Inside Story of the UFO Retrieval Program
Today’s news includes: Dark matter atoms may form shadowy galaxies with rapid star formation and NASA’s UFO team discusses its findings publicly for the first time, and more.
JWST Reveals Hundreds of Most Ancient Galaxies--In the JWST version of the Hubble Deep Field, astronomers are discovering what galactic life was like in the earliest years of the universe.
Strange star holds 'holy grail' clues about unique supernova explosions in the early universe, reports Robert Lea for Space.com. The star's chemical fingerprints represent evidence of pair-instability supernovae of the first massive stars, a new study suggests.
Harvard's Avi Loeb on Relics from Alien Spacecraft--"Most mainstream scientists argue that the possible existence of spacecraft from a non-human origin is an 'extraordinary claim' that is not worth a serious study until “extraordinary evidence” falls to their lap."
Dark matter atoms may form shadowy galaxies with rapid star formation, reports Paul Sutter for Space.com. "In new simulations, 'dark atoms' formed dark stars and could even trigger the formation of black holes."
Pentagon denies secret UFO retrieval program after whistleblower bombshell--Experts and journalists backed whistleblower David Charles Grusch, a decorated Air Force veteran who said the US retrieved crafts of 'non-human origin'. Susan Gough, a spokesperson for the Department of Defense, told Fox News Digital in an email on Tuesday that there is no "verifiable information to substantiate the claims."
NASA’s UFO team discusses its findings publicly for the first time--A NASA group that formed around a year ago to study unidentified aerial phenomena held its first public meeting ahead of a report expected in the next few weeks, reports Leah Crane for New Scientist.
Curated by The Galaxy Report editorial staff