NASA's UFO task force will livestream unidentified anomalous phenomena meeting ... trends now

NASA's UFO task force will livestream unidentified anomalous phenomena meeting ... trends now
NASA's UFO task force will livestream unidentified anomalous phenomena meeting ... trends now

NASA's UFO task force will livestream unidentified anomalous phenomena meeting ... trends now

NASA is due to hold a historic public meeting about UFOs tomorrow — as the once-mocked subject becomes mainstream.

The space agency launched an independent task force which has been studying unidentified objects in our skies and oceans since September of last year.

Tomorrow's panel will see a broad discussion of NASA's 'science perspective' on UAP, alongside more specific and exotic presentations, including one NASA astrobiologist breaking down 'relevant observations' of anomalies 'beyond Earth's atmosphere.' 

Tomorrow's meeting, which is expected to last over four hours, will make history as the first time America's space agency has presented any results from its UAP investigation to the public.

NASA's panel marks another milestone for unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), the once fringe topic formerly known as UFOs. Officially unexplained infrared targeting footage, like the GIMBAL video taken by Navy pilots in 2015 (above), played a pivotal role in changing attitudes

NASA's panel marks another milestone for unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), the once fringe topic formerly known as UFOs. Officially unexplained infrared targeting footage, like the GIMBAL video taken by Navy pilots in 2015 (above), played a pivotal role in changing attitudes

NASA's independent UAP study group, as well as officials from both the Pentagon and Federal Aviation Administration's UAP investigative teams, will present their latest UFO findings

NASA's independent UAP study group, as well as officials from both the Pentagon and Federal Aviation Administration's UAP investigative teams, will present their latest UFO findings

The mere existence of the agency's independent study team has added greater legitimacy to many unusual claims and events that had previously spent decades relegated to the fringes of scientific inquiry.  

The study group, formed nearly a year ago in June 2022, has been mandated to explore both the feasibility and the wisdom of tasking NASA's own hardware and brainpower in the hunt for 'unidentified anomalous phenomena' (UAP).

The term UAP is meant to broaden the search for the truth about UFOs, encompassing both mysterious objects or occurrences whether in the sky, underwater or in outer space. 

'The charter of this committee was to recommend to NASA whether research is warranted on this subject,' according to Harvard physicist Avi Loeb, founder of the extraterrestrial-hunting, UAP-studying Galileo Project

'They were not supposed to do any research,' Loeb told the DailyMail.com. 'They were not supposed to conduct new scientific study into the question, but just listen to witnesses that tell them what was reported in the past.' 

NASA has previously stated that they possess no current evidence that UAPs are extraterrestrial in origin, nor any hard evidence of alien life out in the universe. 

But they have also stated that the limited state of the current data makes it difficult to draw scientific conclusions.

While their group is scheduled to publish the full results of their nine-month UFO study this July, tomorrow's public hearing is shaping up to look more like a sprawling interagency task force.

UFO reports will be delivered by both the head of the Pentagon's All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), physicist Sean Kirkpatrick, and an advisor to the Federal Aviation Administration's Air Traffic Surveillance Services Office, Mike Freie.

The meeting will "go live on NASA TV, the agency's official YouTube channel, at 10:30 am ET, 1430 GMT on Wednesday (May 31).

The panel will even answer written questions put to them by the public,

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