logo
Harvard scientist warns 'hostile' alien craft could strike Earth in just months

Harvard scientist warns 'hostile' alien craft could strike Earth in just months

Daily Mail​2 days ago
A respected Harvard astrophysicist has revealed new evidence suggesting that the mysterious object barreling toward Earth this December is an alien craft.
Professor Avi Loeb and his team found that the supposed comet known as 3I/ATLAS is on an extremely unusual course that will take it close to three different planets: Venus, Mars, and Jupiter.
Loeb explained that 3I/ATLAS's course is so rare the chance of a natural space rock randomly flying along that path is less than 0.005 percent.
Based on those findings, Loeb, an outspoken believer in UFOs, has concluded that 3I/ATLAS may be an alien probe sent to this solar system by an unknown intelligence.
Moreover, Loeb said that such a craft and the beings who control it would have one of two motives, one being harmless and the other being hostile.
'The consequences, should the hypothesis turn out to be correct, could potentially be dire for humanity, and would possibly require defensive measures to be undertaken (though these might prove futile),' Loeb and his team warned in their new study.
The researchers' theory emerged from a grim scientific concept called the dark forest hypothesis, which assumes that other intelligent civilizations in the galaxy would be hostile and likely view humanity as a threat that needs to be attacked.
In 2021, Loeb theorized that Oumuamua, the first interstellar object which passed through our solar system, may have also been an alien probe, citing its strange cigar-like shape and its ability to speed up without the influence of gravity.
In May, Professor Loeb was one of the keynote speakers at a congressional hearing regarding UFO sightings. At that event, he said 'there are objects in the sky that we don't understand' while calling for increased funding for UFO detection.
Loeb has also claimed that up to 10 percent of the metal fragments recovered from the Pacific Ocean contain 'alien' elements not seen in our solar system.
Those remnants came from a meteor-like object that originated from interstellar space and crashed off the coast of Papua New Guinea in 2014. However, Loeb has maintained that the object could have been an alien craft, or at least debris from one.
This month, Loeb and co-authors Adam Drowl and Adam Hibberd from the space research non-profit Initiative for Interstellar Studies found other pieces of evidence that suggest 3I/ATLAS is not your average comet.
First, its massive size, which studies estimate as between seven and 12 miles long, would make it significantly larger than Oumuamua (300 to 1,300 feet long).
Scientists have said that interstellar objects that large should be extremely rare in the cosmos, making 3I/ATLAS's visit to our solar system a statistical long-shot.
Loeb's study also revealed 3I/ATLAS does not have a coma, a cloud of gas and dust that typically surround comets.
The team said this suggests the giant object is therefore not a comet, which should have a smaller core and be part of a larger population of interstellar objects.
Combined with the one-in-20,000 chance of making close passes by multiple planets this year, Loeb argued the possibility that the object headed toward Earth could be artificial can't be ignored.
'When viewed from an open-minded and unprejudiced perspective, these investigations have revealed many compelling insights into the possibility that 3I/ATLAS is technological,' Loeb explained.
Their new study was published to the pre-print server arXiv on July 17, meaning the research has not been peer-reviewed yet.
Whether it's a comet or an alien craft, 3I/ATLAS is expected to pass by Earth on December 17, speeding through the solar system at more than 41 miles per second (roughly 150,000 miles per hour).
On its current trajectory, it'll come within 2.4 astronomical units of our planet (223 million miles).
An astronomical unit (AU) is equal to the distance between Earth and the sun, 93 million miles. Technically, 3I/ATLAS has been in the solar system for weeks, and was roughly four AU away from Earth in early July.
In October, it'll make its closest approach to a planet, coming within 0.4 AU (37 million miles) of Mars.
Loeb's previous analysis of the massive object has found that it has come from a thicker part of the Milky Way galaxy's disk, where older stars are found.
The 12-mile-wide visitor is believed to be older than our sun, which is 4.6 billion years old.
The July 10 study in Astronomy & Astrophysics found 3I/ATLAS took about 800 million years to travel across part of the Milky Way to reach our solar system.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Photos show the cosmic calling of extraterrestrial enthusiasts at Indonesia's UFO Festival
Photos show the cosmic calling of extraterrestrial enthusiasts at Indonesia's UFO Festival

The Independent

time5 hours ago

  • The Independent

Photos show the cosmic calling of extraterrestrial enthusiasts at Indonesia's UFO Festival

A metallic spacecraft glistens under ambient light as two figures with elongated limbs, bulbous heads and featureless faces gaze with black eyes into the distance of the island of Java. The extraterrestrial arrival in Indonesia is one of the science fiction scenes that has captivated groups of outer space enthusiasts at the country's UFO Festival throughout July. Since 2016, organizers have welcomed hundreds of fans of outer space realities and mysteries from Indonesia and beyond. The festival aims to be a creative and intellectual crossroads for enthusiasts of space science and exploration, Unidentified Flying Objects, Unidentified Aerial Phenomena and SETI, short for the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence. This year's free event included an Alien Village, UFO Village and UFO Camp at a site near Yogyakarta, about 420 kilometers (260 miles) from the Indonesian capital Jakarta. Visitors admired a replica of a Mars exploration module and galleries with artistic interpretations of outer space, while workshops for adults and students offered cosmic activities such as spacesuit construction. Venzha Christ, director of the Indonesia Space Science Society, said a focus on the term UFO allows participants to wonder without boundaries. 'I think the Indonesian generation needs a platform that can transform and socialize creative ideas, whether from the perspective of technology, science or even art," Christ said. 'Imagining outer space, imagining the universe, is imagining limitlessness.' ___ Tarigan reported from Jakarta, Indonesia.

Satellite launched by India and Nasa to track changes to Earth's land and ice
Satellite launched by India and Nasa to track changes to Earth's land and ice

STV News

time16 hours ago

  • STV News

Satellite launched by India and Nasa to track changes to Earth's land and ice

Nasa and India have teamed up to launch an Earth-mapping satellite capable of tracking the slightest shifts in land and ice. The $1.3bn (£980m) mission will help forecasters and first responders stay one step ahead of floods, landslides, volcanic eruptions and other disasters, according to scientists. Rocketing to orbit from India, the satellite will survey virtually all of Earth's terrain multiple times. Its two radars – one from the US and the other from India – will operate day and night, peering through clouds, rain and foliage to collect troves of data in extraordinary detail. Microwave signals beamed down to Earth from the dual radars will bounce back up to the satellite's super-sized antenna reflector perched at the end of a boom like a beach umbrella. Scientists will compare the incoming and outgoing signals as the spacecraft passes over the same locations twice every 12 days, teasing out changes as small as a fraction of an inch. It's 'a first-of-its-kind, jewel radar satellite that will change the way we study our home planet and better predict a natural disaster before it strikes,' Nasa's science mission chief Nicky Fox said ahead of liftoff. Ms Fox led a small Nasa delegation to India for the launch. PA Media The Nisar satellite at the Indian Space Research Organisation's Satish Dhawan Space Centre (Indian Space Research Organisation/Nasa/AP) 'Congratulations India!' minister of science and technology Jitendra Singh posted once the satellite safely reached orbit, adding that the mission 'will benefit the entire world community'. Nasa's deputy associate administrator Casey Swails, part of the delegation that travelled to India, said it 'really shows the world what our two nations can do. But more so than that, it really is a pathfinder for the relationship building'. It will take a week to extend the satellite's 30ft boom and open the 39ft-in-diameter drum-shaped reflector made of gold-plated wire mesh. Science operations should begin by the end of October. Among the satellite's most pressing measurements: melting glaciers and polar ice sheets; shifting groundwater supplies; motion and stress of land surfaces prompting landslides and earthquakes; and forest and wetland disruptions boosting carbon dioxide and methane emissions. Nasa is contributing $1.2bn (£900m) to the three-year mission – it supplied the low-frequency radar and reflector. The Indian Space Research Organisation's $91m (£68m) share includes the higher-frequency radar and main satellite structure, as well as the launch from a barrier island in the Bay of Bengal. It is the biggest space collaboration between the two countries. The satellite called Nisar – short for Nasa-Isro Synthetic Aperture Radar – will operate from a near-polar-circling orbit 464 miles high. It will join dozens of Earth observation missions already in operation by the US and India. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

Joe Rogan is stunned by 'alien probe' hurtling towards Earth at 130,000mph
Joe Rogan is stunned by 'alien probe' hurtling towards Earth at 130,000mph

Daily Mail​

time18 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Joe Rogan is stunned by 'alien probe' hurtling towards Earth at 130,000mph

Joe Rogan expressed shock during his podcast after reading a article detailing a mysterious interstellar object reportedly on a path toward Earth. NASA has identified the object, named 3I/ATLAS, as a likely comet, but Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb has proposed a more controversial theory, suggesting the object could be 'an alien probe.' Rogan said that the object is approaching from behind the sun, making it difficult to detect, adding that Loeb believes the object is on a direct trajectory toward Earth and could arrive in 2027. During Tuesday's episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, the podcaster read aloud from the article, reacting in real-time to its contents. ' The object measures roughly seven miles in diameter. Holy f***. How big is New York City?'* he said, astonished. 'Bigger than Mount Everest, making it the largest interstellar object ever spotted.' The article also included skepticism from astronomer Chris Lintott of the University of Oxford, who told Live Science that Loeb's theory was 'nonsense on stilts.' Rogan acknowledged the criticism but defended Loeb's credentials: 'Harvard is legit and Avi is a legit astronomer.' The podcaster then speculated that the object could be intentionally sent to Earth to wipe out humanity and reset civilization, similar to how the dinosaurs were wiped out. Rogan offered his scenario for what could happen if the object turns out to be an alien craft, suggesting 'that might be the end of the Earth.' He speculated that the timing of the object's arrival could coincide with a tipping point in the rise of artificial intelligence, imagining a future where AI gains control of the planet and deems humanity unsalvageable. 'It wipes everything out. Just like when the dinosaurs were here. Maybe that's how they reset the game,' said Rogan. In his view, such an extinction-level event could pave the way for a new beginning. 'We start fresh with new organisms, and then they come along and do genetic engineering, just like they did with us and monkeys, to create a new version of humans,' he continued. 'But this time, they make us a little less territorial, a little more inquisitive, more interested in innovation and less focused on controlling resources. Because that's what f**** us.' 3I/ATLAS was first identified on July 1 in data from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile. A team of more than 200 researchers determined that the object's nucleus, the solid core of a comet, is roughly 3.5 miles wide, and its appearance suggests it contains large amounts of ice and dust in a surrounding cloud known as a coma. However, Loeb recently challenged this classification in a preprint study published on arXiv. Loeb and his team found that 3I/ATLAS appears to lack a coma altogether, raising doubts about whether it is a natural object. According to the Harvard professor, the absence of a coma could mean the object isn't a comet at all but something artificial. 'The consequences, should the hypothesis turn out to be correct, could potentially be dire for humanity, and would possibly require defensive measures to be undertaken (though these might prove futile),' the study warned. Loeb's theory draws from a bleak scientific concept known as the Dark Forest Hypothesis, which suggests that intelligent civilizations may remain silent or act preemptively to eliminate threats, meaning they could view humanity as something to destroy before it becomes dangerous. 'As a scientist, I respond to evidence collected by instruments, the professor shared in a blog post on Wednesday. 'As of now, we have anomalies but we need more data on 3I/ATLAS or other interstellar objects in order to ascertain whether any one of them is technological in origin. 'Once we find an interstellar artifact beyond a reasonable doubt, the next step will be to figure out its technological capabilities and intent.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store