Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb recovered small fragments of iron from the ocean floor, and he believes they’re evidence of alien life. He called NASA ‘arrogant’ for doubting it
A Harvard professor who claims to have found objects from outside the solar system at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean that may be indicative of alien life has called NASA “arrogant” for disputing data around the discovery.
Astrophysicist Avi Loeb led a team of “the best ocean explorers in the world” to locate fragments of iron spheres, named IM1, that came from an artificial alloy and were detected by US spy satellites when they entered the Earth’s atmosphere and plunged into the Pacific Ocean in January 2014.
The team used a magnetic sled to recover 740 marble-sized molten droplets from the seabed 260 miles from Papa New Guinea. Subsequent research carried out alongside experts from the US Space Command found the fragments likely came from an object outside of our solar system.
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