When Pilots see UFO's


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  1. FILE: AIRSPACE.TXT
  2. AUTHOR: Dennis Stacy, Air & Space Magazine
  3. DATE: 12-03-87
  4. SUBJECT: UFO Sightings by Aircraft Pilots
  5. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  6. WHEN PILOTS SEE UFO's
  7. People have been seeing unidentified flying objects in the skies
  8. for years. But when the eyewitness is up there with the UFO, is the sighting
  9. more difficult to explain?
  10. *** By Dennis Stacy for Air & Space Magazine December 1987/January 1988
  11. In the late afternoon of November 17, 1986, Japan Air Lines flight 1628, a
  12. Boeing 747 with a crew of three, was nearing the end of a trip from Iceland
  13. to Anchorage, Alaska. The jet, carrying a cargo of French wine, was flying
  14. at 35,000 feet through darkening skies, a red glow from the setting sun
  15. lighting one horizon and a full moon rising above the other.
  16. A little after six p.m., pilot Kenju Terauchi noticed white and yellow
  17. lights ahead, below, and to the left of his airplane. He could see no details
  18. in the darkness and assumed the lights were those of military aircraft. But
  19. they continued to pace the 747, prompting first officer Takanori Tamefuji to
  20. radio Anchorage air traffic control and ask if there were other aircraft
  21. nearby. Both Anchorage and a nearby military radar station announced that they
  22. were picking up weak signals from the 747's vicinity. Terauchi switched on the
  23. digital color cockpit weather radar, which is designed to detect weather
  24. systems, not other aircraft. His radar screen displayed a green target, a color
  25. usually associated with light rain, not the red he would have expected from a
  26. reflective solid object.
  27. Because he was sitting in the left-hand seat, Terauchi had the only unob-
  28. structed view when the lights, still in front of and below the airplane, began
  29. moving erratically, "like two bear cubs playing with each other," as the pilot
  30. later wrote in a statement for the Federal Aviation Administration. After
  31. several minutes, the lights suddenly darted in front of the 747, "shooting off
  32. lights" that lit the cockpit with a warm glow.
  33. As the airplane passed over Eielson Air Force Base, near Fairbanks, the
  34. captain said he noticed, looming behind his airplane, the dark silhouette of a
  35. gigantic "mothership" larger than two aircraft carriers. He asked air traffic
  36. control for permission to take his airplane around in a complete circle and
  37. then descend to 31,000 feet. Terauchi said his shadower followed him through
  38. both maneuvers.
  39. A United Airlines fight and a military C-130 were both in the area and An-
  40. chorage asked the airplanes to change course, intercept the Japanese 747, and
  41. confirm the sighting. Both airplanes flew close enough to see JAL 1628's
  42. navigation lights, alone in the night sky, before Terauchi reported that the
  43. unidentified flying objects had disappeared. The encounter had lasted nearly
  44. 50 minutes.
  45. Because it involved an airline pilot and an unidentified flying object that
  46. had apparently been captured on radar, the JAL 1628 encounter attracted a
  47. great deal of public attention. But UFO reports from pilots--private, military
  48. and airline--are not new to the subject of "ufology." One of the best known
  49. cases was a sighting by Idaho businessman and private pilot Kenneth Arnold.
  50. Flying his single-engine airplane over Washington's Cascade Mountains on June
  51. 24, 1947, Arnold spotted nine silvery, crescent-shaped objects skimming along
  52. at high speed near Mt. Rainier. They dipped as they flew, "like a saucer would
  53. if you skipped it across water," Arnold told reporters--and thus "flying
  54. saucers" entered the popular vocabulary.
  55. Pilots had reported similar unexplained aerial phenomena before, mainly in
  56. the form of the "Foo Fighters" noted by American bomber crews over Europe
  57. in World War II. But Arnold's sighting, with its accompanying front-page
  58. publicity, struck a jittery, post-Hiroshima nerve in American society and
  59. set off a barrage of similar reports. Skeptics believed that every sighting
  60. had a prosaic explanation, such as mis-identification of stars, planets, or
  61. natural atmospheric phenomena. Others thought that there was more to UFOs,
  62. that they could even be visitors from other planets.
  63. Following the Arnold incident, the Air Force was given the responsibility of
  64. investigating UFO reports from the United States, first as Project Sign (also
  65. called Saucer), then Grudge, and finally Blue Book. Usually understaffed and
  66. underfunded, the Air Force program functioned more like a public relations
  67. office than a scientific investigation, according to the late astronomer
  68. J. Allen Hynek. Hynek himself, who served as a consultant to Project Blue Book
  69. from 1948 until it was dissolved in December 1969, gradually changed from a
  70. skeptic into a believer.
  71. Not even skeptics can deny the subject's popular appeal. Last March, a Gallop
  72. poll found that 88 percent of its respondents had heard of UFOs. Nearly half
  73. of those polled believed UFOs were real, not figments of the imagination or
  74. mis-perceived natural phenomena. Nine percent of the adult population claimed
  75. to have seen one.
  76. Of these claims, pilot reports are the ones that interest Richard F. Haines,
  77. a perceptual psychologist who compiles AIRCAT, a computerized catalog that
  78. lists more than 3,000 UFO sightings by aviators over the past 40 years. Chief
  79. of the Space Human Factors Office at NASA's Ames Research Center in California
  80. Haines is the author of "Observing UFOs", a handbook of methodology for
  81. accurate observation, and the editor of "UFO Phenomena and the Behavioral
  82. Scientist", a collection of psychologically oriented essays on the subject.
  83. ******************************************************************************
  84. -- SKEPTICS R US --
  85. The Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal
  86. (CSICOP) was founded in the spring of 1976, during a meeting of the American
  87. Humanist Association in Buffalo, New York. The impetus for the group's form-
  88. ation had been provided a year earlier by the publication of "Objections to
  89. Astrology" by Paul Kurtz, professor of philosophy at the State University of
  90. New York at Buffalo. The manifesto had been signed by 186 scientists, in-
  91. cluding 18 Nobel prizewinners, who feared that the public was confusing
  92. astronomy and astrology.
  93. Today Kurtz is chairman of the loosely knit international organization, which
  94. holds annual meetings and publishes a 25,000-circulation quarterly, "The
  95. Skeptical Inquirer." The journal is devoted to articles debunking psychokinesis
  96. telepathy, clairvoyance, and other psychic claims, the Loch Ness Monster,
  97. astrology and UFOs. CSICOP Fellows include science writer Isaac Asimov,
  98. astronomer Carl Sagan, Nobel physicist Murray Gell-Mann, and James Randi,
  99. recent recipient of a "genius grant" awarded by the MacArthur Foundation.
  100. The UFO subcommittee is led by Philip J. Klass ("UFOs--Identified","UFOs Ex-
  101. plained",and "UFOs, the Public Deceived"), James Oberg ("UFOs & Outer Space
  102. Mysteries"), and Robert Sheaffer ("The UFO Verdict"). The subcommittee con-
  103. sists of about two dozen members who operate as an informal network, exchang-
  104. ing articles about UFOs for information and comment. Some members make them-
  105. selves available for local media appearances to counteract what Klass calls
  106. "the popular view of UFOs as extraterrestrial spaceships."
  107. "We prefer to have skeptics, of course," says Klass, "but we don't require
  108. anyone to take an oath of allegiance saying they don't believe in flying
  109. saucers. Basically, we're a mutual education circuit."
  110. -- Dennis Stacy
  111. ******************************************************************************
  112. AIRCAT's cases include Blue Book's declassified files as well as some Haines
  113. collected and research personally. Before joining the Space Human Factors
  114. Office, his research included interviewing pilots about what they had seen
  115. peripherally during takeoffs and landings, data that may one day lead to re-
  116. design of airplane cockpits. "I was interviewing pilot anyway," he says, "and
  117. fell naturally into the habit of asking them if they'd ever seen anything
  118. strange."
  119. Haines concentrated on pilot reports for reasons other than convenience. "They
  120. have a unique vantage point simply by being in the air," he says, "if for no
  121. other reason than if the phenomenon is between your eyes and the ground, you
  122. can calculate the slant range, and you're establishing an absolute maximum
  123. distance the object could be away. You can't do that with the object against
  124. the sky background."
  125. "Pilots also have available to them a variety of electromagnetic sensors of
  126. various kinds on board the aircraft itself, which can possibly record some
  127. manifestations of the phenomenon, such as electromagnetic frequency and even
  128. energy content," he says. "They can control the location of their plane so that
  129. they can maneuver to gain the best vantage point, under some conditions.
  130. "Finally," says Haines, "they represent a very stable personality type with a
  131. high degree of training, motivation, and selection. If a pilot comes forward
  132. with a strange tale, I give him a lot of careful concentration because he's
  133. putting his reputation on the line and maybe his job. He's had to have thought
  134. the details out in his mind already, and perhaps eliminated a number of ex-
  135. planations before going public."
  136. He's also likely to request anonymity. Kenneth Arnold, tired of the publicity
  137. following his sighting, later commented, "If I ever see again a phenomenon of
  138. that sort, even if it's a ten-story building, I won't say a word about it."
  139. The feeling was echoed even in the Air Force. When Blue Book's predecessor,
  140. Project Grudge, conducted an informal survey of Air Force pilots in the late
  141. 1940s , one respondent said, "If a spaceship was flying wing-tip to wing-tip
  142. formation with me, I would not report it."
  143. The UFO phenomenon got its tabloid reputation at least in part because of the
  144. saucer-busting of active UFO skeptics. Foremost is the UFO panel of CSICOP,
  145. the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal
  146. (see "Skeptics R Us," previous page). Led by Philip J. Klass, contributing
  147. avionics editor of "Aviation Week and Space Technology", James Oberg, an
  148. aerospace writer and a manned space operations specialist, and Robert Sheaffer,
  149. a Silicon Valley computer systems analyst, CSICOP exposes hoaxes and uncovers
  150. explanations of UFO sightings.
  151. Sheaffer doesn't agree that pilots are superior UFO observers. "The idea of
  152. pilots as super witnesses just doesn't hold," he says. "The last I heard they
  153. were human like the rest of us, and still subject to all concerns and errors
  154. of human psychology and perception. In fact, they're apt to be less worried
  155. about how bright an object is, or its angular elevation, than in keeping their
  156. plane in the air. Anyone surprised by a very brief and unexpected event is not
  157. likely to report it accurately."
  158. Haines agrees that normal perception isn't infallible. Very bright objects,
  159. for example, can appear to be much nearer than they actually are. Autokinetic
  160. or self-generated, movement of the eyeball can make distant objects like
  161. stars and planets appear to move. "Also when you're flying in a sunny, clear
  162. blue atmosphere," Haines says, "sometimes the eye can focus inaccurately, so
  163. that you're not focusing at infinity anymore, but maybe only one or two meters
  164. in front of the cockpit."
  165. Because the way we see external events depends on the body's perception of it-
  166. self in space, acceleration and inertial forces that disrupt the inner ear's
  167. delicate sense of balance can also lead to optical illusions. Still, Haines
  168. contends that many induced illusions are short-lived and cannot account for
  169. the majority of AIRCAT's cases. "If a pilot describes a disk-shaped airform
  170. with no visible means of propulsion pacing his right wing for 30 minutes,
  171. doing everything he's doing--and I have plenty of cases like that--then that's
  172. not an optical illusion, it's not a bird or balloon or meteor, it's not any of
  173. those prosaic explanations," Haines says. "We don't know what it is necessarily
  174. but we know quite clearly what it isn't."
  175. One sensational pilot-and-UFO case almost certainly had a prosaic explanation.
  176. On the afternoon of January 7, 1948, people near Godman Air Force Base at Fort
  177. Knox, Kentucky, reported an object in the sky that looked like "an ice cream
  178. cone topped with red." Captain Thomas F. Mantell, flying in command of a ferry
  179. flight of four F-51 Mustangs (P-51s had been re-designated F-51s the previous
  180. year), was asked to investigate. None of the fighters were equipped with oxy-
  181. gen, and after three dropped out of the chase Mantell continued alone. "It's
  182. directly ahead and above and still moving at about half my speed," he radioed.
  183. "The thing looks metallic and of tremendous size. I'm going up to 20,000 feet,
  184. and if I'm no closer I'll abandon the chase." A few minutes later Mantell's
  185. airplane crashed, earning him the dubious distinction as the world's first
  186. "UFO martyr."
  187. Project Blue Book proposed that Mantell succumbed to hypoxia, or oxygen
  188. starvation, and crashed while chasing the planet Venus, but later evidence
  189. indicates he was pursuing a top-secret, high-atmosphere Skyhook balloon. The
  190. balloons, designed for upper-atmosphere research, were later used by the CIA
  191. for surveillance. At altitudes of 70,000 feet or more, the translucent plastic
  192. balloons would often be swept rapidly along by the jet stream.
  193. Mantell wasn't the last pilot to die while pursuing, or being pursued by, an
  194. alleged UFO. At 6:19 p.m. on Saturday, October 21, 1978, Frederick Valentich
  195. of Melbourne, Australia, took off from Moorabbin Airport aboard a rented
  196. Cessena 182 bound for nearby King Island. He planned to pick up a load of
  197. crayfish for his fellow officers at the Air Training Corps, where he was a
  198. flight instructor. An experienced daytime pilot with an unrestricted license
  199. and instrument rating, Valentich, 20, was relatively inexperienced at night
  200. flying. He was also a UFO enthusiast who, his father said later, had claimed
  201. a UFO sighting 10 months before his disappearance.
  202. Out of Melbourne, Valentich paralleled Cape Otway before heading over open
  203. water for King Island, where he was scheduled to land at 7:28. At 7:06 he
  204. radioed Melbourne Flight Service, asking, "Is there any known traffic in my
  205. area below 5,000 feet? Seems to be a large aircraft." Ground control asked
  206. what kind. "I cannot confirm," Valentich replied. "It has four bright lights
  207. that appear to be landing lights...[and] has just passed over me about 1,000
  208. feet above... at the speed it's traveling are there any RAAF [Royal Australian
  209. Air Force] aircraft in the vicinity?"
  210. "Negative," answered Melbourne. "Confirm you cannot identify aircraft?"
  211. Valentich replied in the affirmative, adding three minutes later, "It's not
  212. an aircraft, it's ..." At that point there was a brief break in the recorded
  213. transmission that was later released to the Australian press.
  214. "It is flying past," Valentich continued. "It has a long shape. Cannot
  215. identify more than that... coming for me now. It seems to be stationary.
  216. I'm orbiting and the thing is orbiting on top of me. It has a green light
  217. and sort of metallic light on the outside." The pilot then informed air
  218. traffic controllers that the object had vanished. At 7:12 he was back on the
  219. air, reporting his "engine is rough-idling and coughing." Ground control
  220. asked what his intentions were; Valentich said, "Proceeding King Island.
  221. Unknown aircraft now hovering on top of me." His radio transmission ended
  222. in a jarring 17-second metallic noise. Neither pilot nor airplane has been
  223. seen or heard from since. Some have attempted to explain away the incident
  224. as a hoax or a suicide, while others have suggested that the inexperienced
  225. night pilot, overcome by vertigo, may have turned upside down and seen the
  226. reflections of his own lights before the engine of his Cessna failed.
  227. Haines has published a book about the Valentich incident, "Melbourne
  228. Episode: Case Study of a Missing Pilot," and he is in the midst of another
  229. compiling all of AIRCAT's cases. Most are variations on ufology's two
  230. major themes: daylight disks and nocturnal lights. The first involves what
  231. appears to be objects in the shape of disks, spheres, or elliptical forms.
  232. Nocturnal lights normally appear as single, continuously visible white light
  233. sources. Sometimes the lights are also detected by ground or airborne radar
  234. and less frequently, accompanied by radio static and brief engine interruption,
  235. such as that experienced by Valentich. Most sightings involve two or more
  236. witnesses and last slightly more than five minutes, long enough in most cases,
  237. says Haines, to eliminate a number of explanations, such as meteors and
  238. balloons.
  239. One case from the AIRCAT files involved a pilot--call him Captain Gray--who
  240. had logged more than 21,000 hours in a 31-year career. On July 4, 1981, he
  241. was piloting a passenger flight in a Lockheed L-1011 Tristar, cruising on
  242. automatic pilot at 37,000 feet. The flight was bound from San Francisco to
  243. New York's Kennedy Airport, approaching the eastern shore of Lake Michigan.
  244. The lake below was obscured by clouds, but ahead and above the sky was clear.
  245. Suddenly, from ahead and to the left of the aircraft, a silvery disk "splashed
  246. into view full size...like the atmosphere opened up," Gray said later. He
  247. leaned forward, blurting out, "What's that?"
  248. Appearing at first like a sombrero viewed from the top, the object rolled as
  249. it approached the airplane along an arc that carried it toward and then
  250. abruptly away from the L-1011. From the side, the disk appeared ten times
  251. wider than it was thick, with six evenly spaced, jet black portholes along its
  252. edge. A bright splash of sunlight flared off the top left end of the object.
  253. As it disappeared, seemingly in a shallow climb, Gray noticed what looked like
  254. the dark smudge of a contrail.
  255. "Did you just see anything?" Gray asked his first officer. "Yes," he replied,
  256. "a very bright light flash." The flight engineer, his view blocked, had seen
  257. nothing.
  258. The overriding question for ufologists is whether a sighting like Captain
  259. Gray's is a natural phenomenon or an object that displays evidence of in-
  260. telligence. "As a scientist I have to be cautious," says Haines. "But when
  261. AIRCAT is made public, I think the technical-minded can read between the
  262. lines."
  263. Skeptics would disagree, "I think there are more than enough ordinary
  264. stimuli floating around to create the UFO phenomena, the UFO social event,
  265. of the past 40 years," says CSICOP's James Oberg. "Because of imperfections
  266. in human memory and perception, coincidences and so on, there'll always be a
  267. small residue of unsolved sightings. A small percent of airplane crashes,
  268. murders, and missing-person cases don't get solved either. But you don't have
  269. to invoke alien airplane saboteurs, murderers, or kidnappers to explain them."
  270. Haines retorts that Captain Gray was a skeptic before his own UFO confront-
  271. ation. But afterwards, "there was no doubt in his mind whatsoever' that what
  272. he had seen was an extraterrestrial spacecraft.
  273. Captain Terauchi of JAL flight 1628 was equally convinced that he had encount-
  274. ered an extraterrestrial craft in the skies above Alaska. Skeptics are not so
  275. sure, citing the fact that Terauchi had reported seeing UFOs on two previous
  276. occasions--and would report yet another sighting the following January, again
  277. over Alaska. (He would later explain his second Alaskan encounter as city
  278. lights reflecting off ice crystals in the clouds.) CSICOP's Philip Klass
  279. thinks that ice crystals in clouds played a significant role in the November
  280. encounter. He theorizes that moonlight reflecting off the clouds accounts for
  281. the initial sighting, and that when the crew later saw Mars and Jupiter, bright
  282. in the autumn sky, they assumed the planets were lights from the original UFO.
  283. The signal on the on-board radar, Klass believes, could have been reflected by
  284. the same ice crystals (although ice crystals, unlike rain droplets, are very
  285. poor reflectors of radar energy). The FAA analyzed the ground radar and con-
  286. cluded that they had been uncorrelated radar signals, a common phenomenon that
  287. occurs when a radar beam bounced back from an airplane to a ground station
  288. doesn't match up with a separate signal sent by the airplane's transponder.
  289. That pilots, as well as ground observers, have seen something in the skies is
  290. undeniable. The question of what they have seen has yet to be satisfactorily
  291. resolved. Maybe it never will be. It may even be irrelevant. As Jacques Valle,
  292. who has written several books on the subject, once said, "It no longer matters
  293. whether UFOs are real or not, because people BEHAVE as if they were,
  294. anyway."

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