UT
Arlingtons planetarium director weighs in on (Stephenville) UFOs
By
Pegasus News wire
In
light of recent news about UFOs out of nearby Stephenville, Texas, Marc Rouleau,
director of the Planetarium at UT Arlington, says tens of thousands of school
children visit the facility every year and one of the most popular questions is:
Are UFOs real?
Technically,
the answer is yes, since UFO really stands for Unidentified
Flying Object. If you look up and see something you dont recognize,
its a UFO.
This
does not imply that the object is an alien spacecraft, however. Most objects that
get fingered as UFOs turn out to have easy explanations. A bright planet,
like Venus, has fooled many casual sky watchers, Rouleau said. Atmospheric phenomena,
like lenticular clouds, can make many people stop and pause.
Some
UFOs have turned out to have more of a human origin. There have been cases of
secret aircraft being tested by the military that were viewed by civilians on
the ground. In other cases, hoaxers were deliberately trying to fake a UFO sighting.
"In
the 'old days' this maybe meant rigging up a pie plate," Rouleau said, "suspending
it from a wire, and taking its picture."
"Today,
computer animation software and a worldwide audience through YouTube is all you
need," he continued. "Even if no easy explanation comes up, there are
reasons why a lot of people are skeptical about aliens visiting Earth. The distances
between stars are so great."
The
next closest star system to our Solar System is 25 trillion miles away. Thats
so far away that the fastest robotic spacecraft ever launched by humans would
need over 50,000 years to make the trip. Even light, traveling at 186,000 miles
per second, takes years to make the trip.
"Since
nothing can accelerate faster than light, any creature that wanted to fly from
Alpha Centauri to Texas would need to commit to at least several decades for a
one-way trip," Rouleau said.
Source:
UT Arlington