Friday, August 12, 2011
Ontological oddities
Europa mars radio signals----
a hoax ---- but enhances our creativity towards mystery... and the truth as well...
http://www.totalthinker.com/Mars/
http://www.totalthinker.com/Mars/europa/Europa.html
a hoax ---- but enhances our creativity towards mystery... and the truth as well...
http://www.totalthinker.com/Mars/
http://www.totalthinker.com/Mars/europa/Europa.html
Mysterious Ice Domes Hint At Life On Europa
by Kate Melville
4 September 2003
http://www.scienceagogo.com/news/20030803205430data_trunc_sys.shtml
A new University of Colorado at Boulder study of Jupiter's moon Europa may help explain the origin of the giant ice domes peppering its surface and the implications for discovering evidence of past or present life forms there. A paper on the subject co-authored by Pappalardo and Barr was presented at the annual Division of Planetary Sciences Meeting held Sept. 2 through Sept. 6 in Monterey, Calif. DPS is an arm of the American Astronomical Society. The meeting schedule is available at http://dps03.arc.nasa.gov/administrative/schedule/index.html.
Europa appears to have strong tidal action as it elliptically orbits Jupiter - strong enough "to squeeze the moon" and heat its interior, said Pappalardo. "Warm ice blobs rise upward through the ice shell toward the colder surface, melting out saltier regions in their path. The less dense blobs can continue rising all the way to the surface to create the observed domes."
The domes are huge - some more than four miles in diameter and 300 feet high - and are found in clusters on Europa's surface, said Barr, who did much of the modeling.
"We are excited about our research, because we think it now is possible that any present or past life or even just the chemistry of the ocean may be lifted to the surface, forming these domes. It essentially would be like an elevator ride for microbes."
Barr likened the upwelling of warmer ice from the inner ice shell to its surface to a pot of boiling spaghetti sauce. "The burner under the pan sends the hottest sauce to the top, creating the bubbles at the surface," she said. "The trouble is Europa's icy skin is as cold and as hard as a rock."
The idea that either small amounts of salt or sulfuric acid might help to create Europa's domes was Pappalardo's, who knew about similar domes on Earth that form in clumps in arid regions. On Earth, it is salt that is buoyant enough to move up through cracks and fissures in rock formations to form dome clusters at the surface.
"In addition, infrared and color images taken of Europa by NASA's Galileo spacecraft seem to indicate some of the ice on the surface of these domes is contaminated. Impurities seen at the surface are clues to the internal composition of the Jovian moon, telling of a salty ice shell," he said.
"The surface of Europa is constantly being blasted by radiation from Jupiter, which likely precludes any life on the moon's surface," said Barr. "But a spacecraft might be able to detect signs of microbes just under the surface."
Both Pappalardo and Barr also are affiliated with CU-Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics. The project was funded by NASA's Exobiology Program and Graduate Student Research Program.
Pappalardo recently served on a National Research Council panel that reaffirmed a spacecraft should be launched in the coming decade with the goal of orbiting Europa. He currently is part of a NASA team developing goals for the Jupiter Icy Moons Orbiter mission.
The scientific objectives of the mission probably will include confirming the presence of an ocean at Europa, remotely measuring the composition of the surface and scouting out potential landing sites for a follow-on lander mission.
Assistant Professor Robert Pappalardo and doctoral student Amy Barr previously believed the mysterious domes may be formed by blobs of ice from the interior of the frozen shell that were being pushed upward by thermal upwelling from warmer ice underneath. Europa is believed to harbor an ocean beneath its icy surface.
But the scientists now think the dome creation also requires small amounts of impurities, such as sodium chloride or sulfuric acid. Basically the equivalent of table salt or battery acid, these compounds melt ice at low temperatures, allowing warmer, more pristine blobs of ice to force the icy surface up in places, creating the domes.
"We have been trying for some time to understand how these ice blobs can push up through the frozen shell of Europa, which is likely about 13 miles thick," said Pappalardo of the astrophysical and planetary sciences department. "Our models now show that a combination of upwelling warm ice in the frozen shell's interior, combined with small amounts of impurities such as sodium chloride or sulfuric acid, would provide enough of a force to form these domes."
by Kate Melville
4 September 2003
http://www.scienceagogo.com/news/20030803205430data_trunc_sys.shtml
A new University of Colorado at Boulder study of Jupiter's moon Europa may help explain the origin of the giant ice domes peppering its surface and the implications for discovering evidence of past or present life forms there. A paper on the subject co-authored by Pappalardo and Barr was presented at the annual Division of Planetary Sciences Meeting held Sept. 2 through Sept. 6 in Monterey, Calif. DPS is an arm of the American Astronomical Society. The meeting schedule is available at http://dps03.arc.nasa.gov/administrative/schedule/index.html.
Europa appears to have strong tidal action as it elliptically orbits Jupiter - strong enough "to squeeze the moon" and heat its interior, said Pappalardo. "Warm ice blobs rise upward through the ice shell toward the colder surface, melting out saltier regions in their path. The less dense blobs can continue rising all the way to the surface to create the observed domes."
The domes are huge - some more than four miles in diameter and 300 feet high - and are found in clusters on Europa's surface, said Barr, who did much of the modeling.
"We are excited about our research, because we think it now is possible that any present or past life or even just the chemistry of the ocean may be lifted to the surface, forming these domes. It essentially would be like an elevator ride for microbes."
Barr likened the upwelling of warmer ice from the inner ice shell to its surface to a pot of boiling spaghetti sauce. "The burner under the pan sends the hottest sauce to the top, creating the bubbles at the surface," she said. "The trouble is Europa's icy skin is as cold and as hard as a rock."
The idea that either small amounts of salt or sulfuric acid might help to create Europa's domes was Pappalardo's, who knew about similar domes on Earth that form in clumps in arid regions. On Earth, it is salt that is buoyant enough to move up through cracks and fissures in rock formations to form dome clusters at the surface.
"In addition, infrared and color images taken of Europa by NASA's Galileo spacecraft seem to indicate some of the ice on the surface of these domes is contaminated. Impurities seen at the surface are clues to the internal composition of the Jovian moon, telling of a salty ice shell," he said.
"The surface of Europa is constantly being blasted by radiation from Jupiter, which likely precludes any life on the moon's surface," said Barr. "But a spacecraft might be able to detect signs of microbes just under the surface."
Both Pappalardo and Barr also are affiliated with CU-Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics. The project was funded by NASA's Exobiology Program and Graduate Student Research Program.
Pappalardo recently served on a National Research Council panel that reaffirmed a spacecraft should be launched in the coming decade with the goal of orbiting Europa. He currently is part of a NASA team developing goals for the Jupiter Icy Moons Orbiter mission.
The scientific objectives of the mission probably will include confirming the presence of an ocean at Europa, remotely measuring the composition of the surface and scouting out potential landing sites for a follow-on lander mission.
Assistant Professor Robert Pappalardo and doctoral student Amy Barr previously believed the mysterious domes may be formed by blobs of ice from the interior of the frozen shell that were being pushed upward by thermal upwelling from warmer ice underneath. Europa is believed to harbor an ocean beneath its icy surface.
But the scientists now think the dome creation also requires small amounts of impurities, such as sodium chloride or sulfuric acid. Basically the equivalent of table salt or battery acid, these compounds melt ice at low temperatures, allowing warmer, more pristine blobs of ice to force the icy surface up in places, creating the domes.
"We have been trying for some time to understand how these ice blobs can push up through the frozen shell of Europa, which is likely about 13 miles thick," said Pappalardo of the astrophysical and planetary sciences department. "Our models now show that a combination of upwelling warm ice in the frozen shell's interior, combined with small amounts of impurities such as sodium chloride or sulfuric acid, would provide enough of a force to form these domes."
Musion Eyeliner 3D Holographic Projection
http://www.musion.co.uk/
Black Eyed Peas Hologram - Live at the NRJ Music Awards 2011 from Musion Systems on Vimeo.
Black Eyed Peas Hologram - Live at the NRJ Music Awards 2011 from Musion Systems on Vimeo.
Here is a video of The Black Eyed Peas performing at the NRJ's in Cannes on Saturday 22nd January 2011. The NRJ Awards are France's equivalent to the Grammys with 6million viewers in France alone. This performance features Fergie and Taboo performing as holograms alongside Will. I. Am. and Apl.De.Ap using the Musion Eyeliner System. The original upload of the video on YouTube generated nearly 50,000 plays in 48 hours.
Lifelike Holograms at Work in a London Airport
February 02, 2011 Techni Glee!
http://techniglee.com/2011/02/lifelike-holograms-at-work-in-london-airport/
http://techniglee.com/2011/02/lifelike-holograms-at-work-in-london-airport/
Meet Holly and Graham, London Luton Airport’s two newest employees. Although they may look real, they aren’t. Holly and Graham are Holograms, quite a coincidence eh?
The duo started work just a couple of days ago at the airport’s security search terminals. They smile and kindly prompt passengers take off their belts, pull their laptops out and all the usual gibberish typically mumbled by a less than enthusiastic guard.
The holograms look strikingly realistic. The airport believes the holograms will improve the overall passenger experience because they are visually compelling and verbally consistent.
The duo started work just a couple of days ago at the airport’s security search terminals. They smile and kindly prompt passengers take off their belts, pull their laptops out and all the usual gibberish typically mumbled by a less than enthusiastic guard.
The holograms look strikingly realistic. The airport believes the holograms will improve the overall passenger experience because they are visually compelling and verbally consistent.
Is Hollywood's 'Alien Fever' Inspired by Real Science Finds?by Mike Wall, SPACE.com Senior Writer Date: 01 August 2011 Time: 03:30 PM ET |
Still of Harrison Ford and Daniel Craig in Cowboys & Aliens. CREDIT: Photo by Zade Rosenthal/Universal Studios and DreamWorks II – © Universal Studios and DreamWorks II Distribution Co. LLC |
Hollywood seems to have caught alien fever.
In the past few months, a slew of big-budget alien movies has hit theaters, from kiddie flicks ("Mars Needs Moms") to comedies ("Paul") to high-octane action films ("Battle: Los Angeles," "Green Lantern" and the just-released "Cowboys & Aliens," among others). And many more such movies are on the way, both this year and next.
This glut of alien sci-fi films comes at a time when scientific discoveries are making the existence of life beyond Earth seem more and more plausible. And that might not be a coincidence, some experts say.
"It's a long-term interest, but the science now is making it that much more realistic," said Emory University physics professor Sidney Perkowitz, author of "Hollywood Science: Movies, Science, and the End of the World" (Columbia University Press, 2007). "I think Hollywood and science will feed into each other on this." [10 Alien Encounters Debunked]
Art imitating (alien) life?
Just 20 years ago, scientists had yet to find a single planet beyond our own solar system. Now the count of confirmed extrasolar planets tops 550, with many more about to be added to the list.
In February, for example, scientists announced that NASA's Kepler space telescope had detected 1,235 candidate alien worlds in its first four months of operation. Of those, 54 likely orbit in their host stars' habitable zone — the range of distances that could support liquid water.
These candidate planets need to be confirmed by follow-up observations, but NASA researchers have estimated that at least 80 percent will end up being the real deal.
And last year, astronomers reported strong evidence that the Saturn moon Enceladus likely harbors a huge and salty ocean beneath its icy crust. Subsurface oceans are also suspected to occur on other moons, such as Saturn's Titan and Europa, a satellite of Jupiter.
In short, the prospect that life exists beyond Earth — and perhaps even beyond our solar system — is becoming more and more likely. This is big news that affects the way many people view our species and its place in the universe.
And now more than ever, Hollywood may be tapping into that growing well of interest.
"My suspicion is, even if Hollywood weren't pushing it, people would be interested," Perkowitz told SPACE.com. "I think the straight science turns them on, but there's no doubt that Hollywood knows how to enhance it, and how to use it in really effective ways."
At least four distinct plumes of water ice spew out from the south polar region of Saturn's moon Enceladus. The image was taken in visible light with the Cassini spacecraft narrow-angle camera on Dec. 25, 2009.
CREDIT: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
CREDIT: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
Hollywood has always loved aliens
Of course, it's not as if Hollywood has just discovered that aliens can be box-office gold. Alien films have been around — and have been raking in big bucks — for decades.
"There's money in aliens," said Seth Shostak, senior astronomer at the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) Institute in Mountain View, Calif. "That's been true for a very long time. When I was a kid, there was money in aliens." [TV's Best Science Fiction Shows Ever]
So Shostak — who has advised Hollywood on a number of feature films, including 1997's "Contact" — thinks this year's surge may just be part of Hollywood's regular cycle, which tends to feature waves of alien movies from time to time.
He does, however, sense an overall increase in alien movies in the last two decades. But this trend may have more to do with geopolitical developments than scientific ones, he said.
"I think that they became popular after the collapse, in 1991, of the Soviet Union," Shostak told SPACE.com. "You still needed bad guys in movies, and all of a sudden your favorite bad guys — who came from behind the Iron Curtain — they weren't available anymore."
Aliens were a natural choice to wrest this role from the Russians, according to Shostak. First of all, aliens won't complain about being caricatured or typecast. [Q&A With 'Cowboys & Aliens' Writer Damon Lindelof]
"There's no anti-defamation league, if you will, for the aliens," Shostak said. "And they have another advantage: They don't ask for residuals. They're cheap. You have to computer-animate them, that's true, but that's a lot cheaper than hiring a big-time Hollywood star."
Indeed, computer-generated imagery (CGI) has matured significantly over the past few decades, roughly paralleling the rise in alien films that Shostak sees. Perkowitz thinks that's no coincidence.
"They can make really spectacular and persuasive aliens now, which they couldn't do 30 years ago," Perkowitz said. "Thirty years ago, you had a guy jumping around in an alien suit. Now it's much more realistic."
Hooking kids on science
Alien foot soldiers menace humankind in the 2011 film 'Battle: Los Angeles.'
CREDIT: Sony Pictures
CREDIT: Sony Pictures
Both Perkowitz and Shostak said they're usually happy to see aliens rendered on celluloid, however clumsily or sensationally.
"In general, I think almost anything Hollywood does with science and technology, even if it's not quite right, is a good thing, because it's some level of exposure," Perkowitz said.
Shostak stressed the emotional hold that movies can have on kids. Compelling sci-fi films can plant a seed of curiosity in youngsters, spurring them to investigate scientific issues on their own — and perhaps even become scientists down the road.
"These films can have a big impact," Shostak said.
That impact can extend into the social and cultural arenas, Perkowitz said. Films about aliens can alert moviegoers to issues that would be difficult or controversial to treat in a straightforward fashion.
He pointed to "District 9," a 2009 South African film that many viewers — including Perkowitz — read as a comment on the evils of apartheid.
"You can talk about really serious social issues in a metaphorical way by using aliens instead of people of a different color, a different culture, a different race or whatever," Perkowitz said. "We can use aliens as stand-ins for what humans do to each other."
UFO Found on Ocean Floor?Benjamin Radford, Life's Little Mysteries Contributor Date: 29 July 2011 Time: 12:38 PM ET |
Peter Lindberg's team found what appears to be a crashed flying saucer on the ocean floor. CREDIT: www.oceanexplorer.se |
An ocean exploration team led by Swedish researcher Peter Lindberg has found what some are suggesting is a crashed flying saucer. Lindberg's team, which has had success in the past recovering sunken ships and cargo, was using sonar to look for the century-old wreck of a ship that went down carrying several cases of a super-rare champagne. Instead, the team discovered what it claims is a mysterious round object that might (or might not) be extraterrestrial.
Lindberg explained to local media that his crew discovered, on the 300-foot-deep ocean floor between Finland and Sweden, "a large circle, about 60 feet in diameter. You see a lot of weird stuff in this job, but during my 18 years as a professional I have never seen anything like this. The shape is completely round."
Adding to the mystery at the bottom of the Gulf of Bothnia, Lindberg said he saw evidence of scars or marks disturbing the environment nearby, suggesting the object somehow moved across the ocean floor to where his team found it.
It's not clear what to make of this report, or the video of the sonar scan that shows the object, but Swedish tabloids and Internet UFO buffs have had a field day. Some suggest the object is a flying saucer of extraterrestrial origin (and the seafloor scars were dug up when it crashed), though of all the things that might create a round sonar signature, that seems to be among the more outlandish. [10 Alien Encounters Debunked]
It might be a natural feature formation, or possibly a sunken, round man-made object.
Lindberg's claim that the object "is perfectly round" may or may not be accurate; while it looks round from the information so far, the resolution of the sonar image was not high enough to verify that it is indeed round. And while the lines that appear to be leading to (or from) the feature may suggest some sort of movement, it's also possible they have nothing to do with the object. [UFO Battles Captured on Video? Not Likely]
Lindberg himself did not offer an extraterrestrial origin, though he did speculate it might be a "new Stonehenge."
This is not the first time a sunken object has been presented as the solution to a mystery. Take, for example, the famous underwater mystery of the "Bimini Road," a rock formation in the Caribbean near the Bahamas that resembles a road or wall. Many New Agers and conspiracy theorists claimed the rocks are too perfectly shaped to be natural, and either were made by an unknown civilization or are possibly a relic from the lost city of Atlantis.
In fact, geologists have identified the blocks as unusually shaped, but perfectly natural, weathered beach rock.
It's also worth noting that UFOs may not be saucer-shaped. The famous "flying saucer" description of the first UFOhas since been revealed as a reporting error.
Lindberg said his team has neither the interest nor the resources to further investigate the anomaly. Deep ocean research is time-consuming and expensive. If the object were indeed a flying saucer, recovering it could potentially be worth millions or billions of dollars. If it's a natural formation, on the other hand, it would probably be a waste of time and money.
NASA Invests in Far-Out Space Tech for Future Missions
by Clara Moskowitz, SPACE.com Senior Writer
Date: 08 August 2011 Time: 04:24 PM ET
The next 50 years of spaceflight will carry many challenges and surprises for explorers hoping to extend their reach into the cosmos. But it will also likely hold untapped riches for space science and spinoff technology that could, one day, catapult human and robotic explores beyond our own solar system and outward to other stars. CREDIT: NASA/Glenn Research Center |
A futuristic spacesuit, plans for a lunar colony and "printable spacecraft" are just some of the new out-of-this-world ideas NASA is funding under a program aimed to develop innovative, creative technologies for space exploration.
Today (Aug. 8) the space agency awarded 30 contracts, worth $100,000 each, to support one-year studies into novel spaceship power technologies, radiation shielding for astronauts, methods to combat the growing threat of space junk, and more.
The proposals are "somewhat out-of-the-box ideas and very advanced system concepts that have the potential to revolutionize our missions in the future," said Joe Parrish, director of the Early Stage Innovation division at NASA's Office of the Chief Technologist, during a press conference today.
The program, called NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts, or NIAC, aims to take on risky research that may not pan out, but has the potential to make a big impact if it does. [Vote! 21st Century's Greatest Space Innovators]
"We recognize that in order to make big gains, sometimes we are going to accept some risks," Parrish said. "NIAC is the greatest example of an effort to really look at very far-reaching activities and consciously and willingly take risks and look for big rewards to those risks."
The winning proposals were chosen from a field of hundreds based on their technical merit and potential impact, as well as their scientific team and cost estimates.
"The ones being selected today really were the cream of the crop," said Jay Falker, NIAC program executive. He said they involved new concepts that hadn't been investigated before by NASA.
"The ideas should be visionary, they should not be incremental," Falker told SPACE.com.
An example is a Space Debris Elimination project by Daniel Gregory of Virginia-based Raytheon BBN Technologies, which will investigate the possibility of using an air-gun to accelerate pieces of orbital junk like broken satellites and spent rocket stages out of the danger zone around Earth.
While the problem of space debris is a known issue that NASA's been working on, the air-gun technique to dealing with it is new, Falker said.
"That's an approach that's completely novel to a problem we've known about," he said.
Other intriguing projects involve using 3-D printers to construct mini spacecraft and habitats for a lunar colony, and using rotating devices called flywheels to power a spacesuit.
World-Class Team Says: "Time was Inherited from an Earlier Universe"
A world-class team of physicists studying the cosmic microwave background (CMB), light emitted when the Universe was just 400,000 years old have claimed that our view of the early Universe may contain the signature of a time before the Big Bang. Their discovery may help explain why we experience time moving in a straight line from yesterday into tomorrow.
Remembering Sputnik: Sir Arthur C. Clarke
October 2007
Photo: Luis Enrique Ascui/Getty Images
To some readers, an introduction to Sir Arthur C. Clarke may be necessary. To others, no introduction will suffice.
Clarke is most famous for his novels, short stories, and screenplays, including Prelude to Space (1951), Childhood's End (1953), Earthlight (1955), The Deep Range (1957), A Fall of Moondust (1961), Glide Path (1963), The Nine Billion Names of God (1967), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), and Rendezvous With Rama (1973). His nonfiction books and essays, meanwhile, have influenced science, particularly astronautics. They include Interplanetary Flight: An Introduction to Astronautics (Temple Press, 1950), The Exploration of Space (Harper, 1951), The Making of a Moon: The Story of the Earth Satellite Program (Harper, 1957), Voices from the Sky: Previews of the Coming Space Age (Harper & Row, 1965), The Promise of Space (Harper & Row, 1968), and The Lost Worlds of 2001 (Sidgwick and Jackson, 1972).
Although he is more revered for his role as an author, Clarke has well deserved the title of futurist for his groundbreaking thinking on space exploration. In October 1945, he published a paper in the magazine Wireless World called ”Extra-Terrestrial Relays: Can Rocket Stations Give Worldwide Radio Coverage?” In it, he predicted that geostationary satellites would soon become the basis of global communications. And in his 1979 novel, The Fountains of Paradise , he describes a space elevator that would ferry passengers and cargo to a docked space station, a concept that is currently undergoing its first primitive implementations (see IEEE Spectrum's August 2005 cover story, ”A Hoist to the Heavens”
Born in 1917 in Minehead, England, Clarke served in the Royal Air Force during World War II as a radar specialist and was involved in the early-warning system that contributed to the RAF's success in the Battle of Britain. After the war, he earned a first-class degree in mathematics and physics at King's College, London. He then got involved with the nascent British Interplanetary Society, serving as its chairman from 1947 to 1950. In 1948, he published his first book of short stories, The Sentinel , which includes a story by that name that eventually became the basis of his most well-known effort, the screenplay to the 1968 Stanley Kubrick movie 2001: A Space Odyssey , which has inspired generations. Since 1956, Clarke has lived in Sri Lanka.
SPECTRUM: You, Frederick Durant, and Ernst Stuhlinger were all in Barcelona at an International Astronautical Federation meeting on 4 October 1957. What was your reaction when you got the news about Sputnik?
CLARKE: Although I had been writing and speaking about space travel for years, I still have vivid memories of exactly when I heard the news. I was in Barcelona for the 8th International Astronautical Congress. We had already retired to our hotel rooms after a busy day of presentations by the time the news broke. I was awakened by reporters seeking an authoritative comment on the Soviet achievement. Our theories and speculations had suddenly become reality!
For the next few days, the Barcelona Congress became the scene of much animated discussion about what the United States could do to regain some of its scientific prestige. While manned spaceflight and Moon landings were widely speculated about, many still harboured doubts about an American lead in space. One delegate, noticing that there were 23 American and five Soviet papers at the Congress, remarked that while the Americans talked a lot about spaceflight, the Russians just went ahead and did it!
SPECTRUM: In the past 50 years, has the Space Age lived up to your expectations?
CLARKE: On the whole, I think we have had remarkable accomplishments during the first 50 years of the Space Age. Some of us might have preferred things to happen in a different style or time frame, but when our dreams and aspirations are adjusted for reality, there is much we can look back on with satisfaction. (For example, in 1959 I took a bet that men would be landing on the Moon by June 1969, and lost only very narrowly.) And in the heady days of Apollo, we seemed to be on the verge of exploring the planets through manned missions. I could be forgiven for failing to anticipate all the distractions of the 1970s that wrecked our optimistic projections—though I did caution that the Solar System could be lost in the paddy fields of Vietnam. (It almost was.)
SPECTRUM: A lot of what was achieved at the beginning of the Space Age—from Sputnik to the first landing on the moon—was spurred on by the rivalry that was the Cold War. Without that competition, do you think the human impetus to reach for space has slowed somewhat?
CLARKE: Launching Sputnik and landing humans on the Moon were all political decisions, not scientific ones, although scientists and engineers played a lead role in implementing those decisions. (I have only recently learned, from his long-time secretary Carol Rosin, that Wernher von Braun used my 1952 book, The Exploration of Space, to convince President Kennedy that it was possible to go to the Moon.) As William Sims Bainbridge pointed out in his 1976 book, The Spaceflight Revolution: A Sociological Study, space travel is a technological mutation that should not really have arrived until the 21st century. But thanks to the ambition and genius of von Braun and Sergei Korolev, and their influence upon individuals as disparate as Kennedy and Khrushchev, the Moon—like the South Pole—was reached half a century ahead of time.
I hope that nations can at last see better reasons for exploring space, and that future decisions would be informed by intelligence and reason, not the macho-nationalism that fuelled the early Space Race.
SPECTRUM: What is your opinion of private efforts to conquer space? Now that private entrepreneurs such as Peter Diamandis, Elon Musk, and Larry Page have become interested in space competitions, do you think they will provide the impetus?
CLARKE: During 2006, I followed with interest the emergence of this new breed of ’Citizen Astronauts’ and private space enterprise. Before the current decade is out, fee-paying passengers will be experiencing sub-orbital flights aboard privately funded passenger vehicles, built by a new generation of engineer-entrepreneurs with an unstoppable passion for space. (I’m hoping I could still make such a journey myself). And over the next 50 years, thousands of people will gain access to the orbital realm—and then, to the Moon and beyond.
The Ansari X PRIZE changed the future of personal spaceflight when it inspired the creation of SpaceShipOne by Burt Rutan. Now the Google Lunar X PRIZE can encourage a new fleet of private spacecraft to take humanity back to the Moon. I have endorsed and backed both these efforts as excellent ways to catalyze private investment and citizen involvement in space.
The growth of space tourism will see not just quick orbital hops, but facilities for accommodation and recreation. In October 2006, the Arthur Clarke Foundation selected the American budget-hotelier Bob Bigelow for the Arthur C. Clarke Innovator Award for 2006—in recognition of his work in the development of space habitats. With the successful Russian launch of Bigelow Aerospace’s Genesis 1, Bob is leading the way for private sector individuals willing to advance space exploration with minimum reliance on government programmes. Bob firmly believes in bringing space closer to people’s lives, and Genesis 1 represents the first step in expandable habitats suited for industrial, commercial and recreational purposes.
SPECTRUM: You have lived to see one of your key ideas—geosynchronous satellites—come to fruition. Another idea of yours—the Space Elevator—is coming closer to reality. Do you have any further thoughts on the Space Elevator?
CLARKE: I am very encouraged by the widespread acceptance of the Space Elevator, which can make space transport cheap and affordable to ordinary people. This concept, which I popularised in The Fountains of Paradise (1978), is now taken very seriously, with space agencies and entrepreneurs investing money and effort in developing prototypes. A dozen of these parties competed for the NASA-sponsored, US $150 000 X Prize Cup which took place in October 2006 at the Las Cruces International Airport, New Mexico.
What makes the Space Elevator such an attractive idea is its cost-effectiveness. A ticket to orbit now costs tens of millions of dollars (as the millionaire space tourists have paid). But the actual energy required, if you purchased it from your friendly local utility, would only add about hundred dollars to your electricity bill. And a round-trip would cost only about one tenth of that, as most of the energy could be recovered on the way back!
Once it is built, the Space Elevator could be used to lift payloads, passengers, pre-fabricated components of spacecraft, as well as rocket fuel up to Earth orbit. In this way, more than 90 per cent of the energy needed for the exploration of the Solar System could be provided by Earth-based energy sources. When the Space Elevator becomes a reality in the coming decades, the most expensive components of orbital travel will be in-flight movies and catering.
SPECTRUM: About a dozen years ago, you wrote a book on terraforming Mars. Now that the Phoenix missions to Mars have started, and crewed missions are on the far horizon (probably decades away), what are your thoughts on humans settling in Mars? Have your views on terraforming changed or are you even more certain that we should go that route?
CLARKE: During my lifetime, I have been lucky enough to see our knowledge of Mars advance from almost complete ignorance—worse than that, misleading fantasy—to a real understanding of its geography and climate. Certainly we are still ignorant in many areas, and lack knowledge that future generations will take for granted. But now we have fairly accurate maps of the Red Planet, and can imagine how it might be modified—terraformed—to make it nearer to our heart’s desire. Much has been studied about what it will take to carry out this planetary scale engineering exercise. But whether we should embark on such a venture should be decided very carefully, and future Martian inhabitants must be allowed to have their say. I have sometimes wondered if there might a committee to protect the Martian wilderness in the 22nd century!
SPECTRUM: Since 1995, more than 200 extrasolar planets have been discovered. Does this excite you? It seems that planetary systems are common—what some have suspected for long. Does this lead you to think that other life forms exist in the universe as well?
CLARKE: I have always believed in life elsewhere in the universe (though I don’t agree that some are visiting us secretively in flying saucers). Finding extra-solar planets indicates that there are many worlds that can nurture life, and hopefully some of them will also evolve intelligence. The biggest challenge in our search for extra-terrestrial intelligence is to know what to look for: Radio signals? Optical signals? Something else? I have suggested that supernovae are the industrial accidents of advanced civilisations. Or, as I wondered in one of my best known short stories ’The Star’, they may be inter-stellar beacons or signals of superior beings…
SPECTRUM: At one point, it had seemed that we were dangerously close to annihilating human beings on Earth through a nuclear war. While the specter of a nuclear holocaust has dimmed somewhat, newer nuclear threats (Iran, North Korea) haven’t eliminated it completely. Do you think the human race will survive the nuclear threat? Or are we bound to self-destruct?
CLARKE: I have often described myself as an optimist. I used to believe that the human race had a 51 per cent chance of survival. Since the end of the Cold War, I have revised this estimate to between 60 and 70 per cent. I have great faith in optimism as a philosophy, if only because it offers us the opportunity of self-fulfilling prophecy.
SPECTRUM: And, finally, what do you think are some of the most important technologies humans should concentrate on developing in the next 50 years?
CLARKE: If I had three wishes, I would ask for these:
1. A method to generate limitless quantities of clean energy.
2. Affordable and reliable means of space transport.
3. Eliminating the design faults in the human body
Interviewed by Saswato R. Das for IEEE Spectrum
To see all of Spectrum's special report Remembering Sputnik, 50 Years Later, go to http://spectrum.ieee.org/sputnik.
Clarke is most famous for his novels, short stories, and screenplays, including Prelude to Space (1951), Childhood's End (1953), Earthlight (1955), The Deep Range (1957), A Fall of Moondust (1961), Glide Path (1963), The Nine Billion Names of God (1967), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), and Rendezvous With Rama (1973). His nonfiction books and essays, meanwhile, have influenced science, particularly astronautics. They include Interplanetary Flight: An Introduction to Astronautics (Temple Press, 1950), The Exploration of Space (Harper, 1951), The Making of a Moon: The Story of the Earth Satellite Program (Harper, 1957), Voices from the Sky: Previews of the Coming Space Age (Harper & Row, 1965), The Promise of Space (Harper & Row, 1968), and The Lost Worlds of 2001 (Sidgwick and Jackson, 1972).
Although he is more revered for his role as an author, Clarke has well deserved the title of futurist for his groundbreaking thinking on space exploration. In October 1945, he published a paper in the magazine Wireless World called ”Extra-Terrestrial Relays: Can Rocket Stations Give Worldwide Radio Coverage?” In it, he predicted that geostationary satellites would soon become the basis of global communications. And in his 1979 novel, The Fountains of Paradise , he describes a space elevator that would ferry passengers and cargo to a docked space station, a concept that is currently undergoing its first primitive implementations (see IEEE Spectrum's August 2005 cover story, ”A Hoist to the Heavens”
Born in 1917 in Minehead, England, Clarke served in the Royal Air Force during World War II as a radar specialist and was involved in the early-warning system that contributed to the RAF's success in the Battle of Britain. After the war, he earned a first-class degree in mathematics and physics at King's College, London. He then got involved with the nascent British Interplanetary Society, serving as its chairman from 1947 to 1950. In 1948, he published his first book of short stories, The Sentinel , which includes a story by that name that eventually became the basis of his most well-known effort, the screenplay to the 1968 Stanley Kubrick movie 2001: A Space Odyssey , which has inspired generations. Since 1956, Clarke has lived in Sri Lanka.
SPECTRUM: You, Frederick Durant, and Ernst Stuhlinger were all in Barcelona at an International Astronautical Federation meeting on 4 October 1957. What was your reaction when you got the news about Sputnik?
CLARKE: Although I had been writing and speaking about space travel for years, I still have vivid memories of exactly when I heard the news. I was in Barcelona for the 8th International Astronautical Congress. We had already retired to our hotel rooms after a busy day of presentations by the time the news broke. I was awakened by reporters seeking an authoritative comment on the Soviet achievement. Our theories and speculations had suddenly become reality!
For the next few days, the Barcelona Congress became the scene of much animated discussion about what the United States could do to regain some of its scientific prestige. While manned spaceflight and Moon landings were widely speculated about, many still harboured doubts about an American lead in space. One delegate, noticing that there were 23 American and five Soviet papers at the Congress, remarked that while the Americans talked a lot about spaceflight, the Russians just went ahead and did it!
SPECTRUM: In the past 50 years, has the Space Age lived up to your expectations?
CLARKE: On the whole, I think we have had remarkable accomplishments during the first 50 years of the Space Age. Some of us might have preferred things to happen in a different style or time frame, but when our dreams and aspirations are adjusted for reality, there is much we can look back on with satisfaction. (For example, in 1959 I took a bet that men would be landing on the Moon by June 1969, and lost only very narrowly.) And in the heady days of Apollo, we seemed to be on the verge of exploring the planets through manned missions. I could be forgiven for failing to anticipate all the distractions of the 1970s that wrecked our optimistic projections—though I did caution that the Solar System could be lost in the paddy fields of Vietnam. (It almost was.)
SPECTRUM: A lot of what was achieved at the beginning of the Space Age—from Sputnik to the first landing on the moon—was spurred on by the rivalry that was the Cold War. Without that competition, do you think the human impetus to reach for space has slowed somewhat?
CLARKE: Launching Sputnik and landing humans on the Moon were all political decisions, not scientific ones, although scientists and engineers played a lead role in implementing those decisions. (I have only recently learned, from his long-time secretary Carol Rosin, that Wernher von Braun used my 1952 book, The Exploration of Space, to convince President Kennedy that it was possible to go to the Moon.) As William Sims Bainbridge pointed out in his 1976 book, The Spaceflight Revolution: A Sociological Study, space travel is a technological mutation that should not really have arrived until the 21st century. But thanks to the ambition and genius of von Braun and Sergei Korolev, and their influence upon individuals as disparate as Kennedy and Khrushchev, the Moon—like the South Pole—was reached half a century ahead of time.
I hope that nations can at last see better reasons for exploring space, and that future decisions would be informed by intelligence and reason, not the macho-nationalism that fuelled the early Space Race.
SPECTRUM: What is your opinion of private efforts to conquer space? Now that private entrepreneurs such as Peter Diamandis, Elon Musk, and Larry Page have become interested in space competitions, do you think they will provide the impetus?
CLARKE: During 2006, I followed with interest the emergence of this new breed of ’Citizen Astronauts’ and private space enterprise. Before the current decade is out, fee-paying passengers will be experiencing sub-orbital flights aboard privately funded passenger vehicles, built by a new generation of engineer-entrepreneurs with an unstoppable passion for space. (I’m hoping I could still make such a journey myself). And over the next 50 years, thousands of people will gain access to the orbital realm—and then, to the Moon and beyond.
The Ansari X PRIZE changed the future of personal spaceflight when it inspired the creation of SpaceShipOne by Burt Rutan. Now the Google Lunar X PRIZE can encourage a new fleet of private spacecraft to take humanity back to the Moon. I have endorsed and backed both these efforts as excellent ways to catalyze private investment and citizen involvement in space.
The growth of space tourism will see not just quick orbital hops, but facilities for accommodation and recreation. In October 2006, the Arthur Clarke Foundation selected the American budget-hotelier Bob Bigelow for the Arthur C. Clarke Innovator Award for 2006—in recognition of his work in the development of space habitats. With the successful Russian launch of Bigelow Aerospace’s Genesis 1, Bob is leading the way for private sector individuals willing to advance space exploration with minimum reliance on government programmes. Bob firmly believes in bringing space closer to people’s lives, and Genesis 1 represents the first step in expandable habitats suited for industrial, commercial and recreational purposes.
SPECTRUM: You have lived to see one of your key ideas—geosynchronous satellites—come to fruition. Another idea of yours—the Space Elevator—is coming closer to reality. Do you have any further thoughts on the Space Elevator?
CLARKE: I am very encouraged by the widespread acceptance of the Space Elevator, which can make space transport cheap and affordable to ordinary people. This concept, which I popularised in The Fountains of Paradise (1978), is now taken very seriously, with space agencies and entrepreneurs investing money and effort in developing prototypes. A dozen of these parties competed for the NASA-sponsored, US $150 000 X Prize Cup which took place in October 2006 at the Las Cruces International Airport, New Mexico.
What makes the Space Elevator such an attractive idea is its cost-effectiveness. A ticket to orbit now costs tens of millions of dollars (as the millionaire space tourists have paid). But the actual energy required, if you purchased it from your friendly local utility, would only add about hundred dollars to your electricity bill. And a round-trip would cost only about one tenth of that, as most of the energy could be recovered on the way back!
Once it is built, the Space Elevator could be used to lift payloads, passengers, pre-fabricated components of spacecraft, as well as rocket fuel up to Earth orbit. In this way, more than 90 per cent of the energy needed for the exploration of the Solar System could be provided by Earth-based energy sources. When the Space Elevator becomes a reality in the coming decades, the most expensive components of orbital travel will be in-flight movies and catering.
SPECTRUM: About a dozen years ago, you wrote a book on terraforming Mars. Now that the Phoenix missions to Mars have started, and crewed missions are on the far horizon (probably decades away), what are your thoughts on humans settling in Mars? Have your views on terraforming changed or are you even more certain that we should go that route?
CLARKE: During my lifetime, I have been lucky enough to see our knowledge of Mars advance from almost complete ignorance—worse than that, misleading fantasy—to a real understanding of its geography and climate. Certainly we are still ignorant in many areas, and lack knowledge that future generations will take for granted. But now we have fairly accurate maps of the Red Planet, and can imagine how it might be modified—terraformed—to make it nearer to our heart’s desire. Much has been studied about what it will take to carry out this planetary scale engineering exercise. But whether we should embark on such a venture should be decided very carefully, and future Martian inhabitants must be allowed to have their say. I have sometimes wondered if there might a committee to protect the Martian wilderness in the 22nd century!
SPECTRUM: Since 1995, more than 200 extrasolar planets have been discovered. Does this excite you? It seems that planetary systems are common—what some have suspected for long. Does this lead you to think that other life forms exist in the universe as well?
CLARKE: I have always believed in life elsewhere in the universe (though I don’t agree that some are visiting us secretively in flying saucers). Finding extra-solar planets indicates that there are many worlds that can nurture life, and hopefully some of them will also evolve intelligence. The biggest challenge in our search for extra-terrestrial intelligence is to know what to look for: Radio signals? Optical signals? Something else? I have suggested that supernovae are the industrial accidents of advanced civilisations. Or, as I wondered in one of my best known short stories ’The Star’, they may be inter-stellar beacons or signals of superior beings…
SPECTRUM: At one point, it had seemed that we were dangerously close to annihilating human beings on Earth through a nuclear war. While the specter of a nuclear holocaust has dimmed somewhat, newer nuclear threats (Iran, North Korea) haven’t eliminated it completely. Do you think the human race will survive the nuclear threat? Or are we bound to self-destruct?
CLARKE: I have often described myself as an optimist. I used to believe that the human race had a 51 per cent chance of survival. Since the end of the Cold War, I have revised this estimate to between 60 and 70 per cent. I have great faith in optimism as a philosophy, if only because it offers us the opportunity of self-fulfilling prophecy.
SPECTRUM: And, finally, what do you think are some of the most important technologies humans should concentrate on developing in the next 50 years?
CLARKE: If I had three wishes, I would ask for these:
1. A method to generate limitless quantities of clean energy.
2. Affordable and reliable means of space transport.
3. Eliminating the design faults in the human body
Interviewed by Saswato R. Das for IEEE Spectrum
To see all of Spectrum's special report Remembering Sputnik, 50 Years Later, go to http://spectrum.ieee.org/sputnik.
Unmasking Europa: The Search for Life on Jupiter's Ocean Moon
By: Richard Greenberg (Author)
http://www.tower.com/unmasking-europa-search-for-life-on-jupiters-ocean-richard-greenberg-hardcover/wapi/100148533A Close Look at Europa . . .
And How Big Science Gets Done . . .
The second-outward of Jupiter's four major moons, Europa is covered with ice, as confirmed in views from modern telescopes and the thousands of images returned by NASA's Voyager and Galileo missions. But these higher-resolution views also showed that the ice is anything but smooth. In fact, Europa's surface is covered with vast criss-crossing systems of mountain-sized ridges, jumbled regions of seemingly chaotic terrain, and patches that suggest upwellings of new surface materials from below. How scientists think about the underlying forces that shaped this incredibly complex, bizarre, and beautiful surface is the subject of this book.
In Unmasking Europa, Richard Greenberg tells the story of how he and his team of researchers came to believe that the surface of Europa is in fact a crust so thin that it can barely hide an ocean of liquid water below. He shows how the ocean is warmed by the friction of tidal movements in this small moon as it orbits around immense Jupiter. The implications of this interpretation- which includes the idea that there are active intermittent openings from the liquid ocean to the frozen surface- are immense. The warmth, the chemistry, and the connections from ocean to surface provide the conditions necessary for the existence of life, even at this relatively remote locale in our solar system, far beyond what's normally thought of as its 'habitable zone.'
Unmasking Europa describes in clear but technically sophisticated terms- and with extensive illustrations (including more than 100 NASA images)- the remarkable history of research on Europa over the last four decades. The book also provides unique insights into how "big science" gets done today, and it is not always a pretty picture. From his perspective as professor of Planetary Science at the University of Arizona, and a quarter century-long membership on the Imaging Team for NASA's Galileo mission, Greenberg describes how personal agendas (including his own) and political maneuvering (in which he received an education by fire) determined a lot about the funding, staffing, and even the direction of the research about Europa.
While he is satisfied that his team's work is now, finally, receiving fair consideration and even respect, Greenberg comes away from his experience feeling that something is fundamentally wrong with the scientific enterprise as a whole because it routinely punishes innovation, risk-taking thought, and willingness to simply let the evidence lead where it may. In today's scientific environment with its careerist pressures and peer-reviewed propriety, Greenberg believes, astute scientists (and sadly many of our youngest and brightest) quickly realize that it is more rewarding in very practical ways to stay within the mainstream- a tendency that by its very nature is at odds with the ideals of scientific research and thought.
Exobiology in Europa (moon)
Essay "Exobiology in Europa (moon) " from category astronomy
Exobiology in Europa Srika Prathipati 21 April 2007 Europa is one of the 16 moons orbiting Jupiter . According to studies undertaken it is understood that below the frozen exterior of ice , there is a sea of liquid water present . The surface of Europa had giant ice domes interrupting its surface . These mysterious domes seem to have formed by splashes of ice from the heart of the frozen crust , that were being pressed up due to the thermal flow from ice , which was warmer underneath . Scientists felt that there must have been some impurities such as sodium chloride or sulfuric acid involved , in the forming of the ice domes .Further studies revealed that Europa had existing microorganisms , which were alike in size and density to bacteria found on Earth . Further doubts have been raised if a frozen moon with an exterior temperature of 260 o F could generate sources of power useful for the essential chemical reactions to survive . An advanced new study showed that Europa certainly has lots of biological energy , which come in the form of several electric particles that continuously come down from the adjacent Jupiter .Photosynthesis is the process in which plants and algae use power from sunlight to generate their own natural molecules out of carbon dioxide gas , which comes from the atmosphere or the ocean . But according to scientists , the energy provided by sunlight will not be sufficient to maintain life on Europa , since the seawater lies under an icy layer ,which is too thick to allow photosynthesis . The easiest source of energy could be obtained from fast moving ,Exobiology in Europa electric particles that strike Europa from the environment of Jupiter .The magnetic field of Jupiter , which is 10 times more than that of Earth , is the strongest . Protons , electrons and other elements from space speed up to exceptionally higher velocities , when they get trapped in Jupiter ‘s magnetosphere .Hyphomicrobium , which is one of the most widespread bacteria on Earth ,lives on formaldehyde as its one and only source of carbon , and similar microbes which feed on formaldehyde could be living and going around in Europa ‘s subsurface sea . Other than producing organic fuels , energy from Jupiter also can force chemical reactions that create oxidants and molecules like hydrogen peroxide and oxygen that could be used to burn formaldehyde and fuels that are carbon-based .But the oxidants and natural molecules that formed on Europa ‘s cold surface would be organically applicable only if they reached the sub surface ocean . The main problem was that , if at all there is a liquid sea on Europa , it is concealed under an ice sheet about 50 to100 miles thick . Therefore if celestial creatures have to take in formaldehyde ,there had to be a means to get formaldehyde all the way through the thick layer of ice into the liquid sea underneath .Europa seems to have very strong tidal action (which is caused by the pull of Jupiter ‘s magnitude and the movement of the moon ‘s path…
Files reveal Blackburn MoD police UFO sighting
Newly-released government documents have shown how three Ministry of Defence police officers spotted a UFO over Blackburn in 1979.
The files include a written description of how the object flew over the Royal Ordnance Factory (ROF) on 24 February 1979. They also include a drawing.The object was said to be about 30ft (9m) across. As it flew off over Darwen, it lit up several streets.
Nine orange bright lights were also seen in the Lytham area in June 2006.
'Smash spacemen'
Photographs and sketches of UFOs, made by members of the public, are included in the files from the National Archives as well as their eyewitness reports.
The Blackburn sighting was submitted by the director of the ROF, who described the witnesses as "three sober, steady, reliable policemen, one of whom is a sergeant".
The UFO was described as a saucer-shaped object, which had a lightbulb-shaped dome on top, had trailed vapour and was at a height of up to 700ft (213m) in the sky.
"The sergeant reported to the local police who laughed like Smash spacemen," the report went on to say.
The files record how the unidentified object was seen on three separate occasions and made no sound.
The files can be downloaded free of charge for a month from the National Archives website.
Many of the reports show the MoD had a lack of will and resources to study thousands of reported sightings submitted to the department.
The Truth is IN There | |||
Did Alex Birch photograph a UFO over Retford in 2004? http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_9560000/9560763.stm On 27 January 2004 there was a light snowfall in Nottinghamshire. Alex Birch, a local photographer, grabbed his camera. He wanted to take a picture of his local town hall, Retford, for a competition. He got the shot - the picturesque winter scene you can seea above - and he says he did notnotice anything out of the ordinary. When he developed the picture though he saw a clear flying saucer shape. This was not the first time Alex had taken a picture of a UFO. In 1962, as a 14 year-old schoolboy, he'd taken a picture which showed five saucer shaped objects in the distance. It was widely reported in the press at the time, an era when the UFO mania was at its height. By his account, he became locally notorious for years after. Ten years later, he told me, he decided to pretend it was a fake - and he gave a different account to the press.
He sent the original film to the Fuji lab, for them to examine, he also had his camera checked. Neither of these enquiries found any technical reason for the mysterious shape. So, he contacted the Ministry of Defence. His file is one of those made public today in the latest release of documents to the National Archives. Though the ministry sent the picture to its specialist imaging department, they too could find no definite reason for the peculiar apparition. "Insufficient Information " was their conclusion - though they did suggest that a droplet of moisture on the lens could have been responsible. 'Mork and Mindy'For Dr David Clarke, who has made a close study of the government's UFO files over many years, Alex Birch's image stands out. Dr Clarke is a lecturer in journalism at Sheffield Hallam University, not a scientific expert, but he said that most of the pictures of UFOs can be dismissed as fakes, or more easily explained through technical causes. For instance, mysterious lights seen above Glastonbury in 2003, or other mysterious lights above a music festival in Wales in 2006, both documented in the files. Perhaps the most bizarre account from the files is the 2003 sighting of"worm-shaped" UFOs "wriggling around in the sky" over East Dulwich in London.
The woman complained of being made "to look foolish". In a letter dated January 21 2003, the woman says "your men have fed us with a lot of rubbish, presumably to make us look foolish and our story unbelievable, which they have succeeded in doing". Alex Birch's sighting is unusual because it was investigated by the MoD. The vast majority of UFOs reported to the government were never looked into, as Dr Clarke explains elsewhere. This file release is the penultimate one: the Ministry of Defence closed its UFO desk in 2009. But people still see what they believe are UFOs. Only last week, BBC Reporter Mike Sewell saw - he said - a UFO in the early hours of the morning, as he drove through a quiet village on his way to Stansted airport. He sounded slightly embarrassed as he spoke on air of seeing a "disc shaped" craft, flying low over a field.
In what I believe to be the most important revelation so far, an intelligence officer reveals that "lack of funds and higher priorities" had prevented any detailed study of the thousands of reports they had received since the end of World War II. The frank admission is contained in a formerly secret document dated July 1995 by a desk officer at DI55, the branch of the Defence Intelligence Staff responsible for the study of UFO reports. The officer concludes the lid had already been blown on secrecy surrounding their interest in UFOs by a series of media revelations. But he said the public perception of DI55 as "defenders of the Earth from the alien menace" was "light years from the truth". And he told his opposite number on the MoD's "UFO desk" that few people would believe the "embarrassing truth… that lack of funds and higher priorities had prevented a proper study of UFO sightings". Cuts to defence funding eventually led to the closure of the MoD's UFO desk in November 2009. The MoD says it has no further interest in the subject. |
Ministry of Defence files on UFO sightings released
Newly released government files on UFOs show a lack of will and resources to study thousands of reported sightings.
The Ministry of Defence files released by the National Archives cover reported sightings of UFOs from 1985 to 2007.In one, a military officer predicts embarassment if the public discovered a "lack of funds and higher priorities" were stopping UFO investigations.
The 34 files include sightings of lights over Glastonbury and a "flying saucer" in Nottinghamshire.
They can be downloaded free of charge for a month from the National Archives website.
National Archives consultant Dr David Clarke said it was about time the data was released.
"One of the most interesting documents in the files is a piece from an intelligence officer, who basically says that despite thousands of reports that they've received since the Second World War, they've never done any study or spent any money or time on the subject, and they say that people just won't believe that when they find out."
The internal memo from a DI55 [defence intelligence] wing commander dated 5 July 1995 says the media's portrayal of DI55 as a "defender of the Earth against the alien menace" is "light years from the truth."
The file shows the officer feared that if intelligence's interest in UFOs was to be revealed it could cause "disbelief and embarrassment since few people will believe the truth that lack of funds and higher priorities have prevented any study of the thousands of reports received."
A former Ministry of Defence UFO investigator said the files reflected debate over the significance of reported UFO sightings.
Nick Pope worked at the MoD between 1991 and 1994.
He said the files were quite revealing: "The fascinating thing about these files is that they show that just as in society there's this huge debate about UFOs - is it really interesting, are we being visited by aliens - or is it all just nonsense?
"We were having the same debates in the Ministry of Defence. Some people thought it was a waste of time and money, others thought it was of extreme defence significance."
Reported sightings
The files show Alex Birch contacted the Ministry of Defence after capturing a series of images of what looked like a "flying saucer" over the town hall in Retford, Nottinghamshire.
In July 2004, the ministry sent the images to the Defence Geographic and Imagery Intelligence Agency (DGIA).
The agency's report said "no definitive conclusions" could be made from the photos. But it added: "It may be coincidental that the illuminated plane of the object passes through the centre of the frame, indicating a possible lens anomaly, eg a droplet of moisture."
The files include 2001 testimony from a retired RAF fighter controller and an MoD official on a 1956 UFO incident in Suffolk.
Ex-controller Freddie Wimbledon describes scrambling fighter planes to intercept a UFO seen on radar and by people on the ground at RAF Lakenheath. He says it reportedly latched on to a fighter plane, "following its every move" before departing at "terrific speed".
Retired MoD official Ralph Noyes describes being shown footage of UFOs taken from the aircraft.
'Wriggling around in the sky'
Another file describes a 2003 sighting by a mother and daughter of "worm-shaped" UFOs "wriggling around in the sky" over East Dulwich in south-east London.
In their testimony to the MoD, two men in "space suits and dark glasses who called themselves Mork and Mindy" joined police officers who attended the scene.
A letter from the woman later complained they had been fed "a lot of rubbish, presumably to make us look foolish and our story unbelievable".
Police told the MoD the officers could not see anything in the sky and "concluded it was possibly a reflection of a star and a street light in her window".
Experts had concluded that sightings of lights in the sky in the summer of 2006 were likely to be Chinese lanterns, an additional file shows.
Pentagon releases names of Chinook crash victims
11:53 AM, Aug 11, 2011 | comments
http://www.11alive.com/news/article/201226/40/Pentagon-releases-names-of-Chinook-crash-victimsSoldiers board a Chinook helicopter in Afghanistan in July. (CNN)
(CNN) -- The U.S. Defense Department Thursday released the names of U.S. military personnel killed in Saturday's downing of a helicopter in Afghanistan.
Thirty-eight people were killed in that attack, eight of them Afghan military personnel. It was the single largest loss of life for U.S. troops since the Afghan war began in late 2001.
Of the 30 Americans, 17 were Navy SEALs.
Twenty-two of the dead were U.S. Navy personnel, the Pentagon said. Fifteen were SEALs belonging to the top-secret unit that conducted the raid that killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden at a compound in Pakistan. Two others were SEALs assigned to a regular naval special operations unit.
Five were so-called conventional forces with particular specialties who regularly worked with the SEALs.
The other eight U.S. troops killed included three Air Force forward air controllers and five Army helicopter crew members.
NATO said it killed the militants responsible for the attack. Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid rejected that, saying a NATO airstrike killed a separate group of insurgents.
The following list was provided by the Defense Department:
The following sailors assigned to an East Coast-based Naval Special Warfare unit were killed:
- Lt. Cmdr. (SEAL) Jonas B. Kelsall, 32, of Shreveport, La.,
The Shreveport native was in charge of Saturday's mission in Warduk Province near Kabul. Father John Kelsall, who heads Lakewood, California's Chamber of Commerce, told CNN affiliate KTLA in a statement, "The country will never understand the level of service those guys gave us." KABC reported that Kelsall, 33, was trained in San Diego, and he met his wife of three years while attending the University of Texas. - Special Warfare Operator Master Chief Petty Officer (SEAL) Louis J. Langlais, 44, of Santa Barbara, Calif.,
Special Warfare Operator Senior Chief Petty Officer (SEAL) Thomas A. Ratzlaff, 34, of Green Forest, Ark.,
The 34-year-old Green Forest, Arkansas, native had a motto, according to CNN affiliate KYTV: "There's two ways to do things: Do them right or do them again." Ratzlaff leaves behind two sons - 6 and 11 years old - and wife who is expecting the couple' third child in November. KYTV spoke to his professors in high school, where he played middle linebacker for the football team, and many had fond memories of him. Science teach Bruce Culver joked that he was the best at dissecting frogs, and his friend Kevin Disheroon told the station that he always wanted to be a SEAL. He went to boot camp just weeks after his 1995 graduation from high school. - Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technician Senior Chief Petty Officer (Expeditionary Warfare Specialist/Freefall Parachutist) Kraig M. Vickers, 36, of Kokomo, Hawaii,
- Special Warfare Operator Chief Petty Officer (SEAL) Brian R. Bill, 31, of Stamford, Conn.,
- Special Warfare Operator Chief Petty Officer (SEAL) John W. Faas, 31, of Minneapolis, Minn.,
- Special Warfare Operator Chief Petty Officer (SEAL) Kevin A. Houston, 35, of West Hyannisport, Mass.
The Cape Cod, Maryland, native lived in Chesapeake, Virginia, with his wife and three children, according to CNN affiliate WVEC. In 1994, he graduated from high school (where he captained his football team) in a wheelchair after having a nasty motorcycle accident. He became a SEAL a few years later. His mother told the station, "He was born to do this job. He'd do it all over again." Just weeks ago,according to CNN affiliate WTKR, Houston gave an American flag - which he'd worn under his armor during his last three Afghanistan tours - to veteran Chris Kelly, a man who inspired him. Kelly told the station he was too heartbroken to be interviewed. - Special Warfare Operator Chief Petty Officer (SEAL) Matthew D. Mason, 37, of Kansas City, Mo.,
- Special Warfare Operator Chief Petty Officer (SEAL) Stephen M. Mills, 35, of Fort Worth, Texas,
The father of three children - 1, 13 and 18 years old - had a tremendous sense of humor, friends and family told CNN affiliate WTKR, and the 14-year Navy veteran loved being a SEAL. A sister of the 36-year-old chief petty officer told CNN affiliate KVUE that he never bragged about being a SEAL, despite a decade in the elite force. "He loved his teammates as brothers. He'll always be remembered as a loving person," Ashley Mills told the station. His cousin, J.B. Abbott, told KVUE that the central Texas native was "very proud and very brave." - Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technician Chief Petty Officer (Expeditionary Warfare Specialist/Freefall Parachutist/Diver) Nicholas H. Null, 30, of Washington, W.Va.,
- Special Warfare Operator Chief Petty Officer (SEAL) Robert J. Reeves, 32, of Shreveport, La.,
The 32-year-old chief petty officer grew up in Shreveport, Louisiana, with Lt. Cmdr. Jonas Kelsall, who was in charge of the Afghanistan mission that ended with Saturday's helicopter crash. They went to school, played soccer and became Navy SEALs together. On a Facebook page set up in Reeves' memory, one poster said, "You could always make the boys laugh, dude." Another described him as "sweet, funny and kind-hearted ... More than anything, though, Rob was most passionate about the Navy and his role as a SEAL." - Special Warfare Operator Chief Petty Officer (SEAL) Heath M. Robinson, 34, of Detroit, Mich.,
- Special Warfare Operator Petty Officer 1st Class (SEAL) Darrik C. Benson, 28, of Angwin, Calif.
- Special Warfare Operator Petty Officer 1st Class (SEAL/Parachutist) Christopher G. Campbell, 36, of Jacksonville, N.C.,
- Information Systems Technician Petty Officer 1st Class (Expeditionary Warfare Specialist/Freefall Parachutist) Jared W. Day, 28, of Taylorsville, Utah,
- Master-at-Arms Petty Officer 1st Class (Expeditionary Warfare Specialist) John Douangdara, 26, of South Sioux City, Neb.,
- Cryptologist Technician (Collection) Petty Officer 1st Class (Expeditionary Warfare Specialist) Michael J. Strange, 25, of Philadelphia, Pa.,
- Special Warfare Operator Petty Officer 1st Class (SEAL/Enlisted Surface Warfare Specialist) Jon T. Tumilson, 35, of Rockford, Iowa,
- Special Warfare Operator Petty Officer 1st Class (SEAL) Aaron C. Vaughn, 30, of Stuart, Fla.,
Kimberly Vaughn met Aaron Vaughn in Guam when she traveled there with the Washington Redskins cheerleaders to entertain the troops. She said she last spoke with her husband the day before the fatal crash and, Kimberly Vaughan said, "We got to tell each other we loved each other so it was a great conversation to have." Kimberly Vaughn said she still plans to move forward with building their home in Virginia Beach, where she will raise their two children. His wife described her husband as a "warrior for Christ and he was a warrior for our country and he wouldn't want to leave this Earth any other way than how he did." - Special Warfare Operator Petty Officer 1st Class (SEAL) Jason R. Workman, 32, of Blanding, Utah.
The following sailors assigned to a West Coast-based Naval Special Warfare unit were killed:
- Special Warfare Operator Petty Officer 1st Class (SEAL) Jesse D. Pittman, 27, of Ukiah, Calif.,
- Special Warfare Operator Petty Officer 2nd Class (SEAL) Nicholas P. Spehar, 24, of Saint Paul, Minn.
The soldiers killed were:
- Chief Warrant Officer David R. Carter, 47, of Centennial, Colo.
He was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 135th Aviation Regiment (General Support Aviation Battalion), Aurora, Colo.; - Chief Warrant Officer Bryan J. Nichols, 31, of Hays, Kan.
He was assigned to the 7th Battalion, 158th Aviation Regiment (General Support Aviation Battalion), New Century, Kan.; - Sgt. Patrick D. Hamburger, 30, of Lincoln, Neb.
He was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 135th Aviation Regiment (General Support Aviation Battalion), Grand Island, Neb.; - Sgt. Alexander J. Bennett, 24, of Tacoma, Wash.
He was assigned to the 7th Battalion, 158th Aviation Regiment (General Support Aviation Battalion), New Century, Kan.; - Spc. Spencer C. Duncan, 21, of Olathe, Kan.
He was assigned to the 7th Battalion, 158th Aviation Regiment (General Support Aviation Battalion), New Century, Kan.
The airmen killed were:
- Tech. Sgt. John W. Brown, 33, of Tallahassee, Fla.;
The technical sergeant from Siloam Springs, Arkansas, studied pre-med before joining the U.S. Air Force to become a pararescueman, his mother, Elizabeth Newlun told CNN affiliate KFSM. His friend, Jon Woods, told the station that Brown was popular, athletic and loved a challenge. "He was just an all-American G.I. Joe, just a great guy who loved his country," Woods said. Newlun read KFSM a letter Brown's uncle had written, describing the airman as "Rambo without the attitude" and "brave but never arrogant, powerful but always gentle." He was married and had no children. - Staff Sgt. Andrew W. Harvell, 26, of Long Beach, Calif.;
- Tech. Sgt. Daniel L. Zerbe, 28, of York, Pa.
All three airmen were assigned to the 24th Special Tactics Squadron, Pope Field, N.C.
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