But scientists are quick to point out that when we talk about extraterrestrial life, we don’t know what form it might take: It could be anything from a micro-organism to an intelligent creature, or something unimaginable.
“[There] is something unknown in our skies,” says Ravi Kopparapu, a scientist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland. “We should be investigating it. We should be collecting data and then try to understand what they are.”
The recent upsurge in interest about U.F.O.s began in 2017, when The New York Times revealed that for more than a decade, the U.S. Department of Defense had secretly catalogued and investigated scores of odd sightings of U.F.O.s (also known as U.A.P.s, or Unidentified Aerial Phenomena), mainly reported by the U.S. Navy and Air Force. Videos of odd encounters between military pilots and unexplained objects in the sky were leaked to the public. In 2020, Congress demanded the Pentagon produce a report explaining what was going on.
Pentagon officials examined 144 incidents from the past two decades. The report found “no clear indications” of extraterrestrial life being behind the sightings, but it left most questions unanswered. The report clarified only one case—“a large, deflating balloon.” In 18 of the incidents, unusual movement patterns were observed, such as acceleration and the capacity to change direction and submerge.