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Aligned, Multiple-transient Events in the First Palomar Sky Survey
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"Aligned, Multiple-transient Events in the First Palomar Sky Survey" and "Transients in the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (POSS-I) may be associated with nuclear testing and reports of unidentified anomalous phenomena" is research published as two companion papers in October 2025 in Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific and Scientific Reports, respectively. The principal authors of the two papers were Beatriz Villarroel and Stephen Bruehl.
Authors of the two papers contended the results of their research indicated the potential presence of UFOs orbiting the Earth in the 1950s. That conclusion was criticized by other scientists and preprints of both papers were rejected from archiving by arXiv due to what it said was a lack of "sufficient or substantive scholarly research".
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Background
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Perspective
Ufology
Ufology is a pseudoscience[1][2] in which persons — called UFO "hopefuls"[2] or UFO "believers"[3] — seek to prove the existence of UFOs as objects controlled by exotic intelligence.[1][2][3][4] The term "UFO", in its strictest sense, means any airborne object that lacks positive identification, but it is more commonly used to mean an alien spaceship.[5] Beginning in the 1980s, the acronym "UAP" was synonymously used for UFO, and was described in 2022 as meaning "unidentified anomalous phenomena".[6][7][8]
Palomar artifacts
In the 1950s, San Diego's Mount Palomar Observatory photographed the entire northern sky in small sections. Subsequent research observed that some objects present in the Palomar survey did not appear in later surveys. The difference was generally attributed to faults in the Palomar Observatory's glass photographic plates.[9]
Beatriz Villarroel's 2021 paper
In a 2021 paper, Beatriz Villarroel and several co-authors concluded the plate fault explanation for the Palomar artifacts was unlikely.[9][a] The paper's conclusion was rejected in a rejoinder paper by University of Edinburgh astronomers.[9]
According to Villarroel, a speaking invitation previously extended to her to address a workshop at Penn State University on the paper was then withdrawn due to alleged violation of conduct codes by her paper's second author.[10] At this time, Villarroel—faced with what she characterized as bullying and harassment within the mainstream astronomical community—said that she decided to fully embark on "UFO research" and "destigmatizing the UFO topic".[10][11] In 2024, she delivered a TEDx talk in Zurich titled "Why we should search for alien artifacts".[12]
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Content
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"Transients in the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (POSS-I) may be associated with nuclear testing and reports of unidentified anomalous phenomena", published in Scientific Reports, and its companion paper, "Aligned, Multiple-transient Events in the First Palomar Sky Survey", published in Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, studied digital scans of the original Palomar photographic glass plates and determined that the frequency of the transients increased around the time of nuclear tests and purported civilian "UFO sightings".[9] In "Transients in the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey", the authors dismiss "several prosaic explanations" and advance two hypotheses to explain their findings: that of a "previously undocumented atmospheric phenomenon triggered by nuclear detonations" or that "nuclear weapons may attract UAP [UFOs]".[13] Of the two, the authors claim the first hypothesis is "unlikely".[13]
Both papers were published in October 2025.[9]
Authors
"Transients in the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey" was authored by Villarroel, an astronomer at the Nordic Institute for Theoretical Physics and by Stephen Bruehl, a psychologist at Vanderbilt University, with Bruehl serving as corresponding author.[13][14] "Aligned, Multiple-transient Events in the First Palomar Sky Survey" was authored by Villarroel and Bruehl, Villarroel serving as corresponding author; they were joined by Enrique Solano, Hichem Guergouri, Alina Streblyanska, Vitaly M. Andruk, Lars Mattsson, Rudolf E. Bär, Jamal Mimouni, Stefan Geier, Alok C. Gupta, Vanessa Okororie, Khaoula Laggoune, Matthew E. Shultz, and Robert A. Freitas Jr.[15]
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Reception
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The papers' conclusions were met with skepticism by the scientific community, and arXiv declined to archive preprints of either paper, asserting they lacked "sufficient or substantive scholarly research".[16][17] The decision by arXiv was denounced by Villarroel in a social media post as "golden proof" of "censorship" of UFO information.[18]
Addressing the idea that the papers had discovered UFOs orbiting Earth int the 1950s, Scientific American noted there were "a host of simpler explanations".[16]
Michael Wiescher suggested Villarroel, Bruehl, and their coauthors had actually been observing debris that resulted from earlier nuclear tests and that would give the appearances of "bursts of radiance" when seen through a telescope.[16] SETI's Eliot Gillum noted that Villareal's results could be explained by meteors that flew directly towards the telescope's view, instead of perpendicular to it, resulting in the appearance of specks of light as opposed to streaks.[16] Sean M. Kirkpatrick stated the results were probably the result of either solar flare radiation or high-altitude balloons.[16] Other critics have noted that the 1950s were a "golden age" of UFO sightings and the results correlating the appearance of the artifacts with UFO reports could be attributed to observation bias.[19]
Writing on his personal website, Adam Frank applauded the researchers' effort at peer review of the two papers, though cautioned that "getting your paper published in a peer-reviewed quality journal does not make it right".[20] Nigel Hambly suggested that examining the actual plates, instead of digital copies as Villarroel and Bruehl did, might result in a different conclusion and that “there’s no shame in being wrong".[16]
See also
Notes
Further reading
- Villarroel, Beatriz (October 17, 2025). "Aligned, Multiple-transient Events in the First Palomar Sky Survey". Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. doi:10.1088/1538-3873/ae0afe. Retrieved November 3, 2025.
- Bruehl, Stephen (October 20, 2025). "Transients in the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (POSS-I) may be associated with nuclear testing and reports of unidentified anomalous phenomena". Scientific Reports (34125). Retrieved November 3, 2025.
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References
External links
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