I dug my slippered heels into our shag carpet and bore deeper into my lime-green vinyl bean bag chair, thoroughly terrified but unable to avert my widened eyes from our
Harvard astrophysicist Abraham “Avi” Loeb says he has found good evidence for alien technology in the solar system, what could be called alien garbage.
“The idea of the existence of advanced extraterrestrial life is no more speculative than extra dimensions or dark matter. It fact, he says, it is less so,” says Harvard astrophysicist, Avi Loeb.
In November of 2018, The Daily Galaxy reported: “You would have thought it was 1938 again following Orson Welles’ radio broadcast of the War of the Worlds the way the way Twitter lit up last week when the chairman of Harvard’s astronomy department, Israel-born theoretical physicist Avi Loeb, suggested that an alien spaceship was possibly on its way to Earth to study humankind, and probably had Stephen Hawking spinning in his grave.”
Was it the Monolith from
We don’t really know, but Harvard Department of Astronomy Chair Avi Loeb says there’s “only one conceivable explanation”: An object which visited our solar system in 2017 indeed was of extraterrestrial origin.
The cigar-shaped “Oumuamua” was a piece of alien junk, Loeb claims in his upcoming book “Extraterrestrial: The First Sign of Intelligent Life Beyond Earth.”
Maxim, “Oumuamua” is a Hawaiian word meaning “scout,” which coincides with its discovery at Maui’s Mt. Haleakala telescope. Loeb says Oumuamua’s shape and speed are what give it away as being an extraterrestrial artifact.
“‘Oumuamua’s geometry [was] more extreme by at least a few times in aspect ratio or its width to its height than the most extreme asteroids or comets that we have ever seen,” Loeb says in his book. In addition, the object was up to “ten times more reflective than typical solar system asteroids or comets,” meaning it could have been c
autoevolution 6 Jan 2021, 9:19 UTC ·
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It’s been said countless times, including by Harvard Professor Avi Loeb: it would be ridiculous for us to assume we’re the only ones in this vast universe. In fact, according to Loeb, look no further than 2017 for signs that we are not alone. 1 photo
This isn’t the first time Professor Loeb makes headlines for what many in the scientific community still consider an outrageous idea, but he isn’t backing down. He maintains the Oumuamua “asteroid” that passed Earth in 2017 was no regular asteroid at all, but rather a piece of debris of alien technology.