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Swedish researcher presents evidence of non-human intelligence spying on nuclear tests

27 October 2025 00:02

A newly published peer-reviewed study has revealed what researchers describe as verified evidence that unidentified objects may have been monitoring Earth’s nuclear activity from space — long before humans launched the first satellites.

The research, led by Dr. Beatriz Villarroel of the Nordic Institute for Theoretical Physics in Sweden, links early nuclear testing to mysterious phenomena captured in the night sky between 1949 and 1957, as highlighted by the Daily Mail.

The study suggests that thousands of objects — possibly of non-human origin — could have been observing nuclear tests conducted by the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union during the early years of the atomic age. These objects, referred to as “transients,” were bright points of light appearing suddenly and disappearing just as quickly in astronomical photographs.

Dr. Villarroel said her research found a clear correlation between the dates of above-ground nuclear detonations and an uptick in the number of these unexplained transients. The findings challenge conventional scientific understanding, as transients are not considered a natural phenomenon. The mysterious lights, she said, appeared “highly reflective, like a mirror,” and at times seemed to rotate “like a flying saucer.”

The peer-reviewed paper, co-authored by Villarroel and Dr. Stephen Bruehl and published in Scientific Reports, analyzed photographic plates from the historic Palomar Observatory Sky Survey in California. The survey captured images of the sky during a period when no human-made spacecraft or satellites yet existed, ruling out the possibility that the objects were early artificial satellites or space debris.

The study focused on 124 above-ground nuclear bomb tests carried out between 1949 and 1957 by the US, UK, and Soviet Union. At that time, the explosions were conducted in the open atmosphere, unlike modern underground testing. The researchers cross-referenced the dates and locations of the nuclear detonations with recorded transient events in the Palomar images and found a statistically significant link.

The team discovered that sightings of these bright, short-lived objects increased by 8.5 percent during periods of nuclear testing. The unexplained lights tended to appear most often within a day of a nuclear explosion, suggesting a temporal connection that ruled out typical atmospheric or photographic explanations.

Even more striking, the researchers found that the probability of a transient being observed increased by 45 percent immediately before or after a nuclear test. Villarroel said this strong correlation supports the idea that the phenomena were not random.

“These are objects before Sputnik One when humans had nothing up there, and these things, no matter what they are, they need to be really flat, reflective like a mirror, and I personally don’t know anything natural that looks like that,” she explained.

By Nazrin Sadigova

Caliber.Az
Views: 400

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