investigations of UFOs, so it simply makes the record of reported episodes.


This record continues to be the duty of the Armed Forces. The Air Force, for example, developed a standard questionnaire that today is populated by some who claimed to have seen extraterrestrials.


The opening of the documents began in October 2008, after repeated requests from Brazilian ufologists. However, only in late 2010 through the concierge 551/GC3, Lieutenant Brigadier-the-air Juniti Saito regulated access to roles, defining how they would be received, cataloged and archived. As in all countries, UFOs and conspiracy theories go hand in hand also in Brazil. While the Air Force ensures that 100% of the documents were released, the ufologists say less than 5%.

"I estimate that 2% or 3% of all existing documents were revealed by the government," said Ademar José Gevaerd, director of the Brazilian Center for Research of UFOs (CBPDV). "They released less than 400 pages covering the whole decade of 2000. I, alone, produce it in three months. " Fernando de Aragao Ramalho, vice president of the Brazilian Studies Extraterrestrial Entity (EBE-ET), agrees: "With absolute certainty the military hide some of the material." The pair said that for years had access to documents not included in the batch released by the government. The Air Force denies.

"Pursuant to the determination of Air Force Command since August 2010, the Brazilian Aerospace Defense Command (COMDABRA), whose mission is to perform homeland defense against all forms of aerospace attack, spent annually to send all their records of sightings to the National Archives. All records, without exception, are being passed, "he said in a statement, the Center for Social Communication of the Air Force.


The differences among ufologists, military and scientists are as old as the existence of people who claim to have seen UFOs and ETs. On June 27, 1986, for example, ufologist Claudeir Covo and physicist at the University of São Paulo (USP) Luiz Carlos Menezes staged a debate in the pages of Jornal da Tarde. "Seriously, there are flying saucers and the aliens are interested in the Earth," said Covo. Menezes retorted: "Oh yeah? So why not come down for a coffee? "


One of the earliest references to flying saucers of humanity, according to UFO researchers, appears recorded in the Bible. In 60 BC, the prophet Ezekiel stopped on the river Chebar in Mesopotamia, and saw "a wheel within a wheel, all full of eyes, which came down from heaven in a cloud of smoke." The theologians attach the image to a "divine vision".


Since then, the shape of flying objects such as those described by Ezekiel became a classic.In Brazil, the most famous of them went down in history after the "Operation Saucer" - which displaced the BAF to Para to investigate strange apparitions. In October 1977, the city of Colares, near the island of Marajo a mysterious luminous object was seen after 19h when flying a few feet of soil.


In the documents of the National Intelligence Service (NIS) the case appears described as a UFO that emitted an intense beam of light toward people who, trembling, and lost their senses dawn sick. Wellaide Cecim de Carvalho, at the time of medical, Hospital Necklaces, confided to agents of the INS that he had met men and women with small holes in the skin, generalized paralysis and burns. About to send reports to the Department of Health, Wellaide preferred to refrain, for fear of ridicule.


Alfredo De La O, Father of the city, and Ildone Favacho Soeiro, mayor of Lookouts, neighboring district, also reported seeing a UFO: "An object crossing the sky at amazing speed, casting a yellow light and in absolute silence." The INS sent a team to photograph the local population called the "animal".


Armed with a camera Minolta SRT-101, the officers failed to record the image: "a clear spot, like a light, not allowing it to make any conjecture about their form." However, when they returned to Bethlehem, remained laconic, too afraid of being ridiculed by their peers. For days, at dusk, residents continued to organize processions Necklaces, lighting fires and drop rockets in order to scare the "animal". The case gained worldwide proportions and the issue was highlighted on the covers of several newspapers.

Equally emblematic, another episode that impressed ufologists worldwide was "The Night official UFO in Brazil," in May 19, 1986: an air traffic controller in Sao Jose dos Campos detected unknown lights in the skies of the region and warned the FAB . Quickly, supersonic fighters have been deployed to chase the UFO, but no localiz'a them (probably the aliens fled after seeing the power of the national military arsenal on the wings).

However, the Roswell event happened in Varginha Brazil, half a century after the most famous episode of the alien in U.S. history. While ufologists Americans accuse the government had confiscated artifacts and alien bodies, taken after the crash of a flying saucer in New Mexico in 1947, Brazilians believe that ET miner (for adoption, it is good to point out) just stopped to visit the region after having been imprisoned by the Army on January 20, 1996.

2012 Prepare for the Alien Invasion? First Contact? Dr. Carol Rosin.

Ufo filmed in Ipatinga, Minas Gerais 19 /12 / 2010, By Rafael Perroni.

Yes, thats us.

UK schools doing UFO crash drills


There seems to be a growing trend among schools to stage a UFO crash, and then teachstudents how to react, as well as to “properly” investigate and report on the incident.
It sounds like a lot of fun, and a great way to fire up a student’s imagination as well as writing skills. Hell, I wish we would have done a staged UFO crash at my school.
The latest “UFO drill” took place Wed, Sept 29, at Sandford Primary School in the UK. The kids were treated to a full UFO crash scenario that included wreckage, police tape, and real police officers. (Perhaps it was only lacking men from the government telling the children not to talk about what was seen.)
What’s interesting is that “police were on hand to show the children how to properly investigate the UFO crash site.” Um, were any of the officers speaking from experience?
A news article at The Weston Mercury elaborates on the role played by the officers:
Teacher and organiser Victoria Shepherd said: “PCSO Wright and PC Church were brilliant. They helped the children secure the scene and talked about what to do in an emergency, how they gathered evidence, how to interview witnesses etc.”
EDIT — Oct 27: The article at The Weston Mercury seems to have been taken down, and the link is dead. Also, there’s now different article at The Mercury about another exercise that was done Oct 18. The article is titled “Pupils Investigate UFO.” St Georges Primary did a writing exercise ”trying to find out what caused a UFO to appear in the grounds of their school.” Thanks for the heads-up, Alli  :)
Are UFO drills becoming something of a routine part of the curriculum in the UK? It’s certainly becoming more and more of a common event. Each time, it’s a joint exercise put in place by the school and local law enforcement.
A similar drill took place in Feb of 2009 when Lanchester Endowed Parochial Primary, in County Durham, staged a surprise “crash” behind the school. In Sept 2008 “children from an Edgware school were made to believe aliens had landed in their playground by teachers and police.” Again, each time it was conducted by the school system and police — teaching children what to do in event of a UFO event. Afterward, the kids are asked to write about their experience.

Residents phoned 999 dozens of times over 'ghost and UFO worries'




Residents phoned 999 dozens of times over 'ghost and UFO worries'
Dozens of residents phoned police over fears that UFOs were landing. Photo: CORBIS

By Andrew Hough
Published: 8:30AM BST 04 Sep 2010

Officers say one emergency call came from a man who rang police claiming to have seen the ghosts of ''two old ladies in a white Fiesta'' on a dual carriageway.
Other worried calls came from people who spotted ghosts or poltergeists on CCTV cameras and another who said he'd seen a ghost which could ''make me a million quid''.


Dozens more calls were also made claiming to have seen aliens including one man reporting that his wife and dog were being abducted by Martians.
More than 150 calls, details of which were released under the Freedom of Information Act, claimed to have seen spooks or UFOs were made to Devon and Cornwall Police over the past 15 years.
One caller claimed a spectre gave him a ''horrible hairstyle and some dodgy photos. Ghost is Paul Newman.''
In one case in October 2003, the force recorded: ''Caller states he has got a ghost on CCTV. Caller wanted advice on who he could contact as the footage was going to make him a million. Advised to go to the press.''
In July 2004 someone from Newton Abbot in Devon reported seeing a ''ghost driver'' on the A38.
The police log recorded: ''Two old ladies in white Fiesta - come onto the A38B carriageway on the off slip facing the wrong way. Stopped on the hard shoulder, trying to reverse back up the off slip.''
A man in Callington, Cornwall, reported his wife and dog being abducted by aliens, while another said he'd seen UFO over a pie factory in Okehampton, Devon.
Other 999 calls were made to report ''a long, white cylinder thing like a train in the sky'' and ''orange balls moving slowly upwards and in all different directions''.
A spokesman for Devon and Cornwall Police said most of the incidents were logged as ''non attendance'' or ''routine'' although in some cases officers were forced to respond.
''Our call centre operators take many types of calls and the vast majority are for emergencies or relate to non urgent inquiries of one type or another," he said.
''There are occasions though when a more unusual call is received.
"These are all dealt with professionally by our highly trained staff who access and process them in an appropriate way.''
Source The Telegraph, UK

Scientists: "Aliens might not have radio"



QMI AGENCY

Toronto SUN

A new theory has stargazers thinking maybe we haven't found signs of extra-terrestrial life yet because we're going about it the wrong way. Right now, a scientific project known as the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) is leading the way in the search for life beyond Earth.

Their method is to scan outer space for radio transmissions, new or old. They've been doing it for 50 years, and so far, it hasn't really worked out.Physicists interviewed in the Economist say that's not necessarily because there are no aliens. But maybe aliens just don't use radio technology, they propose,

Paul Davies, a physicist at Arizona State University, pointed out thatradio-communications are likely to be a short-lived technology, even on Earth, where people are increasingly using fibre optics to communicate.Instead, Dick Carrigan, a retired particle physicist, suggested looking for other signs, like evidence of tampering with the energy output or pollution.The basic idea is to think outside the box and not focus on modern Earth technologies, which could easily become obsolete.Instead of looking for the earliest signs of industrialization, then, perhaps the thing to do is to let the imagination run riot and ask what technology might do to a solar system if it had tens or hundreds of thousands of years to work its magic,” reads the Economist article, Signs of Life.

Hubble's role in search for aliens

Hubble's role in search for aliens

Hubble Ultra Deep Field (Nasa)
Very distant galaxies have been spotted in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field

By Sir Martin Rees
Astronomer Royal
Source: BBC News, today.

The powerful vision of the Hubble Telescope - which turns 20 this week - has expanded our cosmic horizons and brought into sharper focus a new set of mysteries about the universe that is our home.

To those whose science is gleaned from the media, astronomy may seem to be on a roll. And it is.

We have established, in outline, a consensus picture of how, from a hot dense beginning nearly 14 billion years ago, our expanding universe developed galaxies, stars and planets.

We can set our entire solar system in a grand evolving scenario stretching back to a Big Bang - an era when everything was hotter than the centres of stars, and expanding on a timescale of a few seconds.

Hubble image (Nasa/Esa/STSCI
Iconic image of the "Butterfly Nebula", showing the end stages of a star

Only in the past 10 years have we learnt that large numbers of "worlds" exist in orbit around other stars.

Present techniques aren't sensitive enough to find an earth-like planet, but the ones so far detected - mostly as big as Jupiter or Saturn, the giants of our own solar system - may well be the largest members of other planetary systems as varied and interesting as ours.

If there is life on Mars, it is very primitive.

But could some newly discovered planets orbiting other stars harbour biospheres as complex as our Earth's, perhaps with intelligent life?

That question can now be seriously addressed.

There are on-going searches for transmissions that might be "artificial" in origin.

These efforts are privately funded: they have a hard time getting public funding because the topic is encumbered by "flaky" associations with UFOs, and so forth.

Despite the heavy odds against success, I certainly support these efforts, because of the philosophical import of any detection of a manifestly artificial signal.

Even if we couldn't make much sense of it, we'd have learnt that "intelligence" wasn't unique to the hardware inside human skulls, and had emerged elsewhere.

Peering back in time

But let's now enlarge our cosmic horizon further. Our galaxy, with its hundred billion stars, is similar to millions of others visible with large telescopes.

Andromeda, the nearest big galaxy to our own lies about two million light years away. Its constituent stars are orbiting in a disc, seen obliquely.

The nearest few thousand galaxies - those out to about 300 million light years - have been mapped out in detail.

As we probe deeper into space, towards our horizon, we probe further back in time (because the light now reaching us set out a long time ago): we see the universe as it was when it was younger and more close-packed.

And we can now see very far back.

Hubble's 3D map showing the cosmic "scaffold" of dark matter, upon which stars and galaxies are assembled

Among the iconic images from the Hubble Space Telescope are those that show a small patch of sky, less than a hundredth of the area covered by a full moon.

Viewed through a moderate-sized telescope, these patches would look completely blank.

But these ultra-sensitive long exposures reveal many hundreds of faint smudges of light - a billion times fainter than any star that can be seen with the unaided eye.

But each is an entire galaxy, thousands of light years across, which appears so small and faint because of its huge distance.

A huge span of time separates us from these remote galaxies.

They are being viewed when they have only recently formed: we are looking back more than 90% of the time to the Big Bang.

In the beginning...

These remote galaxies have not yet settled down into steadily-spinning "pinwheels" like Andromeda.

Some consist mainly of glowing diffuse gas that hasn't yet condensed into stars.

SOME KEY HUBBLE TELESCOPE DISCOVERIES TO DATE
Hubble Space Telescope
In what was a prime mission objective, Hubble fixed the Universe's age at about 13.7 billion years - later confirmed by other instruments
Hubble's ability to detect faint supernovae contributed to the discovery that the expansion rate of the Universe is accelerating
Hubble was one of two telescopes to make the first direct images of planets orbiting another star - historic images made public last November
Hubble provided the first direct measurements of the three-dimensional distribution of dark matter in space

When we look at Andromeda, we sometimes wonder if there may be other beings looking back at us.

Maybe there are.

But on these remote galaxies there surely aren't. Their stars haven't have had time to fuse pristine hydrogen into carbon, oxygen and silicon - the atoms needed for planets and life.

What about the far future? Six billion years from now, when the sun dies, the galaxies will be more widely dispersed, and will be intrinsically somewhat fainter because their stellar population will have aged, and less gas will survive to form bright new stars.

But what might happen still further ahead?

A very surprising discovery aided by the Hubble Telescope is that the galaxies are dispersing at a rate that is actually accelerating, under the influence of some mysterious force.

The best long-range forecast, therefore, is that the cosmos will continue to expand, becoming ever emptier, ever darker and ever colder.

We can't predict what role life will eventually carve out for itself: it could become extinct; on the other hand, it could achieve such dominance that it can influence the entire cosmos.

The latter is the province of science fiction, but it can't be dismissed as absurd.

After all, it's taken little more than one billion years for natural selection to lead from the first multi-cellular organisms to Earth's present biosphere (including us).

And what about the very beginning?

The first tiny fraction of a second of cosmic history is still shrouded in mystery, because the conditions then - the densities, temperatures, and so forth - would have been far beyond those we can simulate in the lab.

Here we enter a realm where theorists can only speculate.

One of my favourite magazine covers showed a red circle, beneath the caption "the universe when it was a trillionth of a trillionth of a trillionth of a second old -- actual size".

According to a popular theory, our universe "inflated" from a hyper-dense blob no bigger than that, under the influence of a cosmic repulsion 120 powers of ten fiercer than the force that drives the galaxies ever-further apart today.

In the past two decades, the Hubble Telescope (and its counterparts on the ground) have hugely expanded our cosmic horizons - but, as always in science, this progress brings into sharper focus a new set of mysteries which will challenge the next generation of astronomers and fascinate all who wonder about the universe that is our home.

Sir Martin Rees is astronomer royal, master of Trinity College, Cambridge, and president of the Royal Society

Nearby galaxy emitting radio waves

Source: Zeenews
Image: Harvard

New York: An unknown object in the nearby galaxy -- M82 -- is sending out radio waves, an incident which has never happened in the universe before.

Researchers at the Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics near Macclesfield in UK, who have traced the radio waves said that”they don't know what it is".

The team, which presented the discovery at the Royal Astronomical Society National Astronomy Meeting in Glasgow today, said the thing appeared in May last year while they were monitoring an unrelated stellar explosion in M82.

"A bright spot of radio emission emerged over only a few days, quite rapidly in astronomical terms. Since then it has done very little except baffle astrophysicists," lead researcher Tom Muxlow was quoted as saying by New Scientist.

"It certainly does not fit the pattern of radio emissions from supernovae: they usually get brighter over a few weeks and then fade away over months, with the spectrum of the radiation changing all the while".

They added, the new source has hardly changed in brightness over the course of a year, and its spectrum is steady.

Yet it does seem to be moving and fast: its apparent sideways velocity is four times the speed of light. Such apparent "superluminal" motion has been seen before in high-speed jets of material squirted out by some black holes.

The stuff in these jets is moving towards us at a slight angle and travelling at a fair fraction of the speed of light, and the effects of relativity produce a kind of optical illusion that makes the motion appear superluminal.

Could the object be a black hole? It is not quite in the middle of M82, where astronomers would expect to find the kind of supermassive central black hole that most other galaxies have. Which leaves the possibility that it could be a smaller-scale "microquasar".

A microquasar is formed after a very massive star explodes, leaving behind a black hole around 10 to 20 times the mass of the sun, which then starts feeding on gas from a surviving companion star. Microquasars do emit radio waves but none seen in our galaxy is as bright as the new source in M82.

Microquasars also produce plenty of X-rays, whereas no X-rays have been seen from the mystery object. "So that's not right either", said the researchers who used the MERLIN network of radio telescopes in the UK for the discovery.

His best guess is still that the radio source is some kind of dense object "accreting surrounding material", perhaps a large black hole or a black hole in an unusual environment.

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