The space agency on Thursday announced a new study that will recruit leading
scientists to examine unidentified aerial phenomena—a subject that has long
fascinated the public and recently gained high-level attention from
Congress.
The project will begin early this fall and last around nine months, focusing
on identifying available data, how to gather more data in future, and how
NASA can analyze the findings to try to move the needle on scientific
understanding.
"Over the decades, NASA has answered the call to tackle some of the most
perplexing mysteries we know of, and this is no different," Daniel Evans,
the NASA scientist responsible for coordinating the study, told reporters on
a call.
While NASA probes and rovers scour the solar system for the fossils of
ancient microbes, and its astronomers look for so-called "technosignatures"
on distant planets for signs of intelligent civilizations, this is the first
time the agency will investigate unexplained phenomena in Earth's skies.
With its access to a broad range of scientific tools, NASA is well placed
not just to demystify UFOs and deepen scientific understanding, but also to
find ways to mitigate the phenomena, a key part of its mission to ensure the
safety of aircraft, said the agency's chief scientist, Thomas Zurbuchen.
The announcement comes as the field of UFO study, once a poorly-regarded
research backwater, is gaining more mainstream traction.
Last month, Congress held a public hearing into UFOs, while a US
intelligence report last year cataloged 144 sightings that it said could not
be explained. It did not rule out alien origin.
NASA's study will be independent of the Pentagon's Airborne Object
Identification and Management Synchronization Group, but the space agency
"has coordinated widely across the government regarding how to apply the
tools of science," it said in a statement.
A paucity in the number of UFO observations make it difficult at present for
the scientific community to draw conclusions.
Therefore, said astrophysicist David Spergel, who will lead the research,
the first task of the group would be identifying the extent of data out
there from sources including civilians, government, nonprofits and
companies.
Another overarching goal of NASA is to deepen credibility in this field of
study.
"There is a great deal of stigma associated with UAP among our naval
aviators and aviation community," said Evans.
"One of the things we tangentially hope to do as part of this study, simply
by talking about it in the open, is to help to remove some of the stigma
associated with it, and that will yield obviously, increased access to data,
more reports, more sightings."
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Space & Astrophysics