Prof. Kevin Knuth is a former NASA research scientist considered one of the most credible and trusted investigators on the UAP subject. In the first half, he discussed his research into the secrets of UFO tech, analyzing how these craft fly, what the tech is, and whether we will ever be able to duplicate the technology. The observations of UFOs by trained pilots have presented enough information for us to estimate some astounding speeds and accelerations that are currently not possible with human technology, he noted. As far back as WWII, there were reports of craft traveling at speeds of 19 kilometers a second, which is 42,500 miles an hour. Radar data was recently analyzed from a 1986 JAL flight over Alaska, in which the pilot described the UFO as three times the size of a 747. "That's basically the size of an aircraft carrier," Knuth pointed out. "And the radar data shows that this thing is accelerating at about 10,000 times the acceleration of gravity. And the top speed measured was just on the order of 250,000 miles an hour. That means you can get to the moon in less than an hour at this speed." he marveled.
With "1000 g acceleration, you can get up to 90% the speed of light in 17 hours, which means you can traverse the galaxy using relativistic time dilation," he remarked. A member of UAP X, a civilian scientific research organization that collects, analyzes, and studies data related to the UFO phenomenon, Knuth said that one theory around UAP is that they may use a warp drive or warp bubble to stretch and contract space around their ship. This might explain how they could survive the accompanying g-forces that would normally tear apart living creatures traveling at such high accelerations. Based on available data, Knuth modeled the various possibilities of extraterrestrial visitation to Earth, and on average, they would have traveled 6,000 light years to get here and arrived 375,000 years ago, he reported.
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Something bizarre is going on in the woods, moors, and forests of East and North Yorkshire, leaving people distressed and mystified. In the latter half, Paul Sinclair, recognized within the field of unexplained phenomena, shared his research into this area of high strangeness in the UK, where UFOs have been seen, along with other paranormal weirdness and cryptid beings. In addition to many types of anomalous creatures like the Flixton 'werewolf,' witnesses in the Yorkshire area have reported curious light-form phenomena. During one evening drive, Sinclair saw this himself as he and a passenger witnessed a huge orange sphere of light in the sky, over the sea, and then up close where it seemed to implode in front of them.
Two people saw an enormous dog-like creature at the edge of a cliff at the headland, and they sensed an ominous feeling-- then everything went suddenly silent. They were carrying an IR camera, but the creature did not appear in the viewfinder-- they could only see it with their eyes. They estimated it was around 6-7 ft. tall. Such mysterious cryptids may have the ability to slip between worlds and in or out of our existence, which is one reason why they evade capture, he commented. A recent case from October 2022 involved a man driving between villages, who saw a bizarre bipedal creature that Sinclair dubbed 'Twig Man' that ran alongside the car moving at 50 mph for about 10 seconds. Rather than twigs, the witness believes the entity was covered in matted hair. In another incident, a mountain biker was riding in the moors when something burst out of the woodlands and was crashing through the undergrowth, keeping pace with him. He yelled out at it, and the creature suddenly stopped.
KNAPP'S NEWS:
George Knapp shares recent items of interest including several articles about UFOs and UAP.
- Bipartisan House group pushes for select committee, classified hearings into UFOs
- Accounting for UAPs' zigzagging, 'brownian motion'
- The Ultimate Secret and the Australian experience
- Physicists Use Quantum Mechanics to Pull Energy out of Nothing
- The climate wrecking ball striking food supply
- An Arctic Border Town Feels a New Chill From Russia