"Unidentified aerial phenomenon" is what the acronym "UAP" stands for.
The three letters represent one of the three common acronyms that are used in discussions of alien spacecraft. A second common acronym is "UFO" for "unidentifid flying object." The third common acronym is "OVNI." It is the acronym that is formed from the first letters of the equivalents of "not identified flying objects" in the French, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish languages.
UAP stands for Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon. Another word for UFO.
UAP stands for Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon. Another word for UFO.
Unexplained bright lights that fly alongside or behind fighter pilots is the role that "foo fighters" have in the literature on UFO incidents. The phenomena of the lights was witnessed widely by pilots during the Second World War. This was the first war in which many battles were fought in the air. The lights would appear suddenly and then just as suddenly disappear. Witnesses to the mysterious lights included battle observers on the ground.
UAP stands for Unidentified Aerial Phenomena. It is a term used to describe objects or occurrences in the sky that cannot be easily identified or explained. The term has gained prominence in discussions about potential extraterrestrial life and military encounters with unknown aerial objects. UAP is often used in official reports and discussions to provide a more neutral terminology than "UFO."
"Doo Uap, Doo Uap, Doo Uap" by Gabin.
Doo Uap, Doo Uap, Doo Uap by Gabin
Co-author of one of the first books about UFO encounters is the role that Desmond Leslie has in the literature on UFO incidents. Specifically, Desmond Arthur Peter Leslie (June 29, 1921 - February 21, 2001) co-authored "Flying Saucers Have Landed" with George Adamski (April 17, 1891 - April 23, 1965) in 1953. The book told of Adamski's interactions with Venusian emissary Orthon and of the round-trips that the two took to the Moon and to Venus in Orthon's UFO. Leslie brought to the writing experience his own background as a screenwriter and as a Spitfire pilot in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War.
An acronym for the first letters of each of the four words in the equivalent of "not identified flying objects" is the role that "OVNI" has in the literature on UFO incidents in the French, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish languages. Specifically, the equivalents in the four languages mentioned above are as follows: 1. "Objet volant non identifié" in French; 2. "Oggetto volante non identificato" in Italian; 3. "Objeto voador não identificado" in Portuguese; 4. "Objeto volador no identificado" in Spanish
One of the very first books on UFO encounters is the role that "Flying Saucers Have Landed" in the literature on UFO incidents. Specifically, the book was published in 1953. Its co-authors were George Adamski (April 17, 1891 - April 23, 1965) and Desmond Leslie (June 29, 1921 - February 21, 2001). Adamski provided the mateial on UFO encounters. Leslie provided his expetise as a screenwriter and his experience as a Spitfire piot for the Royal Air Force during the Second World War. The publishing companies were the British Book Centre and Thomas Werner Laurie. A revised and enlarged edition subsequently was published in 1970 by Neville Spearman in the United Kingdom.
That is not true. Airline employees are not employees of the government, only the air traffic controllers are.
Certainly, many early UFO"s were of this type and may have been meteors or some natural cosmic phenomena, ( Green Fire Balls) are well-documented in the UFO literature.
The constellation Orion is the place in space from which bad UFO incidents originate according to George Williamson. Specifically, George Hunt Willamson (December 9, 1926 - January 1986) pinpointed Orion as the place where bad space aliens with trouble on their minds tend to cluster in space. Williamson said that UFO incidents should tend to be friendly because most space aliens are good, peace-loving, positive inhabitants of the universe. He identified his information sources as friendly saucer pilots with whom he was in short-wave radio communication.