Another Loud, Mysterious Boom — This Time in Georgia

“The loud boom is odd. We had some supervisors drive around and nothing was found. We don’t know what it was.”

- Athens-Clarke Asst. Fire Chief Mark Melvin

OnlineAthens Banner-Herald, May 30, 2017: A large boom or explosion heard early Saturday afternoon, May 28, 2017, across Athens-Clarke and neighboring counties remains unexplained, police and fire report on Tuesday, May 30th.
OnlineAthens Banner-Herald, May 30, 2017: A large boom or explosion heard early Saturday afternoon, May 28, 2017, across Athens-Clarke and neighboring counties remains unexplained, police and fire report on Tuesday, May 30th.

 

Click here to subscribe and get instant access to read this report.

Click here to check your existing subscription status.

Existing members, login below:

Bigelow Aerospace Founder Tells CBS’s 60 Minutes On May 28th “There Is An Existing Presence, An E.T. Presence” On Earth Now

“[The alien presence] is just like right under people's noses.”

- Robert Bigelow, Founder, Bigelow Aerospace, May 28, 2017, CBS 60 Minutes

Robert Bigelow, Founder of Bigelow Aerospace in Las Vegas, talking with CBS 60 Minutes corresponent Lara Logan as they stand in front of Bigelow's largest expandable spacecraft, The Olympus, which he calls “a mansion for the skies.” May 28, 2016, 60 Minutes image source CBS News.
Robert Bigelow, Founder of Bigelow Aerospace in Las Vegas, talking with CBS 60 Minutes corresponent Lara Logan as they stand in front of Bigelow's largest expandable spacecraft, The Olympus, which he calls “a mansion for the skies.” May 28, 2016, 60 Minutes image source CBS News.

 

Click here to subscribe and get instant access to read this report.

Click here to check your existing subscription status.

Existing members, login below:

Part 2: CIA Release of 1973 Controlled Remote Viewing of Jupiter

“Maybe the stripes are like bands of crystals, maybe like rings of Saturn, though not far out like that.”

- Controlled Remote Viewer Ingo Swann, April 27, 1973, describing rings around Jupiter 6 years before confirmed by Voyager I

NASA Hubble Space Telescope image of Jupiter and blue aurora at the massive gas planet's poles. Credit: 2016 NASA, ESA, J. Nichols, Univ. of Leicester.
NASA Hubble Space Telescope image of Jupiter and blue aurora at the massive gas planet's poles. Credit: 2016 NASA, ESA, J. Nichols, Univ. of Leicester.

 

Click here to subscribe and get instant access to read this report.

Click here to check your existing subscription status.

Existing members, login below:

Part 1: Lots of 2017 Surprises On Jupiter

“We knew, going in, that Jupiter would throw us some curves. ...There is so much going on here that we didn’t expect that we have had to take a step back and begin to rethink of this as a whole new Jupiter.”

- Scott Bolton, Ph.D., Juno Principal Investigator, Southwest Research Inst., San Antonio, TX

NASA Hubble Space Telescope image of Jupiter and blue aurora at the massive gas planet's poles. Jupiter is composed primarily of gaseous and liquid matter and is the largest planet in our solar system with a diameter of 88,846 miles (142,984 km) at its equator, which is eleven times the size of Earth's equatorial diameter of 7,917.5 miles (12,756 km). Credit: 2016 NASA, ESA, J. Nichols, Univ. of Leicester.
NASA Hubble Space Telescope image of Jupiter and blue aurora at the massive gas planet's poles. Jupiter is composed primarily of gaseous and liquid matter and is the largest planet in our solar system with a diameter of 88,846 miles (142,984 km) at its equator, which is eleven times the size of Earth's equatorial diameter of 7,917.5 miles (12,756 km). Credit: 2016 NASA, ESA, J. Nichols, Univ. of Leicester.

 

Click here to subscribe and get instant access to read this report.

Click here to check your existing subscription status.

Existing members, login below:

U. S. Army Infantryman At Ft. Richardson, Alaska, Encounter with Grey Alien

“It was a small, thin, grey hand. It was quick and reached up and grabbed my genitals.”

- Stephen Mann, former U. S. Army Infantryman, Fort Richardson, Anchorage, Alaska

 

Click here to subscribe and get instant access to read this report.

Click here to check your existing subscription status.

Existing members, login below:

Part 1 – Aliens: Scientists Search for Extraterrestrial Life

“I would say the odds are even 50/50 that in a year or two, we will have discovered life elsewhere — and that's pretty big stuff!”

- Jim Al-Khalili, Ph.D., Prof. of Theoretical Physics, Univ. of Surrey, Guildford, U. K.

Aliens: the World's Leading Scientists on the Search for Extraterrestrial Life, edited by Jim Al-Khalili, Ph.D., Prof. of Theoretical Physics, Univ. of Surrey, Guildford, England. Available at Amazon and bookstores everywhere © November 2016 and May 2017.
Aliens: the World's Leading Scientists on the Search for Extraterrestrial Life, edited by Jim Al-Khalili, Ph.D., Prof. of Theoretical Physics, Univ. of Surrey, Guildford, England. Available at Amazon and bookstores everywhere © November 2016 and May 2017.

 

Click here to subscribe and get instant access to read this report.

Click here to check your existing subscription status.

Existing members, login below:

Part 2 – Aliens: Scientists Search for Extraterrestrial Life

“It's almost at the point where there's a race to see where we will discover life elsewhere first, which is incredible!”

- Jim Al-Khalili, Ph.D., Prof. of Theoretical Physics, Univ. of Surrey, Guildford, U. K.

Other worlds illustration by 7kfnn.

 

Click here to subscribe and get instant access to read this report.

Click here to check your existing subscription status.

Existing members, login below:

Proxima Centauri, Closest Star to Earth, Has Exoplanet Where Temperature and Water Might Make It Habitable

“One of the main features that distinguishes this planet from Earth is that the light from its star is mostly in the near infra-red. These frequencies of light interact much more strongly with water vapour and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which affects the climate that emerges in our model [of Proxima Centauri and exoplanet.]”

- James Manners, Ph.D., Astronomy & Astrophysics Journal, May 16, 2017

The closest star system to the Earth is the famous Alpha Centauri group. Located in the constellation of Centaurus (The Centaur), at a distance  of 4.3 light-years, this system is made up of the binary formed by the stars Alpha Centauri A and Alpha Centauri B, plus the faint red dwarf Alpha Centauri C, also known as Proxima Centauri. This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has given us this stunning view of the bright Alpha Centauri A (on the left) and Alpha Centauri B (on the right).
The closest star system to the Earth is the famous Alpha Centauri group. Located in the constellation of Centaurus (The Centaur), at a distance of 4.3 light-years, this system is made up of the binary formed by the stars Alpha Centauri A and Alpha Centauri B, plus the faint red dwarf Alpha Centauri C, also known as Proxima Centauri. This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has given us this stunning view of the bright Alpha Centauri A (on the left) and Alpha Centauri B (on the right).

 

Click here to subscribe and get instant access to read this report.

Click here to check your existing subscription status.

Existing members, login below:

Not Much Dust Between Saturn and Its Nearest Ring

“No spacecraft has ever been this close to Saturn before. We could only rely on predictions, based on our experience with Saturn's other rings, of what we thought this gap between the rings and Saturn would be like. I am delighted to report that Cassini shot through the gap just as we planned and has come out the other side in excellent shape.”

- Earl Maize, Cassini Project Manager, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA

 

This unprocessed image shows features in Saturn's atmosphere from closer than ever before. The view was captured by NASA's Cassini spacecraft during its first of 22 dives between the innermost ring and the gaseous planet on April 26, 2017. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute.
This unprocessed image shows features in Saturn's atmosphere from closer than ever before. The view was captured by NASA's Cassini spacecraft during its first of 22 dives between the innermost ring and the gaseous planet on April 26, 2017. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute.

May 4, 2017 Pasadena, California - On April 26th, 2017, NASA’s Cassini spacecraft took a 70,000 miles per hour nose dive into the gap between the planet Saturn and its nearest thin ring of micron-sized dust. No Earth craft had ever flown between the innermost ring and Saturn itself.

 

Click here to subscribe and get instant access to read this report.

Click here to check your existing subscription status.

Existing members, login below: