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Sci-Fi The Military

Ukraine's Astronomers Say There Are Tons of UFOs Over Kyiv (vice.com) 283

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: Ukraine's airspace has been busy this year -- that's the nature of war. But scientists in the country are looking to the skies and seeing something they didn't expect: An inordinate number of UFOs, according to a new preprint paper published (PDF) by Kyiv's Main Astronomical Observatory in coordination with the country's National Academy of Science. The paper does not specifically address the war, but in the United States, the Pentagon has long hinted, speculated, and warned that some UFOs could be advanced technology from foreign militaries, specifically China and Russia (though it hasn't really given any evidence this is actually the case). The Ukraine paper is particularly notable because it not only shows that science has continued to occur during the war, but also explains that there have been a lot of sightings. "We see them everywhere," the research said. "We observe a significant number of objects whose nature is not clear."

The paper is titled Unidentified aerial phenomena I. Observations of events come from observations made at NAS' Main Astronomical Observatory in Kyiv and a village south of Kyiv called Vinarivka. According to the paper's authors, the observatories took on the job of hunting for UFO's as an independent project because of the enthusiasm around the subject. It describes a specific type of UFO the researchers call "phantoms" that is an "object [that] is a completely black body that does not emit and absorbs all the radiation falling on it." The researchers also observed that the UFOs it's seeing are so fast that it's hard to take pictures of them. "The eye does not fix phenomena lasting less than one-tenth of a second," the paper said. "It takes four-tenths of a second to recognize an event. Ordinary photo and video recordings will also not capture the [unidentified aerial phenomenon]. To detect UAP, you need to fine-tune the equipment: shutter speed, frame rate, and dynamic range."

So the researchers did just that using two meteor monitoring stations in Kyiv and Vinarivka. "We have developed a special observation technique, taking into account the high speeds of the observed objects," the paper said. "The exposure time was chosen so that the image of the object did not shift significantly during exposure. The frame rate was chosen to take into account the speed of the object and the field of view of the camera. In practice, the exposure time was less than 1 ms, and the frame rate was no less than 50 Hz." The scientists divided the phenomenon they observed into two different categories: cosmics and phantoms. "We note that Cosmics are luminous objects, brighter than the background of the sky. We call these ships names of birds (swift, falcon, eagle)," the paper said. "Phantoms are dark objects, with contrast from several to about 50 percent."

Using the cameras, stationed roughly 75 miles apart, allowed the scientists to make repeated observations of strange objects moving in the sky. The paper didn't speculate on what the objects were, merely noted the observations and mentioned the objects' incredible speeds. "Flights of single, group and squadrons of the ships were detected, moving at speeds from 3 to 15 degrees per second," the research said. "Phantoms are observed in the troposphere at distances up to 10 -- 12 km. We estimate their size from 3 to 12 meters and speeds up to 15 km/s." The easy explanation would be that these are missiles, or rockets, or something else associated with the war. But the scientists insist that their nature "is not clear."

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Ukraine's Astronomers Say There Are Tons of UFOs Over Kyiv

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  • What is with this UFO fake news narrative? Who is paying for this regurgitated vegemite to be run over and over?
    • It's not fake news, but it's really not news at all.

      definition of UFO = Flying object that you can't identify.

      Yeah, in the middle of a serious shooting war, there will be a lot of stuff flying around (and without submitting flight plans or talking to the tower). If you don't recognize it... yep, it's a UFO by definition.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 13, 2022 @11:36PM (#62879757)

    The only evidence available will be a smudgy xerox of a grainy photo of a grainy photo of a contact print of a grainy photo. At least one of which will have been underdeveloped or overexposed and another the reverse.

    It's traditional.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      As noted in the summary, high quality photography is difficult due to their sheer speed. 15 km/s is way above the escape velocity from earth.

      • Re:For some reason (Score:4, Informative)

        by slack_justyb ( 862874 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @12:31AM (#62879853)

        15 km/s is way above the escape velocity from earth

        I mean I wouldn't call it "WAY" above as escape velocity is 11.2 km/s (assumptions of non-rotating body, perfectly spherical cows, etc...). But I mean, po-tay-to, po-tah-to.

        • you just said you thought military planes maneuvering in lower atmosphere could do 50% over escape velocity, a speed that even specialized craft can barely reach and frequently detonate towards reaching while doing a straight line

          maybe it's time to stop googling numbers

      • Re:For some reason (Score:5, Informative)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @05:25AM (#62880215)

        According to TFA, they are going 15 km/s at an altitude of 10-12 km.

        There is no airframe that could survive that for more than a few seconds.

    • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @12:57AM (#62879895)

      Aliens are naturally small and very blurry in nature, its the only explanation that makes sense...

    • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )

      The only evidence available will be a smudgy xerox of a grainy photo of a grainy photo of a contact print of a grainy photo.

      Yep you said it, they're all steeped in tradition. Photos of UFOs, Big Foot, Nessie are all the same quality from the Kodak Brownie to the latest most expensive digital camera.

    • in Infra Red of course.
    • Nope. It will be a shaky video taken from a smart phone of a CRT display image of a smudgy xerox of a grainy photo of a grainy photo of a contact print of a grainy photo.
  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Tuesday September 13, 2022 @11:43PM (#62879765)

    As opposed to a normal number of UFOs?

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @12:30AM (#62879851) Homepage Journal

      An "inordinate" number of probable alien spacecraft would be one or more. But as for UFOs, they're common as dirt. UAP is actually a better term for them because that they are (a) and object and (b) flying are each very big assumptions. I've seen meteor showers which, if you didn't understand what you were looking at, would convince most people they were looking at gravity-defying UFOs.

      In this case we have two independent sequences of observations that can be correlated and which can't be categorized by professional astronomers. That's pretty unusual, so again inordinate for that would be 1 or more. That's interesting. 15 km/s something like Mach 43; it's roughly the same order of magnitude but somewhat larger than orbital vehicle reentry. If we allow for error bars and what not, I'd say we're looking at something like that -- a IRBM reentry vehicle, possibly a hypersonic reentry vehicle.

      "Hypersonic" is not necessarily that exotic; the Kh-47M2 Kinzhal "hypersonic" missile is simply an air-launched SRBM. If these things aren't correlated with missile attacks, they may be some kind of hypersonic boost-glide spy vehicle.

      • That's a pretty crazy and expensive stretch.

        • lolwut?

          Dude mentions plausible explanations including existing military technology in use by one of the belligerents, but no, it's aliens.
          • by GoTeam ( 5042081 )

            Dude mentions plausible explanations including existing military technology in use by one of the belligerents, but no, it's aliens.

            That's exactly what an alien would say... Where were you that night Mr DamnOregonian?

    • You know it occurs to me this is a terrible time to be a UFO enthusiast. There's so many drones that virtually any UFO can be explained just by somebody's drone. Even larger ones aren't impossible to a dedicated hobbyist willing to flaunt the FAA. And if you're such a person you have to kind of keep it secret or you're going to get into a whole hell of a lot of trouble
  • by Eunomion ( 8640039 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @12:01AM (#62879793)
    But also the obvious that advanced drones from all parties would get some covert workouts in such a zone.
    • But also the obvious that advanced drones from all parties would get some covert workouts in such a zone.

      Hi chance of getting disclosed though. Defenses are up and cameras are rolling.

    • Based on the existing evidence that would be a Russian drone from the late 2000s.
  • by registrations_suck ( 1075251 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @12:05AM (#62879801)

    Dammit. Now I want to have a really good, really close UFO encounter.

    Thanks. Thanks a lot people.

  • Nonsense (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Uldis Segliņš ( 4468089 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @12:13AM (#62879809)
    Absolute garbage both from news and science standpoint. I can collect mysterious macro videos with too fast angle changing stuff and insist on calling them UGOs - unidentified garden objects. And then all of a sudden call them ships, for good measure throw in some sciency terms. Why are people even listening to such crackpots. So far every "UFO" video has been debunked with simple explanations like atmospheric effects, optics weakneses or even not understood technology - trusting too much that technology always captures same as our brain after all filters and postprocessing and unconscious decision what it is. Technology does not work like that. Stop assigning your brains effects to cameras, radars etc. Every antenna has sidelobes, every lens refraction, sensors and other chips have specific ways of working, that can be the source of weird effects. No need to make a shortcut to what it is just because we want to believe. This hype about UFOs is becoming a religion lately. Don't be fools!
    • I see someone is working hard to dissuade us of UFO existence.
      I wonder why, hmmm?

  • by TwistedGreen ( 80055 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @01:28AM (#62879953)
    Yeah, no... I don't think "astronomers" are saying any of this.
    • by Knuckles ( 8964 )

      Except that the authors here are astronomers,
      https://arxiv.org/abs/2208.112... [arxiv.org]

      • Re:Astronomers? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @03:39AM (#62880113)

        And their instruments intended to look at objects millions of light years away are able to discern activity in the atmosphere clearly enough to conclude such astounding claims as "absorbs all radiation"? At this point, you wait for the experiments to be proposed, conducted, and replicated. Otherwise jumping to conclusions is premature (ok, sure, it's super advanced soviet era technology, the same tech that allowed their tractors to operate an entire week before breaking down in some cases).

        • And their instruments intended to look at objects millions of light years away are able to discern activity in the atmosphere clearly enough to conclude

          JWST enters the chat.

          See those pics of the earliest galaxies? Then those images of Jupiter?

  • war (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Tom ( 822 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @01:40AM (#62879979) Homepage Journal

    Don't forget that we're in the middle of a war and anything that gets attention is good. The primary risk for the Ukraine is that the West loses interest. As soon as that happens, they're toast. In light of that - is there real science going on, or propaganda? UFO stuff already isn't the pinnacle of science, you know?

    • How many decades did it take for the west to lose interest in Afghanistan? They're not going to "lose interest" after 6 months now that war is in Europe.

      And if they did feel the need to rally their citizens in support of the war, they have way more effective talking points than UFOs.

      Perhaps people are just curious about the things they see in the sky. That's a lot less of a stretch to me than it being some kind of piss-poor attempt at warmongering, which they don't even need to do, given the high level of s

  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @01:46AM (#62879985) Journal

    "This is News Saucer 4726.3 bringing you the latest from these crazy humans..."

  • by Cito ( 1725214 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @02:06AM (#62880011)

    It was reported in recent years that China blew up a satellite with a ground missile that had horrible side effects causing collateral damage with other satellites. These things also have heat shields and exotic fuels. No telling what all have certain radioactive elements. Not to mention over 70 years of trash in orbit, from screws to shards of solar panel glass. All this mess raining down, and at the upper atmosphere of course the pieces will be bigger, then "suddenly disappear" as some burn up. And I bet various debris made out of old heat shield raining down probably looks really weird as it's odd shape will have it twisting and changing directions like crazy. At least that's the first thoughts I have.

    • Heat shields on a satellite? What the hell for? Once they're up, they're not coming back down, X-37 excepted. Exotic fuels? Basically everybody uses hydrazine of some flavor, with UDMH or Aerozine 50 being the most common. These can decompose as a monopropellant, so they won't be rocketing debris around, they'll just explode. Radioactive elements are minimal. Some Soviet satellites flew nuke reactors, and I think America tried a couple too, but most radioactive power sources are on a one-way trip to
  • If there's anything up there, I tend to think it might be some kind of unknown electrical phenomenon. Some UFOs might be a type of lightning that hasn't been described yet. That would explain why they've been around since ancient times. Others might be caused by RADAR or other types of electro-magnetic systems used in the military. That would explain the increase in modern times.

  • Unidentified flying objects over an area where a war is going on? Now that's unheard of.

  • Can't trust sworn statements. Can't trust the government. Can't trust the loonies broadcasting from converted minibuses.

    And you cannot trust video. Not one bit, not ever. If your "proof" is hosted on Youtube, go fuck yourself.

    Not only did that ship already sail, it sunk just over the horizon.

  • The published paper says this:

    The stations are equipped with ASI 178 MC and ASI 294 Pro CCD cameras, and Computar lenses with a focal length of 6 mm. The SharpCap 4.0 program was used for data recording.

    which is common equipment (sub $1000) used by amateur astronomers for both meteor detection and also imaging celestial objects: stars, planets, galaxies, etc.

    It seems to me that it would not be outside the bounds of amateur science to perform the same experiments, though maybe not in a war zone.

  • In WWII American pilots called them "foo fighters". Pretty sure sightings happened in 'Nam as well, and possibly in other conflicts. It seems like putting more people on the ground and in the air in combat or combat-related roles makes them, you know, see things?

    You can interpret this phenomenon in any number of ways, but it should come as no surprise that Ukrainians are seeing a lot of unusual activity in their skies.

    • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

      You can look at this a number of ways:

      1) Pilots are as susceptable as anyone else to visual illusions
      2) Even in WW2 secret craft were being flown by both sides (though I suspect anything like that would have come out by now if not from the USA/UK then certainly the Germans)
      3) Human war is a spectator sport for alien intelligence(s).

      Personally I'd go for 1.

      • Pretty much. 1) is the least-fun option, but you won't wind up looking too nutty if you pick it.

      • Well, we know the Nazis flew some wild shit -- flying wings, rocket planes, and the latter of those had wildly, impossibly, mind-bendingly good performance for the day.
    • In WWII American pilots called them "foo fighters".

      No, these are not "foo fighters". How do I know that? Because a foo fighter is something seen to follow an aircraft. These new sightings are observations from astronomers, people that are presumably on the ground and stationary. If it is not following an aircraft then it is not a foo fighter.

      There has been a handful of explanations for this phenomenon. It could be static buildup from the aircraft moving through the air creating a kind of tiny lightning storm that follows the aircraft. It could be a va

  • Should be lots of UFM.

    Unidentified Flying MIGs.

  • The exciting news is that we have discovered advanced life from beyond earth.

    The bad news is that they are just like us.
  • I know these are flying objects. I know they're not identified.

    Calling unknown military aircraft in an active theater of war "UFOs" is actively stupid to the point of being embarrassing.

    Jesus fuck, Slashdot.

  • So they are seeing "tons" of UFOs? I suppose that's a safe estimate, since a single aircraft generally weighs tons.

  • Those are UROs.

    (Unidentified Russian Objects)

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