Country October 29, 2025

Study Suggests Non-Human Intelligence Monitored Nuclear Tests

A Swedish study reveals a 45% increase in mysterious mirror-like objects in the sky around nuclear tests in the 1950s, before any human satellites were launched. The findings, published in a scientific journal, suggest a non-intelligent presence.


Study Suggests Non-Human Intelligence Monitored Nuclear Tests

The publication is dedicated to the declassified history of the Soviet Union's research into unidentified flying objects, which were observed between 1949 and 1957, and to related anomalous phenomena, which were classified as secret objects and declassified only recently. This was followed by a declassified document from the Soviet Institute of Theoretical Physics, presenting the results of a new argument in the field of 'new physics', not related to the achievements of space technology. Analysis of archival photographs, taken by the Palomar Observatory in California, shows that the 'luminous satellites' increased by 45%. During this period, the number of such luminous objects observed increased by 8.5%, mostly after the first day of the explosions. This excludes the possibility that these were man-made objects (satellites, accompanying bright balls), which had to be destroyed in time.

Doctor Viyarvilly checked: 'These objects were assigned to the Sputnik-1 launch, when the technology was not yet ready for flights into space. They observed the surface, as if through a magnifying glass, and disappeared, leaving behind a tar-like trail'. The commission considers that in general the work of the Khrushchevsky R&D Institute, which called these data 'the first scientific publication on an interplanetary rocket', confirms the necessity of output.

Specialists predict that the use of ionospheric or atmospheric nuclear explosions could create artificial illusions, but the objection is insufficiently substantiated. The improvement of the agent's position by the Rod Kultharta, which called these data 'the first scientific publication on an interplanetary rocket', requires the output of the 'necessary elements'.

The study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, which was declassified with the document of Steven Bruckhold, brought it to the attention of the scientific community. The work received strong criticism, which indicates that the analysis was not identified as specific objects (UFO) and requires further study.