A former US Air Force fighter pilot claims he has deciphered the method behind UFOs’ extraordinary maneuvers, reports dailystar.co.uk.
Numerous military encounters with these enigmatic craft have been reported over the past two decades, prompting a major investigation by the Pentagon.
One of the most famous sightings occurred during the USS Nimitz encounter, where fighter pilots witnessed a UFO descend from 26,000 feet to just above sea level in less than a second.
This astonishing move would imply that the craft reached a staggering speed of 30,000 kilometers per hour, a speed that would be fatal for any human pilot.
According to Chris Lehto, a former USAF pilot, the spacecraft exhibits two key characteristics: it moves without inertia, has essentially no weight, and accelerates at an incredibly fast rate without affecting its surroundings.
Chris believes the explanation lies in a technology that seems straight out of science fiction. He argues that the answer to the UFO riddle lies in the Alcubierre Drive, a theoretical interstellar engine devised in 1994 by Mexican physicist Miguel Alcubierre.
The Alcubierre Drive uses a form of ‘space warp’ technology, reminiscent of what is depicted in episodes of Star Trek. By bending space, a craft in a “warp bubble” could potentially travel at or even exceed the speed of light without breaking the known laws of physics.
While the Alcubierre Drive remains a hypothetical concept with challenges to overcome, Chris notes that the energy required is no longer considered unattainably large.
Patents filed with the US Patent Office outline the potential operation of the drive, as well as another groundbreaking technology developed by US aerospace engineer Salvatore Pais.
Pais suggests that powerful rotating magnets could theoretically eliminate an object’s inertia, and he has filed a patent for a spaceship based on this principle.
However, Chris remains skeptical about Pais’ theory. He explains that while Pais’ patent applications for the US Navy attracted attention for their potential energy-related applications, doubts have been raised about their feasibility. There is speculation that it is a scam, pseudoscience or disinformation intended to mislead adversaries of the United States.
Alternatively, rival theories propose that the “Tic Tac” UFO is a secret Pentagon project testing similar advanced technologies discussed by Chris.