NASA released the findings of its highly-anticipated study today, scrutinizing more than 800 sightings of UFOs across three decades — with ‘inconclusive’ results for those who ‘want to believe.’
‘To date, in the peer-reviewed scientific literature, there is no conclusive evidence suggesting an extraterrestrial origin for UAP,’ NASA’s panel of experts wrote in their new report which was, in part, designed to recommend future investigative avenues.
The US space agency announced last year that it would review evidence regarding unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs), more commonly known as unidentified flying objects (UFOs), with the goal of advising how NASA tools could aid the search.
The panel defined UAP as sightings ‘that cannot be identified as aircraft or known natural phenomena from a scientific perspective.’
But NASA’s team elaborated their scientific view that the bar for proof of extraterrestrial visitors to Earth must be kept high.
‘In the search for life beyond Earth, extraterrestrial life itself must be the hypothesis of last resort,’ the panel wrote, ‘the answer we turn to only after ruling out all other possibilities.’
‘As Sherlock Holmes said, ‘Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth.”
Above, a weather balloon careens through the after following a release from the Cape Canaveral weather station in Florida. The NASA included this image in their report as an example of striking, highly unusual objects that nevertheless have a terrestrial explanation
Long-awaited: NASA will today release the findings of its highly-anticipated study into more than 800 sightings of UFOs over three decades
The NASA panel did admit to several lingering cases that remained unexplained and baffling, including the now famous, seemingly metallic orbs recorded by an MQ-9 Reaper drone in the Middle East. NASA’s report today said, ‘Due to limited data, the object remains unidentified’
In May, NASA’s independent study team shared their preliminary observations — that up to 98 per cent of reported UAP sightings can be explained away.
Just 2 to 5 per cent are considered ‘possibly really anomalous’, the panel added, but a lack of high-quality data is hampering researchers’ ability to apply ‘rigorous scientific scrutiny’ to the mystery-solving.
These genuinely unexplained UAPs are defined as ‘anything that is not readily understandable by the operator or the sensor,’ or ‘something that is doing something weird,’ said team member Nadia Drake earlier this year.
Feedback: In May, NASA’s independent study team (pictured) revealed their preliminary observations — that up to 98 per cent of reported UAP sightings can be explained away
One sighting from Southeast Asia that NASA did have a provisional explanation for involved a UAP that appeared to warp and compress the air around it, a process called cavitation. They concluded the unusual effect was ‘likely a sensor artifact resulting from video compression’
It is unlikely that today’s report will provide any ground-breaking new information that wasn’t revealed at the first public meeting in May, but it could eventually usher in the start of a new mission for the US space agency.
While NASA’s probes and rovers currently scour the solar system for any signs of alien life, its historic posture has been to ‘debunk’ sightings on our home planet.
However, the US government has started to take UAPs more seriously in recent years, partly because of concerns that some could be related to foreign surveillance.
The Pentagon has received 350 reports of UFOs in the past two years, and 171 of them remain unexplained.
NASA’s study is separate to the Pentagon’s investigation into UAPs, which saw US lawmakers hear first-hand accounts of UFO sightings from former members of the military earlier this year.
The US space agency’s panel is leading the civilian, unclassified side of the effort, while the US Department of Defense has convened a government body to examine UAPs in co-ordination with the intelligence and military communities.
NASA put together an independent team of 16 scientific, aeronautic, and data analytic experts with the aim of analyzing sightings of UAPs from a logical and scientific perspective.
‘We have access to a broad range of observations of Earth from space – and that is the lifeblood of scientific inquiry,’ the space agency’s Thomas Zurbuchen said last year before the study began.
‘We have the tools and team who can help us improve our understanding of the unknown. That’s the very definition of what science is. That’s what we do.’
Interesting: Earlier this year the Department of Defense released a document disclosing the ‘world’s UFO hotspots’. It includes a map showing where the most sightings of unidentified objects have been recorded, based on reports between 1996 and 2023
Classified report: NASA’s study is separate to the Pentagon’s investigation into UAPs (pictured)
A flying object near Japan’s Senganmori mountain, highlighted by the International UFO Lab
The report is due to be published at 09:30 ET (14:30 BST) today.
This will be followed by a media briefing at NASA’s headquarters in Washington from 10:00 ET (15:00), where the panel will discuss its findings.
The press conference will be streamed live on NASA Television, the NASA app, and the agency’s website here.
‘We recognize that public interest in UAPs is high, and that the demand for answers is strong,’ Daniel Evans, the NASA official in charge of the study, said in May.
‘It is now our collective responsibility to investigate these occurrences with the rigorous scientific scrutiny that they deserve.’
He added: ‘All of NASA’s data is available to the public – we take that obligation seriously – and we make it easily accessible for anyone to see or study.’