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Do you believe there's extraterrestrial life out there?

The US government claim that they were unable to tack drones for variety of reasons, as a government scientist told 60 minutes (a popular news program). I understand that shouting them down is dangerous because they fly in densely populated areas. The reason why aircraft cannot follow them makes no sense to me because they fly slow, as the radar data shows, they are not superfast UFOs. The best way to determine the drone points of departure is to use satellite data. However, the scientist said nothing about the satellite images of drones.
At least the incidents in Jersey were never properly explained. It reminds me of the Phoenix Lights incident in Arizona back in the 1990s. Literally thousands of people who witnessed a giant triangle the size of a football field were told it was just flares dropped from jets. Just for fun I watched night images of actual flares on youtube and it was so obvious based on the uneven speed they dropped and the disparity in light intensity between the flares.
 
well this frustrating not only did early photos mistake Phobos for 3I Atlas
https://bsky.app/profile/stim3on.bsky.s ... k6h4npf22d

But the first confirmed video image makes 3I Atlas looks like a round spec
https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration ... t_3I_ATLAS

According to the European space Agency 3I/ATLAS has not yet revealed itself in the Mars Express images, partly because these were taken with an exposure time of just 0.5 seconds (the maximum limit for Mars Express) compared to five seconds for ExoMars TGO.

Scientists will continue to analyse the data from both orbiters, including adding together several images from Mars Express to see if they can spot the faint comet.

They also tried to measure the spectrum of light from comet 3I/ATLAS using Mars Express’s OMEGA and SPICAM spectrometers, and ExoMars TGO’s NOMAD spectrometer. At this point, it is uncertain whether the coma and tail were bright enough for a spectral characterisation.
 

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