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Meet 'Blackbird': A flying taxi that spins and moves in any direction thanks to new propulsion system
December 6, 2024
A new type of flying car could soon be ferrying passengers through the skies using a novel propulsion technology, engineers say.
On Nov. 5, CycloTech, an Austrian company that builds flying car components, unveiled blueprints for its new "BlackBird" demonstrator aircraft — a flying car that uses a custom-made alternative to propellers.
Dubbed the "CycloRotor," this all-electric propulsion system is based on the principle of the Voith Schneider propeller (VSP) — which is frequently used on tug boats and ferries, CycloTech chief technology officer Tahsin Kart said in a promotional video. It's a circular rotor with small propeller blades inside, which spin around and can be used for both propulsion and steering.
By moving the center around which the propeller blades spin, the aircraft can change its airspeed and direction, CycloTech representatives said in a statement.
Each propeller blade can also be angled to produce directional thrust, like the wing of an aircraft, and can be precisely aligned to send the aircraft in specific directions or rotate mid-air.
The CycloRotors will greatly enhance the BlackBird demonstrator's maneuverability, enabling it to move or spin in any direction while airborne and also perform sharp corrections to its trajectory with added precision, CycloTech representatives said in the statement.
This can also improve the comfort and safety of passengers on any flight in windy or other inclement weather conditions, they added.
This technology sets BlackBird apart from electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft, such as those being tested by DARPA, as well as prototype air taxis — all of which use more traditional propeller designs.
The Blackbird demonstrator is still in development, but CycloTech released several promotional videos showing the CycloRotor technology being used to levitate and propel scale models.
At present, the model can support a maximum of 750 pounds (340 kilograms) and can fly at around 73 mph (118 km/h).
This is almost half that of a Skyhawk Cessna, one of the most popular private light aircraft options on the market, which can max out at 142 mph (229 km/h).
The team behind the BlackBird demonstrator aims to fly a full-size version of the aircraft in early 2025.
https://www.space.com/space-exploration/tech/meet-blackbird-a-flying-taxi-that-spins-and-moves-in-any-direction-thanks-to-new-propulsion-system
https://www.cyclotech.at/
https://www.youtube.com/@cyclotechgmbh/
Dwarf planet Ceres could be rich in organics, defunct spacecraft data reveals
December 6, 2024
Using data from NASA's now-defunct Dawn spacecraft, scientists have discovered that the dwarf planet Ceres, the second wettest body in the solar system after Earth, could have an interior reserve rich in organic materials — the building blocks of life.
The results hint that Ceres may have enough internal water, organic molecules, and the energy source needed for life to exist on the dwarf planet. Of course, that alone doesn't suggest the dwarf planet is inhabited.
Dawn was a mission that explored Ceres, the largest object in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, and the slightly smaller Vesta.
It beamed its last data back to Earth 6 years ago, but prior to that, in 2017, the spacecraft detected organic compounds near the Ernutet crater in Ceres' northern hemisphere.
Researchers from Spain's Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía used Dawn data to identify 11 more regions on Ceres rich in organic material. This indicated to the team that a reservoir of organic materials exists within Ceres.
With a width of over 578 miles (930 kilometers), Ceres doesn't quite meet the criteria of a planet, but with its abundant water, it could well qualify as an ocean world.
That means it is also an object with potential significance in the search for life beyond Earth.
There was already heated discussion surrounding Ceres' origin and evolution, and this discovery may settle that debate.
The problem arises from the fact that organic compounds are rapidly degraded by solar radiation, and if these materials were always on the surface of Ceres, they should have been destroyed or at least have their abundances reduced.
One suggestion proposed that the detected materials were delivered to Ceres via recent impacts of organic-rich comets or asteroids. Another suggests that the organics seen at the surface of Ceres came from within the dwarf planet.
These findings dispute the former theory, suggesting the organic materials come from within the dwarf planet or are "endogenous."
"The significance of this discovery lies in the fact that, if these are endogenous materials, it would confirm the existence of internal energy sources that could support biological processes," team leader and Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía researcher Juan Luis Rizos said in a statement.
To investigate the organic compounds found on Ceres, the team used a new approach that examined the dwarf planet's surface and the distribution of organic matter at the highest possible resolution.
Of particular interest were the compounds discovered in a region at the equator of Ceres called the Ernutet crater. Most of the 11 regions discovered in the Dawn data were found in this region toward the equator of Ceres.
The materials in the sites around the Ernutet crater had been exposed to more solar radiation than those in the crater. That degraded the spectral features of the exposed material, making them tougher to spot in Dawn data.
Standing out to the team was a region between the Urvara and Yalode basins of Ceres, which contained the strongest traces of organic materials, which appear to have been dispersed through this region by the asteroid impacts that created these basins.
"These impacts were the most violent Ceres has experienced, so the material must originate from deeper regions than the material ejected from other basins or craters," Rizos said.
The scientist added that if the presence of organics is confirmed, their origin leaves little doubt that these compounds were created in the interior of Ceres.
And the quantities of the materials detected by the team hint that organic molecules must exist in great amounts below the surface of Ceres.
The composition of Ceres links the dwarf planets with a family of meteorites rich in compounds of carbon.
These fragments of asteroids are called "carbonaceous chondrites" which are thought to be composed of material that existed around 4.6 billion years ago as the planets were forming around the infant sun.
In addition to this, Ceres could be a vital destination for future space exploration.
"Ceres will play a key role in future space exploration. Its water, present as ice and possibly as liquid beneath the surface, makes it an intriguing location for resource exploration," Rizos explained.
"In the context of space colonization, Ceres could serve as a stopover or resource base for future missions to Mars or beyond."
These researchers' findings, suggesting that organic materials were recently released to the surface of Ceres by asteroid impacts, are supported by separate results delivered by a team of Italian scientists.
This separate team found that organic compounds degrade more rapidly under solar radiation than previously estimated.
https://www.space.com/dwarf-planet-ceres-water
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/PSJ/ad86ba
https://www.space.com/the-universe/stars/Zwicky-Transient-Facility-10000-supernova
https://sites.astro.caltech.edu/ztf/bts/bts.php
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IBeEAA_g-gc
Over 10,000 exploding stars catalogued by groundbreaking Zwicky Transient Facility
December 6, 2024
The Zwicky Transient Facility has reached an incredible milestone: It has classified over 10,000 cosmic explosions that mark the deaths of massive stars and the feeding frenzies of vampire stellar remnants.
These events, called supernovas, are undoubtedly some of the most fearsome and powerful events in the universe.
Since 2012, humanity has discovered almost 16,000 supernovas. The Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF), which began operations in 2017 using the 48-inch telescope at Palomar Observatory, is responsible for almost two-thirds of these detections.
That makes it the largest and arguably most successful supernova surveyor to date.
"There are trillions of stars in the universe, and about every second, one of them explodes," California Institute of Technology astronomer Christoffer Fremling said in a statement.
"Reaching 10,000 classifications is amazing, but what we truly should celebrate is the incredible progress we have made in our ability to browse the universe for transients, or objects that change in the sky, and the science our rich data will enable."
Fremling is the leader of the Bright Transient Survey, an endeavor that uses the ZTF to discover and classify new supernovas.
It should probably come as no surprise that the ZTF has been so revolutionary in supernova science because it has pedigree even in its name.
The project is named for Caltech astronomer Fritz Zwicky.
In the 1930s, Zwicky began hunting cosmic explosions with a small telescope from the frigid heights of the Palomar Mountain near San Diego.
By the 1940s, Zwicky moved his hunt for supernovas to the 48-inch Samuel Oschin telescope at Palomar Observatory, along with his collaborator, Walter Baade.
Together, Zwicky and Baade discovered a multitude of these explosions, coining the term "supernova" to describe them.
Finding over 120 supernovas across his career, Zwicky, who passed away in 1974, held the record for hunting these stellar explosions until 2009.
Now, the supernova-hunting facility that shares Zwicky's name continues his record-setting work.
Why supernova classification matters
The ZTF doesn't just hunt supernovas. This project is capable of detecting a range of transient astronomical events, which are events that occur and then fade from the sky.
Transient events tracked by the ZTF include rapidly moving asteroids in the solar system, black holes ripping apart stars and devouring them in so-called tidal disruption events (TDEs), and colliding stars that eventually merge.
The ZTF detects hundreds of thousands of these transient events each night. Once verified, these detections are sent to an astronomy database called the "Transient Name Server."
From there, they are available to the astronomical community as a whole. This allows astronomers to follow up on the detection of supernovas using a range of telescopes around the globe.
ZTF principal investigator and Caltech astronomer Mansi Kasliwal says that the "name of the game" for ZTF studying supernovas is to obtain spectra.
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"Discovery is only the first step," she said. "Spectra are the most valuable currency in this field. You don't know the physics and chemistry of the object without that."
Obtaining the spectrum of light from these supernovas allows scientists to determine a range of characteristics.
That includes their distances from Earth, the chemical compositions of the stars from which they erupted, and, crucially, what type of supernova the ZTF has witnessed.
The supernovas that relate to the deaths of massive stars are referred to as core-collapse supernovas.
They occur when massive stars run out of fuel for nuclear fusion, and the outward flow of energy that supports them against the inward push of gravity ceases.
The core of the massive star collapses to create a neutron star or a black hole. This collapse sends shockwaves rippling into the outer layers of the star, causing a core-collapse supernova.
Another type of supernova occurs when the remnant of an already dead star, a white dwarf, vampirically strips material away from a companion star.
This material builds up on the surface of the white dwarf, triggering a thermonuclear explosion, which is seen as a Type Ia supernova.
This process usually obliterates the white dwarf, but there are rare events called Type-Iax supernovas in which the stellar remnant lives on as a ravaged "zombie star."
It is vitally important to identify Type Ia supernovas because they are a crucial astronomical tool. Because the light output of Type Ia explosions are so uniform, they are known as "standard candles," and they can be used as milestones on a giant cosmic measuring stick.
The ZTF doesn't just hunt supernovas for other facilities to identify, however. Using two spectrographs at Palomar Observatory, the ZTF project can also classify its own supernovas and supernovas detected by other facilities.
"Back when we started this project, we didn't know how many astronomers would follow up on our detections," Fremling said.
"To see that so many have is a testament to why we built ZTF: to survey the whole sky for changing objects and share those data as rapidly as possible with astronomers around the world."
One of the project's biggest achievements was the discovery of Supernova Zwicky (SN Zwicky), a cosmic explosion warped by an effect called "gravitational lensing," which allowed it to appear four times in the same image.
"I was observing that night and was absolutely stunned when I saw the lensed image of SN Zwicky," Fremling explained in a Caltech news story last year.
"We catch and classify thousands of transients with the Bright Transient Survey, and that gives us a unique ability to find very rare phenomena such as SN Zwicky."
Moving forward from this milestone, data from the ZTF will continue to help astronomers answer questions about stellar life and death — and may even assist in solving the mystery of dark energy, the unknown force driving the acceleration of the expansion of the universe.
Zwicky's legacy of supernova science is in good hands.
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Watch the sun rise on SpaceX's Crew Dragon as the Milky Way fades into darkness in mesmerizing ISS video
December 6, 2024
A new video from humanity's largest orbital laboratory is a good reminder of why spaceflight continues to captivate us.
In this one-minute clip posted to X from the International Space Station (ISS) social media account, SpaceX's Crew Dragon Freedom can be seen docked against the backdrop of the Milky Way.
The arm of our galaxy that's visible to us then gradually fades as the sunlight reflected off the spacecraft brightens to a blinding white.
The ISS travels in low-Earth orbit (LEO) at an altitude of about 260 miles (420 kilometers) and an average speed of 17,150 miles per hour (27,600 kilometers per hour). It completes an orbit around the planet once every 90 minutes.
Pertaining to the transition between Earth's light and dark sides, astronauts aboard the space station experience 16 sunrises and sunsets every day — so, if astronauts aboard the station don't happen to be near a window to catch the view, they never have long to wait before it comes back around again.
Crew Dragon Freedom arrived to the ISS on Sep. 29, after launching aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.
The spacecraft carried two members of SpaceX's Crew-9 mission: NASA astronaut Nick Hague, Crew-9 commander, and Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov.
Normally, a crewed SpaceX mission to the ISS includes four crewmembers, but two crewmembers of the Crew-9 rotation were already aboard the space station.
NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams were added to the Crew-9 manifest after their original ride to the space station, Boeing's Starliner spacecraft, returned to Earth without them.
Problems with Starliner's thrusters when it arrived to the ISS in June forced NASA to find another way home for Wilmore and Williams.
As a result, the agency removed NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Stephanie Wilson from the Crew-9 manifest in order to make room for Wilmore and Williams aboard the Dragon capsule designated for the mission; the spacecraft will be returning to Earth in February.
In the meantime, Freedom is docked to the zenith port of the space station's Harmony module.
The spacecraft was recently relocated from the module's forward port, allowing astronauts to look down at the capsule without a backdrop of the Earth.
Instead, while in planet's shadow, the stars behind Dragon light up to reveal the Milky Way in the distance.
https://www.space.com/space-exploration/international-space-station/watch-the-sun-rise-on-spacexs-crew-dragon-as-the-milky-way-fades-into-darkness-in-mesmerizing-iss-video
https://x.com/Space_Station/status/1864335101053550742
Integrating Commercial Space into National Security: Opportunities and Challenges
December 6, 2024
Join us on Dec. 18 for an exclusive webinar that explores the critical intersection of commercial space innovation and defense sector transformation.
The rapid evolution of commercial space technologies is reshaping the boundaries of national security.
From advanced satellite constellations to resilient communication systems, venture-backed startups are pioneering innovations that could redefine how the Department of Defense achieves its mission.
But navigating the Pentagon’s complex procurement process, ensuring compatibility with legacy systems, and addressing security concerns present significant hurdles for non-traditional players.
Discussion Topics:
The U.S. Space Force’s priorities in leveraging commercial space capabilities to enhance strategic operations.
Key challenges in integrating innovative technologies into national security frameworks.
Strategies for startups and VC-backed ventures to break into the defense market.
David Ariosto
SpaceNews Host, Journalist, and author of the upcoming Knopf book “Open Space”
Col. Richard Kniseley
Senior Materiel Leader, Commercial Space Office,
USSF Space Systems Command
Maj. Gen. Steven J. Butow
Military Deputy,
Defense Innovation Unit
Arthur F. Grijalva
Director,
SpaceWERX
https://spacenews.com/integrating-commercial-space-into-national-security-opportunities-and-challenges/
Space Force Training, Readiness Shine at I/ITSEC
Dec. 5, 2024
U.S. Space Force Maj. Gen. Tim Sejba, commander of Space Training and Readiness Command (STARCOM), shared a forward-looking vision for the command at the Interservice/Industry Training, Simulation & Education Conference (I/ITSEC) on Dec. 3. Sejba kicked off I/ITSEC 2024 as part of a panel, joined by joint and international senior leaders.
As the Space Force considers its future needs for modeling and simulation—spanning wargaming, training, and high-end testing—it is apparent that complex systems and integrated threats in both space and cyberspace require new approaches.
“When you think about many of the space systems and the effects that we provide for the joint force and our allies, we have to be able to counter both the space and cyber threat significantly differently than we have in the past,” said Sejba.
“I’m continually reminded by some of my Air Force mentors that building out the ranges that the Air Force has did not happen overnight. It happened over many decades to get to what we have at Nellis and other ranges today.”
The first step is putting in the right infrastructure to enable integrated training, he noted.
“In a benign environment, which we operated for many decades, we could develop individual trainers… positional trainers that allowed crews to get very proficient to do their daily jobs, day in and day out,” Sejba said.
“But that didn’t necessarily integrate a threat into that environment the way we face threats today.”
He highlighted how the Space Force, as a deployed-in-place force, operates most of its capability from the United States, requiring integrated units to address electronic warfare challenges in ways unlike traditional force deployments.
Training infrastructure forms the foundation, but effective execution is the next step. Sejba emphasized the need to build realistic and timely training scenarios that align with the timelines of joint and allied forces.
“We must look at how we actually build out training and threat scenarios to make sure that we’re on the same timelines as the rest of our joint force and allied partners,” he said, noting the importance of providing ‘red threat’ aggressor Guardians.
“Our Aggressors bring the threat of how we are actually going to represent and deny space capability, so we understand how to operate in that contested environment.
We have to be able to do this digitally, and we’ll have to provide that to large-scale exercises, both today and in the future.”
Sejba praised the Space Force’s ability to attract top talent, noting that the average age of new enlisted Guardians is 24, with many already holding degrees.
“We know that we already have a highly technical force,” said Sejba. “Challenging them as early as Basic Military Training to understand the environment and the domain that they're going to have to operate in is really important.”
The September stand-up of the service’s new Officer Training Course represents a pivotal step in the continued development of its officer Guardians, Sejba added.
STARCOM is also preparing for a significant transition as it relocates its headquarters, said Sejba.
“Earlier this year, the Secretary of the Air Force announced that we would move from our temporary location in Colorado Springs, down here to Florida—just down the street at Cocoa Beach and Patrick Space Force Base,” Sejba noted.
“At the same time as we move the headquarters, we’re laser-focused on making sure combat credibility stays at the front edge.”
Events like I/ITSEC represent the opportunity for continued partnership across the military, academic, and industry enterprises, said Sejba.
“It’s a great honor to represent our service,” he said, reflecting on the Space Force’s rapid evolution since its founding in 2019. “Combat credibility is one of the key things we are focused on, certainly in an era of great power competition.
As we approach our fifth anniversary on Dec. 20, I encourage everyone to reflect on how far we’ve come in preparing Guardians and combat-critical capabilities for the high-end threats we now face, and how we’re going to support the joint force and our allies differently than we ever had to.”
Space Training and Readiness Command prepares combat-ready USSF forces to prevail in competition and conflict through innovative education, training, doctrine, and test.
The command, established in 2021, is comprised of five Space Deltas, and develops superior space capabilities, delivers warfighting solutions, and prepares every Space Force Guardian.
https://www.starcom.spaceforce.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/3986489/space-force-training-readiness-shine-at-iitsec/
The 'Deep State' exists and it knows all about aliens and UFOs, US official claims
15:19, 6 DEC 2024
US officials sat down for an interview and claimed the Government know more than they let on about aliens and UFOs.
Republican politician Eric Burlison and former state legislator Tim Burchett revealed the shock news about aliens in a podcast interview for Timothy Alberino.
Burlison, who is in his second year in office, says he's frustrated about the lack of confirmed information. He also revealed he is aware of a so-called "deep state" in the US.
According to an American political conspiracy theory, the deep state is a seecret network of members of the government – especially within the FBI – working with business and financial leaders.
They claim the deep state exercises power alongside or within the elected United States government and influences huge decisions.
Burlison also made a reference to "special access programmes" that are against their laws.
He wants to identify them and ensure they are following correct procedure for the public. While there was no evidence provided, Burlison seems adamant they are influencing the Pentagon.
"The one thing we have been able to confirm, that without a shadow of a doubt, that there is a 'Deep State,' there are these special access programs, and they are violating the law," he said.
He then followed on to the Pentagon, where many of the secrets off the US are held. Burlison claims they don't want to look like "they have their pants down."
The politician again did not reveal what he knew, but suggested the organisation didn't want to get caught out.
"They think 'if I don't know about it, it must not exist,' so we're facing that as well." The conversation was made in relation to information being withheld from the public, specifically regarding UFO disclosure.
Conspiracy theorists believe the Government should provide an open policy when it comes to outer space. While the White House has previously released their UFO sightings, some believe this is not strong enough evidence.
Several within the US believe that aliens have made contact with the earth, and the government is withholding information. The campaign for disclosure has been running online, with many fans sharing their opinions.
One wrote "They will be operating under a presidential order," suggesting President Joe Biden is ensuring all UFO information is strictly forbidden for discussion.
"How does deep state benefit from telling people ETs are here and we/they can't control their activities? They benefit only by putting disclosure off indefinable" added another.
https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/latest-news/deep-state-exists-knows-aliens-34263830
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qlkmz7vaynY
EXCLUSIVE: Declassified Records Shed Light On Past Bucks County UFO Sightings
December 5, 2024
With the latest buzz about government investigations into unidentified flying objects (UFOs), previously classified records from the U.S. Air Force reveal details about Bucks County’s own past sightings.
Project Blue Book, the U.S. Air Force’s study of UFOs, which spanned from 1952 to 1969, included several local reports and investigations.
Project Blue Book was based at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio and looked to determine if UFOs were a threat to national security and to scientifically analyze UFO-related data.
Out of 12,618 reports collected, 701 remained unexplained, with the majority attributed to misidentifications of natural phenomena or man-made objects, like planes, spotlights, and weather balloons.
Below are the Bucks County-related reports we uncovered:
Langhorne – Sept. 24, 1966 – A person reported a “very bright” object that was moving toward the northern horizon around 9:26 p.m. It had no sound.
It was also observed through a telescope and a drawing showed a large white circle with a white ring around it. U.S. Air Force Major Hector Quintanilla Jr. found the report did not have sufficient information for further evaluation.
Morrisville – Sept. 3 to 4, 1966 – A couple in Morrisville Borough reported a UFO sighting to Johnsville Naval Air Station in Warminster Township.
The couple reported seeing a very bright white light in the sky around 10:35 p.m. and it remained visible for nearly 20 minutes. U.S. Air Force Major Hector Quintanilla Jr. found that the report was “not sufficient for evaluation.”
Doylestown – Nov. 15, 1966 – a person reported flashing lights brighter than the brightest stars around 10:30 p.m. in the eastern sky.
U.S. Air Force Major Hector Quintanilla Jr. found that the report was “not sufficient for evaluation.”
Newtown – Nov. 15. 1966 – A resident reported a glowing red-green light in the eastern sky. The object stayed in one spot but then moved up and down before going back to the original spot.
The person reported seeing the object for one hour. An investigation found the person likely saw Sirius rising. Sirius is the brightest star in the night and means “glowing” in Greek.
Yardley – Jan. 24, 1967 – A round object described as big as a planet to the size of a moon was reported from Bucks County to Plattsburgh Air Force Base in New York in the southeast sky.
The New York air force base’s control tower were among the witnesses before the object disappeared over the horizon. An investigation determined the object was decaying pieces of a satellite returning to Earth’s atmosphere.
Morrisville – Jan 25, 1967 – A Levittown woman, a Newtown resident, and two boys reported seeing an illuminated object with a very bright tail that was traveling in the northern sky for three to five minutes around 10:30 p.m. as the group traveled back to Levittown after a movie.
The woman wrote that the object was “so different” that it could not be compared to anything else. She added: “The first thing that came to my mind was that it must be a ‘flying saucer.'” Investigators determined the sighting was possibly a satellite.
Bristol and Philadelphia – Nov. 14, 1959 – Reports came in that a bright orange object shaped like an inverted dish with a structure on the top that pulsated was seen for four minutes before fading away.
A Philadelphia resident, who was an amateur astronomer, reported seeing the object from Northeast Philadelphia heading toward the Pennsylvania Turnpike bridge across the Delaware River in Bristol Township.
According to declassified records, there were photos taken of the object using 35mm film and a telephoto lens.
An investigation determined that the sighting most likely was related to 250 million candlepower photo flares dropped by a U.S. Air Force aerial photo plane that was performing a planned mission between Fort Dix in New Jersey and Bristol.
The sighting time lines up with the mission. An officer from McGuire Air Force Base in New Jersey noted that the mission was announced over Philadelphia radio stations in advance.
The photos were reviewed at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and returned to the photographer, according to a June 1959 letter by U.S. Air Force Major Lawrence J. Tacker.
None of the local reports were found to be little green men, but the reports were logged and several investigated.
The declassified records are accessible through the National Archives via the Freedom of Information Act.
https://levittownnow.com/2024/12/05/exclusive-declassified-records-shed-light-on-past-bucks-county-ufo-sightings/
Exact date Donald Trump will release all secret files on 'UFO and potential ETs' revealed
09:46, 6 DEC 2024
An alien-loving lawyer has claimed that incoming United States President Donald Trump will release everything the US government knows about UFOS and aliens “as soon as he takes office”.
Danny Sheehan has been involved in bringing UFO whistleblowers to the United States Congress in recent years. He has been helping to provide explosive evidence of alleged government cover-ups regarding real encounters with extraterrestrial beings.
And after making series of bombshell claims regarding the potential locations of two bases with hundreds of UFOs seen going “in and out of it”, and that aliens are stealing human eggs and sperm, he has now returned with another one.
Sheehan, speaking to the New Paradigm Institute, said: “Donald Trump will be inaugurated on January 20, and he has stated on at least four different occasions that publicly that it's his intention, once he's inaugurated, to release all of the information that is in possession of the United States Government pertaining to UFOs, and the potential ET phenomenon – what is now know as the non-human intelligence.
“That's caused quite a stir . . . but if, in fact, he goes forward and starts to reveal this information then it's extraordinarily important that we in the consciousness community, respond to whatever he starts to publicly release to assist people in absorbing the full dimensions of what it is that's going on here.
In the run up to the election, Trump was speaking to Joe Rogan about aliens, where he admitted that there was “no reason not to think” that Mars and “all these planets” don't contain life on the.
“Maybe it's life that we don't know, but maybe it's a different kind of life,” he said.
He went on to claim that there is “a lot of interest in the people coming from space,” which has seemingly set the alien community on Earth into overdrive trying to predict what could Trump make public.
Sheehan's claims are in line with what a Trump ally and US Congressman claimed recently, after having had conversations with Trump about it, and he's been told that full disclosure “will happen”.
Speaking to News Nation, Congressman Tim Burchett said: “President Trump will move towards total disclosure, and that's what's going to have to happen.
“We have these government bureaucrats who keep saying they don't exist… the best pilots in the world are telling us these things are flying within close proximity to their aircraft.
In my conversations with the President elect, I'm convinced that's what he wants (full disclosure) and that he trusts the American public.”
https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/us-news/exact-date-donald-trump-release-34260431
https://newparadigminstitute.org/
https://www.youtube.com/@NewParadigmInstitute
ET Prediction: War Of Worlds Exposed
December 5, 2024
Article by Kerry Cassidy
WHAT IS COMING THAT THE MILITARY ALREADY KNOWS AND WILL HELP TO BRING ABOUT.
WAR OF WORLDS BECOMING VISIBLE
Note the key difference in what people are showing right now as flyovers drones, ufos etc which are always there using night vision etc.
Is that this event Clif is talking about will not be “real” until one of the UFOs or drones fires upon people or a ground target.
This is the key upcoming event I believe is imminent. That will change everything!
The more accurate info comes from the ET meeting that Courtney Brown and his remote viewers put out is that in the next 3 months (actually at the end of that period the BATTLE of the good ETs versus the bad ETS (good and bad meaning either they are friends or foe) will be visible in our skies.
This will be visible as the War of Worlds and includes Earth military on both sides fighting each other as well.
In other words the hidden battle will go viral and become visible. It is ALREADY GOING ON.
My entire work and channel for the past 20 years delves deeply into this…alien agenda.
Project Blue Beam is only a small part of this scene.
In 2019 Marine and super soldier Randy Cramer stated the military would make this happen within 3 years on stage at a conference near Yelm, Washington …they are late.
RELATED ARTICLES:
RANDY CRAMER: REVISITING THE FAKE/REAL ALIEN INVASION SCENARIO AKA PROJECT BLUE BEAM
PROJECT CAMELOT: RANDY CRAMER U.S. MARINE – EARTH DEFENSE FORCE
UAP with humans in cages
Captain Mark Richards: TOTAL RECALL: SPACE WAR – ALL 12 INTERVIEWS
BRAD OLSEN AND KERRY CASSIDY: SKY EVENT
https://x.com/camelotQKerry/status/1864740182005813394
https://truthsocial.com/@kerrycassidycamelot/posts/113601659291695907
https://projectcamelotportal.com/2024/12/05/et-prediction-war-of-worlds-exposed/