UFO Digest Newsletter March 7, 2005 This week we are highlighting a video from Dugway, Utah.. This footage was compiled by KTVX Television. We have a story about creating anti-gravity propulsion systems based on Alien technology, another about two Japanese observatories that have started probing for signs of extraterrestrial life and finally a story about two entrepreneurs that need your help in finding new planets . Enjoy.
Many UFO hunters claim that Dugway in Utah has become the new "Area 51". Local hunters have documented a variety of unusual activity in the area near Dugway, Utah, which cannot be explained. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Over the past 15 years, astronomers have found just 136 planets outside our solar system. But now space buffs David Gutelius and Laurance Doyle say they can push that number well into the thousands by 2010.
They just need to borrow your computer for a little while. The two entrepreneurs are currently seeking funding for a nonprofit project that would turn the home computers of every amateur astronomer in the world into one giant calculator, capable of crunching through millions of bits of cosmic data each day. Story continues. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Learning from Extra-terrestrial UFOs
Dark Energy can provide anti-gravity propulsion needed for intergalactic space travel and reaching speed faster than light.
Bangalore is the city of computer scientists. In the middle of hustle and bustle of cyber research and development, a group of engineers and astrophysicist are close to announcing a most major breakthrough in the history of the mankind. Read more. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two Japanese observatories have started a probe to find signs of extraterrestrial life using radio and optical telescopes, in Japan's first government-backed search for aliens.
"I don't think it would be any wonder if life like us exists somewhere else as space is vast," Mitsumi Fujishita, radioastronomy professor at Kyushu Tokai University, said. Read more. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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