US military tracks UFO with physics-defying capabilities
Chinese astrophysicists are examining 100 space tracks (photo: Unsplash)
A new video from the US military has been leaked online, showing an anomalous UFO over Florida. The object, resembling a human silhouette, initially hovered in the air and then took off at such a speed that computer algorithms produced shocking figures, according to the SCMP.
Anomalous characteristics
An AI-assisted assessment yielded the following results:
Acceleration exceeding 600g—the object experienced a force 600 times greater than Earth’s gravity;
Comparison with aviation. To understand the scale: pilots lose consciousness at just 12g, and the most durable modern drones have a strength limit of about 30g;
Absence of a propulsion system—the object had no visible power plant, exhaust, or wings, yet it changed shape while moving.
Pentagon's declassified materials criticism
Although the new footage from the US Department of War is significantly clearer than the blurry images from previous years, Professor Zhang Nan considers its scientific value to be limited.
The problem is that the Pentagon reveals only raw photos and videos. For a comprehensive analysis, there is a lack of accompanying data: radar readings, telemetry, and spectroscopic records.
The Chinese analyst suggests that the US government is deliberately withholding the most critical data sets to protect the secret technologies of its military sensors from geopolitical rivals.
Strategic competition: UAP vs. SETI
The study of anomalies has clearly divided the scientific approaches of the two superpowers:
The US approach focuses directly on investigating UAP (UFO) incidents—physical objects or phenomena observed in proximity to Earth. This area receives substantial funding from both military and private sources.
China's approach focused on the global search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) in deep space. Chinese scientists are using the world's largest radio telescope, FAST, with a 500-meter aperture.
Currently, a team led by astrophysicist Zhang Tongjie from Beijing Normal University is investigating about 100 of the most promising microwave signals. All of them were selected from over a million records made by the former Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico.
Scientists have already spent 20 to 30 hours of FAST telescope time on their detailed analysis, considering the scanning of radio waves from the depths of the universe a more promising method for searching for civilizations than hunting for objects in Earth’s atmosphere.