After analysis of images taken by the NASA-based US space agency’s Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) satellite, extraterrestrial life enthusiasts believe they have seen a large UFO near the Sun. Conspiracy theorists from extraterrestrial life claim that what appears to be a solar anomaly near the surface of the Sun is a UFO of an almost incomprehensible scale.
According to prominent alien hunter Scott Waring, the alleged UFO is at least ‘ten times the size of Earth’.
Earth’s radius is 3,958 miles (6.37 km), making the UFO more than 39,580 miles (63,370 km) long.
Waring also believes that the UFO comes from the Sun’s core, where it is powered by the immense energy of our host star.
The UFO enthusiast said on his blog etdtabase.com: “In the image, I added light and focus and we can see that the red material is accumulating around his helmet.
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Space scientists who have worked for NASA in the past have a much simpler explanation for all the strange UFO sightings reported.
According to former NASA engineer James Oberg, most UFO sightings are nothing more than “space dander” floating in front of the cameras.
These dandruff stains can be anything from chipped paint drifts aimlessly in zero gravity to ice flakes or broken spaceship insulation.
He said: “I have had enough experience with real space flight to realize that what is seen in many videos is nothing more than the ‘norm’ for totally mundane phenomena that occur in supernatural environments.”
Oberg argued that human brains are not connected to make sense of these little objects floating on the planet.
SOHO is a joint mission of the European Space Agency (ESA) and NASA.
Launched in 1995, SOHO studies the Sun from its interior to its outer atmosphere, with an uninterrupted view from its point of view between the Sun and our planet, approximately one million miles from Earth.
And in the past 25 years, NASA SOHO has also become the best comet finder in human history.
The observatory’s kite hunting prowess comes from a combination of its long lifespan, its sensitive instruments focused on the solar corona, and citizen scientists who constantly scour SOHO data for previously undiscovered comets.