Although modest in scope, a NASA research project reflects shifting attitudes toward the formerly taboo subject of UFOs
On June 9, with only a few hours’
notice, NASA held a press conference to announce a study it was
commissioning on unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs). The acronym is a
rebranding of what are more popularly known as unidentified flying
objects, or UFOs, a topic usually associated with purported
extraterrestrial visitations and government conspiracy theories. The
question on the public’s mind was why one of the U.S.’s premier
scientific agencies was getting involved in something often considered
to be at the farthest fringes of respectability.
Yet the pronouncement also fit in with the suddenly more open-minded zeitgeist regarding UAPs. Last year saw the publication of a much-anticipated report on the Department of Defense’s own investigations into the subject,
following the release of first-person accounts and video from U.S.
fighter pilots claiming to show encounters with strange objects in the
skies. High-profile coverage in mainstream media and open congressional
hearings about UAPs have kept the matter circulating in the public
realm. A month after the Pentagon’s report came out, theoretical
astrophysicist Avi Loeb, former chair of Harvard University’s astronomy
department, announced a private initiative called the Galileo Project, which is aimed at searching for potential evidence of alien technology here on Earth.
What NASA can bring to this discussion is as yet unclear. The agency
has set aside a slim $100,000 for the nine-month study—less than the
typical funding it provides for exploratory studies of unconventional
technologies such as space telescopes with kilometer-scale mirrors or
interstellar probes propelled by giant laser beams. Helmed by the
well-respected Princeton University astrophysicist David Spergel, the
investigation intends to identify existing and future data sets
scientists could use to advance their understanding of UAPs. Even if it
uncovers little of interest, the study’s existence suggests that
something the agency once avoided talking about at all costs is on the
cusp of becoming an appropriate topic of inquiry.
“There’s no question you have a lot more voices in scientific and
academic circles who are willing to be public and say this is a
legitimate enterprise,” says Greg Eghigian, a historian at Pennsylvania
State University, who is writing a book about UFO sightings.
NASA’s unexpected UAP announcement is perhaps a bit less surprising
in hindsight. The agency’s current administrator, former astronaut and
senator Bill Nelson, told reporters last year that he was sure U.S.
pilots who reported mysterious encounters “saw something, and their
radars locked onto it.” The Office of the Director of National
Intelligence and the Office of Naval Intelligence officials behind the
Pentagon’s UAP task force had previously spoken about involving multiple
branches of government in their investigations, Eghigian says. “NASA
was one of the agencies mentioned,” he adds.
Yet exploring enigmatic incursions into American airspaces arguably
makes more sense as a project for the military than one for a civil
space agency. After all, these unidentified objects—if they exist—might
be terrestrial in origin, perhaps constituting evidence of advanced
Russian or Chinese aerospace technology rather than anything from beyond
Earth. NASA’s study is aimed at categorizing data from Earth-observing
satellites and other monitoring instruments that may have picked up some
sliver of information relevant to such phenomena to see if there is
anything whatsoever the agency can say about their nature. NASA already
collects extensive information about the atmosphere using a suite of orbiting probes such as Terra, Suomi National Polar-Orbiting Partnership (NPP) and
CloudSat, any of which may have picked up incidental data that could
help identify UAPs.
“We have the tools and team who can help us improve our understanding
of the unknown,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for
science at NASA, in an official statement. “That’s the very definition of what science is. That’s what we do.”
In this, Zurbuchen sounds not unlike Loeb, the most high-profile
researcher presently pursuing such inquiries. Loeb had in fact
approached NASA about investigating UAPs and sent Zurbuchen a proposal
last summer to use telescopes and other instruments to hunt for
transient celestial events that might be relevant to the existence of
unknown aircraft. He expressed annoyance upon learning that the agency
had set up its own independent commission in which he wasn’t involved.
“To me, it’s really a contradiction,” Loeb says. “If there is someone
pursuing the research agenda that you’re trying to study, why wouldn’t
you collaborate with that person?”
Given that he is the head of the Galileo Project, which has
overlapping aims, Loeb was told by NASA that it would be a conflict of
interest to have him participate in the agency’s new endeavor. He
eventually made peace with the issue. “What matters is the truth,” he
says. “It doesn’t matter who tells it. I’m happy that I’m not alone.”
The Galileo Project has recently finished assembling its first
telescope instruments on the roof of the Harvard College Observatory,
which will begin capturing data in the coming weeks that might speak to
the reality of UAPs (or not). Earlier this month, the collaboration held
its first in-person conference, where Loeb presented the team’s initial
year of progress and plans for the future. There are also 10 scientific
papers in preparation from different team members regarding the
workings of their telescope, which will be publicly available after they
go through peer review.
Loeb is currently pulling together funding to go after the fragments
of a roughly breadbox-size meteor named CNEOS 2014-01-08 that crashed
off the coast of Papua New Guinea in 2014. Based on the speed at which
it entered Earth’s atmosphere, a screaming 162,000 kilometers per hour,
Loeb and his student Amir Siraj proposed that the space rock came from another star system (a hypothesis supported by subsequently declassified U.S. spy-satellite data). That pieces of
such a small object didn’t entirely burn up suggested to Loeb and Siraj
that it was made of a material tougher than iron.
“It makes me ask the question whether it was natural or artificial in
origin,” Loeb says. He would like to lead an expedition to trawl the
ocean floor with a magnet in an attempt to pick up pieces of what he
believes could be an alien spacecraft.
That there are now multiple research projects investigating a formerly scorned subject speaks to how much the scientific landscape has shifted in recent years. “The way NASA has approached the UFO/UAP stuff over
the decades, I think a generous and polite word would be ‘cautious,’”
says Kate Dorsch, a historian of science at the University of
Pennsylvania. The agency went to great lengths to make clear that no
credible evidence exists for a linkage between UAPs and putative aliens,
and even the level of funding dedicated to its new study implies that
it’s not ready to do more than dip a toe in the murky waters around this matter. “$100,000 is a pittance,” Eghigian says. “I’m not
sure, for a serious project, what you can do with $100,000.”
|
At the same time, talking about the possibility of life elsewhere in
the cosmos no longer seems as outlandish or disreputable as it once was.
Scientists of all stripes regularly draw up plans for probes to look
for microbes on planets and moons in the solar system, and they have
used their telescopes to search for chemical evidence of living
ecosystems on worlds orbiting distant stars.
“I think the UAP stuff is emerging in a climate where we are already
discussing life in the universe in a new way,” says Adam Frank, an
astrophysicist at the University of Rochester. “Now that the ‘giggle
factor’ for the scientific search for life in the universe has gone
down, it’s possible this also makes it easier for people to discuss
UAPs.”
Accounts of unidentified phenomena often include claims associated
with extremely low standards of evidence, such as out-of-body
experiences, alien abductions and crop circles, says Jacob Haqq-Misra,
an astrobiologist at the Blue Marble Space Institute of Science. “When
you lump all that together, I see why some scientists dismiss it all,”
he adds. But focusing on eyewitness accounts from esteemed pilots
convinced they saw something—accounts often backed up by sensor data—has
allowed him to recognize to that there might be something concrete for
scientists to investigate, even if the culprit ends up being mundane
instrumentation problems.
“If you don’t care about it personally as a scientist, that’s fine.”
Haqq-Misra says. “But to pretend like it’s not something
interesting—that doesn’t help.”
Some might worry that NASA’s reputation could be sullied by becoming
associated with a notoriously pseudoscientific subject or that nothing
the agency says about this matter will ever satisfy true believers. “The
danger is that NASA will not find anything, and people will be like,
‘Oh, NASA is in on the conspiracy. NASA’s not telling us what’s true,’”
Frank says. But he also thinks there’s an opportunity for the study to
spark a teachable moment about the process of science and how it
investigates the world.
“Science only works because we have this rigorous means of evaluating
our own biases,” which involves being willing to scrutinize “your claim
that you know what you know,” he says.
By their very nature, UAPs point to events slightly beyond our
understanding. They exist at the edges of the known, a realm that
science is particularly adept at tackling. The proliferation of projects
to investigate UAPs suggests that perhaps some researchers are willing
to take a more relaxed attitude toward a subject that was formerly
off-limits. But even increased scrutiny seems unlikely to entirely get
rid of the questions surrounding them.
“Until somebody builds a perfect system that captures all data at all
times at all levels of detail,” Dorsch says, “some of these UAPs are
just going to evade knowing.”
Adam Mann is a journalist specializing in astronomy and physics. His work has appeared in National Geographic, the Wall Street Journal, Wired, and elsewhere.