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