A strange "alien" ball puzzles scientists
A strange "alien" ball puzzles scientists
A strange "alien" ball puzzles scientists... and new evidence proves its authenticity.
A shocking new analysis of a strange ball with "alien" writings attached, found in Colombia, has revealed more evidence, which experts say proves it is a real unidentified flying object.
Fiber optic cables
A team of scientists in Mexico conducted new microscopic scans of the unidentified object, first spotted in March, and found a maze of fiber optic cables that indicate it was capable of sending and receiving signals. The object also appears to have somehow dried out the field in which it landed, destroying all the grass and soil it touched down on, according to a report published by the British newspaper, the Daily Mail.
Researchers from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) indicated that it was likely not radiation, but some kind of invisible energy that sucked all the water out of the grass and soil, rendering them dead and unable to grow again. They claimed it may have been anions, tiny particles in the air carrying a negative electrical charge.
"Man-made Is it "
Dr. Julia Mossbridge, from the Department of Physics and Biophysics at the University of San Diego, questioned the authenticity of the Boga Ball, describing it as a "man-made art project." Rodolfo Garrido, a Mexican engineer working with the UNAM team, noted that new evidence suggests a powerful, decaying ionized field emanating from the Boga Ball.
Since the investigation began, the UFO has become five times heavier than it was when it landed, which one engineer believes proves it is using future gravitational forces to lighten its weight for flight.
Its weight has increased, but its size has remained constant.
Based on the new findings inside the ball and the unexplained shift in its weight, experts believe it may be an advanced probe using some kind of energy that enabled the UFO to fly by manipulating gravity.
Garrido also revealed that the ball's weight increased several times, reaching 16, 20, and then 22 pounds, despite its size never changing. The so-called "Unidentified Flying Object" was spotted on March 2nd over the city of Buga, zigzagging through the sky in a manner that defied conventional aircraft movement.
The object was found shortly after landing and has since been analyzed by scientists, who claim it consists of three layers of metal-like material and 18 microscopic spheres surrounding a central core they have dubbed a "chip." The UNAM team recently published their latest report on the ball after discovering this mysterious fiber-optic object hidden within it.
There is no evidence of how it was constructed.
A digital microscope, adjusted to 2,000x normal vision, was used to see the hidden wires, which extend in various directions and connect to pins and copper dots on the ball's surface, including something resembling a microchip. Initial X-rays of the ball, conducted in March, found no cracks revealing how the object was constructed.
A Wall Street Journal report revealed that a small Pentagon office spent months investigating conspiracy theories about Washington's secret UFO programs, revealing that at least one of these theories was supported and promoted by the Pentagon itself.
After investigations and decades of mystery, it emerged that the government itself had been involved in spreading the UFO myth since the 1950s to mislead and conceal secret missions.
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