?Do aliens really exist, and how are UFOs classified
?Do aliens really exist, and how are UFOs classified 1980 
Many films have talked about alien creatures, the first of which is the movie Close Encounters of the Third Kind by Steven Spielberg, in which a clip of an unknown body appeared, which looked like a very large bird flying in the sky of Wyoming. These clips and movies fall under the category of science fiction, but they may be closer to the truth than we imagined.
Steven Spielberg's idea for this movie goes back to several sources, as there are various reports of seeing mysterious objects in the sky of that region. In detail, the Joint UFO Network and the National UFO Reporting Center do not count all these UFO sightings as Type III, but what is Type III? What are the first and second types?
Astronomer Allen Heinick and UFOs:
When you hear about a classification for seeing UFOs, you might think that this idea was made by conspiracy theorists, but you may be shocked that astronomer Allen Heinick, a researcher in charge of the McMillen Observatory at Ohio University, announced this classification.

In the late 1940's the USAF asked Hynek to study and interpret the growing number of reports of UFOs in the sky.
Accordingly, Heineck has studied more than 200 reports, in which he asserts that approximately 20% of them are inexplicable.
Heineck asserted that these unknown objects were not of interest to him, but that they were of interest to the general public, especially after they were mentioned in the documentary The American Zeitgist.
Hynek continued his study of UFOs through several sources, the most prominent of which was the Blue Book Project, which specialized in studying these objects.
But - October 1973, a report arrives of two men in Pascagoula, Mississippi claiming to have been kidnapped by aliens.
Heineke was interested in this report, entered his crucifixion and confirmed that the two men were indeed honest, and made drawings of the figures of the creatures that had kidnapped the two men.
During this period, Hynek announced the opening of the Center for the Study of Unidentified Flying Objects (CUFOS).
Classification of seeing and encountering unidentified flying objects:
The Pascagoula incident prompted Heinick to begin his book on these objects and creatures.
At the core of this book, Heineck mentions the classification of degrees of vision as follows:
First: Someone sees a flying UFO, but there is no evidence of that.
Second: The unknown body leaves traces on the ground, such as destroying trees and others.
Third: The unknown body interacts with a living creature on Earth.
Media professor Barna Donovan of St. Peters University in Jersey explains:
The first type, expresses the vision of the foreign body without the presence of any evidence.
As for the second, the body may leave a trace on the ground indicating its passage or presence.
And third, it is classified when the creature inside the foreign body is seen.
Although Hynek died in 1996, a number of researchers have studied the field and added more classifications.
For example, the fourth type indicates the abduction of humans by aliens, and the fifth type, indicates direct communication between aliens and humans.
Donovan stresses that these classifications are the best way to understand and quantify the types of interaction between humans and unknown objects, while noting that the fourth and fifth types are of great importance.

Although the classification system proposed by Heineck is the most well-known of all UFOs, it is not the only one. A number of UFO-logists use sub-categories of the five basic classifications.
These sub-categories are looked at with reference to several details of the report, such as the place and time during which the vision occurred.
Those interested can enter the Rio Scale, and rate each incident involving UFOs.
This metric uses a number of conditions to evaluate each event, such as the source and quality of the reports.
A score of zero means that the event is not important, and a score of 10 confirms the existence of an immediate event or vision that may be of interest if studied.
? Why should we classify incidents related to UFOs
Someone might ask why researchers are so interested in classifying these types of accidents, with little possibility of aliens being, as Donovan emphasized that 10% of these accidents can't be explained logically.
He added that 90% of the accidents are due to seeing planes at night or in bad weather, while the kidnapping of some people by aliens is due to multiple sleep disturbances. As for the remaining percentage, it is either evidence of the existence of extraterrestrial creatures, or that they are certain accidents that science has not yet been able to explain.
One of the advantages of reports about accidents related to most UFOs is the diversity of the source, as these accidents happen with people of all nationalities and ages.
It is worth noting that Donovan asserts that most of them are trying to explain the event they saw firsthand.
He adds that people should rely on scientific thinking in terms of skepticism, looking at events and results and analyzing them.
Donovan stresses that there are several events that science is still unable to explain, such as the kidnapping of the American couple Barney and Betty Hill by aliens, as they claimed in Hampshire.
As for Donovan, the most important data and reports for unidentified flying objects are the reports that come from the military, and Donovan considers them one of the basic evidence of the existence of extraterrestrial life.
Some of these reports were issued by the US Department of Defense, and were recorded on Army radio cameras.
These events happen to many people, in many places, which makes them more difficult to explain than the rest of the events.
Source: ibelieveinsci
 


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