Ever since the first sighting more than 75 years ago, popular culture has usually depicted a UFO as a flying saucer emitting a powerful halo of light.
But that could finally change following the official release of information from the Pentagon about the mysterious aerial phenomena.
Based on clues from reported sightings, the typical UFO has a round shape, usually described as spherical or an orb, with a white or silver colour, often translucent.
It also has a size of between 3 and 13 feet (1 to 4 metres) and usually travels through the air at a height just below commercial passenger planes.
The Pentagon has also released a hotspot map that reveals the location of reported UFO sightings, including Japan and the Middle East.
The new Department of Defense document reveals characteristics of the typical UFO, including the colour and the shape, velocity, and flight level
Details about the typical UFO, based on reports between 1996 and 2023, were revealed in the document posted to the new website of the AARO, a dedicated UFO office under the Department of Defense, formed in July last year.
AARO discloses that most UFOs (28 per cent) have been sighted at altitudes of around 20,000 feet – just under commercial air traffic.
Around 10 per cent have been reported at just 5,000 feet – around eight times as tall as Seattle’s Space Needle and three times as tall as New York’s One World Tower.
In terms of shape, most of them (47 per cent) have been described as ‘orb’, ’round’ or ‘sphere’, while one per cent have been Tic Tac-shaped.
One of the most famous and unusual UFOs to date, spotted by the US Navy in 2004, was the floaty white oblong similar to the breath mint.
Other UFO shapes include rectangle, oval, triangle, disk, cylinder, square and even polygon, although 19 have had an ‘ambiguous’ shape.
Meanwhile, 16 per cent have been described as having lights, although in many cases this may have been due to their reflective qualities.
‘Thermal signatures’ include the emission of shortwave or medium-wave infrared light, which is invisible to the naked eye but can be picked up by special detectors.
Ever since the first UFO sighting more than 75 years ago, popular culture has usually depicted them as flying saucers, as round as wheels. Pictured, cover of the pulp science fiction magazine Amazing Stories from October 1957
One of the most famous and unusual UFOs to date, spotted by the US Navy in 2004, was compared with the Tic Tac breath mint due to its white, oblong appearance (pictured)
AARO says that most UFOs (28 per cent) have been sighted at altitudes of around 20,000 feet – less than commercial air traffic
In terms of velocity, it is generally ‘stationary to Mach 2’ – meaning the UFO will range from not moving at all to moving at two times the speed of sound, which is just over 1,500 miles per hour.
And it has ‘no thermal exhaust detected’, so the ones that move at considerable speeds may have other means of propulsion, albeit unknown.
UFO stands for ‘unidentified flying object’ and so the term doesn’t necessarily describe an object with an extraterrestrial origin.
Department of Defense, commonly known as the Pentagon, now refrains from using the term UFO at all.
This is largely because it is commonly associated with wind up conspiracy theories and paranoia (such as the ‘time traveler’ who claims an alien invasion will take place next year).
Instead, the Pentagon uses UAP – ‘unidentified aerial phenomenon’ – although in most places this has low usage and is yet to enter common parlance.
AARO explains: ‘DoD considers unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) as sources of anomalous detections in one or more domain (i.e., airborne, seaborne, spaceborne, and/or transmedium).
‘[They] are not yet attributable to known actors and that demonstrate behaviors that are not readily understood by sensors or observers.’
Most UFOs have been described as ‘orb’, ‘round’ or ‘sphere’, but other reported shapes include polygon, triangle and ‘Tic Tac’
Artist’s impression of a UFO. New data from the Pentagon neither supports nor refutes this depiction
These days, UFOs are considered a security threat by the Pentagon, which will have them shot down if they are in enough space and don’t pose dangers to citizens below.
A good example is the ‘octagonal’ object with ‘potential surveillance capabilities’ that was taken out over the Great Lakes in February (which itself followed the elimination of a Chinese ‘spy balloon’).
Others may get mistaken for astronomical objects if they arrive with a flash of light (one possible example is the 2015 UFO that was said to burn away in the atmosphere over the Indian Ocean).
The US government is notoriously secretive when it comes to sharing what it knows about UFOs, but the new AARO’s new website could usher an era of more transparency with the public.
It will be a ‘one-stop shop’ for publicly available information on the phenomena and it could be a matter of time before fresh data is disclosed.
In a recent statement, Pentagon officials said the site would shows how ‘committed’ it is to ‘transparency with the American people’.
It comes not long after a prominent UFO whistleblower David Grusch delivered a bombshell testimony before Congress, claiming the Pentagon was covering up evidence related to extraterrestrials.
He testified under oath that the Pentagon had first-hand encounters or knowledge about secret government programmes involving technology that is ‘non-human’.
In response, one Twitter user posted: ‘David Grusch is my hero. The man will go down in history as the spark that ignited the flame that burnt down the façade separating humanity from the truth of our origins.’
However, Sean Kirkpatrick, a laser and materials physicist, slammed Grusch’s claims about alleged secret programs that retrieve crashed UFOs and reverse engineer the technology as ‘insulting’.
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