An astrophysicist from Harvard University (USA) believes that he has found evidence to confirm the existence of alien life, thanks to his efforts to scan the seabed of the Western Pacific Ocean.
Professor Avi Loeb of Harvard University believes that his team has found fragments of alien technology in a meteorite that fell in the waters off Papua New Guinea in 2014, according to USA Today 7.7.
To salvage this meteorite, the team he led was on a ship called Silver Star that departed to the waters off the coast of Papua New Guinea in the Western Pacific with the mission of finding the remains of the mysterious meteorite. hid crashed to the ground nearly 10 years ago.
Within 2 weeks, they searched more than 160 km of the sea shelf, and found 50 microscopic spheres, containing an alloy that was not similar to any alloy belonging to the solar system. These spherical fragments are believed to come from a basketball-sized meteorite, originating from outside the solar system.
These spheres are so small that a microscope is needed to observe and analyze them. Professor Loeb said his team brought the “evidence” back to the US and continued to analyze it in Harvard University’s laboratory before being able to confirm that they were of natural origin or were technological products.
Depending on the results obtained, they could be evidence that allows us to prove the existence of aliens for the first time.
“Our discovery opens a new frontier in the field of astronomy, whereby research outside the solar system is done through microscopes instead of telescopes,” USA Today newspaper quoted Professor Loeb as saying.
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