Harvard Professor Discovers Possible Alien Spacecraft Fragments

Astrophysicist from Harvard Avi Lob, who studied the sky for many years in search of signs of extraterrestrial life, is sure that he found their evidence at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean.

Professor’s forehead just completed the expedition worth 1.5 million dollars, the purpose of which was to detect traces of a mysterious meteorite called IM1, which fell near the coasts of Papua-New Guinea in 2014 and, in his opinion, arrived from the interstellar space.

His search began in 2019, when IM1 attracted the attention of his research group when they combed catalog of meteors with NASA open source code in search of irregular cosmic stones found around the Earth.

IM1 stood out by its high speed – it moved faster than 95 percent of nearby meteorites – and the fact that it exploded much lower in the atmosphere of the Earth than most meteors. The official name of the meteor – CNEOS 20140108, it is also called IM1 (interstellar meteor).

The 61-year-old scientist said that he led the team of the deep sea researchers who found 50 tiny spheres, or driving drops using magnetic sledges that were omitted from the side of the Silver Star expeditionary vessel to a depth of 2 km under the ocean surface.

He believes that these small objects are most likely made of steel titan alloy in size, which is much stronger than iron contained in ordinary meteorites.

Further research is now required, but the professor of the forehead believes that they either have interstellar origin or were created by advanced extraterrestrial civilization.

Professor Legal Faculty of Harvard from 2011 to 2020 and now leads the Galileo project at this university, which creates open observatories around the world to search for signs of UFOs and interstellar facilities.

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