
Copernical Team
Despite doubts from quantum physicists: Einstein's theory of relativity reaffirmed

MSU studies nutrients that may have fertilized ancient photosynthesis in Earth's oceans

Asteroid-smashing NASA probe sent boulders into space

On space, poll shows most Americans support NASA's role, U.S. presence

Life on Earth didn't arise as described in textbooks

Week in images: 17-21 July 2023

Week in images: 17-21 July 2023
Discover our week through the lens
California Science Center starts complex process to display Space Shuttle Endeavour vertically

Earth from Space: New York

Galaxy J1135 reveals its water map

First contact with aliens could end in colonization and genocide if we don't learn from history

We're only halfway through 2023, and it feels already like the year of alien contact.
In February, President Joe Biden gave orders to shoot down three unidentified aerial phenomena—NASA's title for UFOs. Then, the alleged leaked footage from a Navy pilot of a UFO, and then news of a whistleblower's report on a possible U.S. government cover-up about UFO research. Most recently, an independent analysis published in June suggests that UFOs might have been collected by a clandestine agency of the U.S. government.
If any actual evidence of extraterrestrial life emerges, whether from whistleblower testimony or an admission of a cover-up, humans would face a historic paradigm shift.
As members of an Indigenous studies working group who were asked to lend our disciplinary expertise to a workshop affiliated with the Berkeley SETI Research Center, we have studied centuries of culture contacts and their outcomes from around the globe. Our collaborative preparations for the workshop drew from transdisciplinary research in Australia, New Zealand, Africa and across the Americas.
In its final form, our group statement illustrated the need for diverse perspectives on the ethics of listening for alien life and a broadening of what defines "intelligence" and "life.