A new article from Scientific American about the possibility of there being real interstellar probes or vehicles here on Earth, that potentially could be detected, and that they might presently be called UAPs. The article avoids even mentioning the other important issues regarding UAPs, such as their sometimes really weird properties and capabilities.
From https://www.scientificamerican.com/artic...planation/ :
(This post was last modified: 2024-07-18, 05:56 PM by nbtruthman. Edited 2 times in total.)
From https://www.scientificamerican.com/artic...planation/ :
Quote:The year is 1950. Physicist Enrico Fermi is eating lunch with a few colleagues outside Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. His shirt ripples in a hot desert wind. He looks up at the sky and reportedly says, “Where is everybody?” He is talking about space aliens. Known as the Fermi paradox, the question still hasn’t been answered.
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While technological life is probably exceedingly rare compared with bacterial life, if it arose on even one planet billions of years ago, that early start would offer ample time to develop interstellar probes before humanity appeared. If these probes could self-replicate using local materials to create and launch more probes, they could spread exponentially. Recent simulations indicate that even if such probes were limited to Voyager speeds, they could saturate most of our galaxy within a fraction of its lifespan.
So where are they?
(Note: enter the existence of observed UAPs: )
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Have we been too hasty to dismiss the possibility of interstellar spacecraft nearby? Are there limits to our sampling depth that we are not fully aware of?
To help find out, in 2022 NASA commissioned an independent study to determine whether current satellites and surveillance systems have sufficient sampling depth to detect “unidentified anomalous phenomena,” or UAPs (government talk for what could be alien spaceships). The researchers’ conclusions:
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Commercial satellite constellations provide imagery at sub- to several-meter spatial resolution, which is well-matched to the typical spatial scales of known UAP.... The limitation on this data is that at any given time most of the Earth’s surface is not covered by commercial satellites at high resolution—for a particular UAP event, we will need to be fortunate to obtain high-resolution observations from space.
(Note: Intelligence community surveillance satellites have large aperature telescopes with amazingly better resolution, but a correspondingly very narrow field of view and can cover only a tiny fraction of the Earth's surface.)
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(So), we can imagine going back to 1950 and rephrasing Fermi’s famed lunchtime question. His shirt ripples in a hot desert wind. He looks up at the sky. “Where are all the loud, obvious indicators of aliens?” he asks.
When phrased like this, the simplest explanation stands out like a sore thumb. Perhaps aliens don’t leave loud, obvious indicators. Perhaps their vehicles are nearby, and perhaps no one has bothered to check properly—yet.