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- REPORT ON A SURVEY OF THE MEMBERSHIP OF THE
- AMERICAN ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY CONCERNING THE UFO PHENOMENON
-
- SUMMARY
-
-
- Refereed journals, to which scientists turn for their reliable
- information, carry virtually no information on the UFO problem. Does
- this imply that scientists have no views and no thoughts on the
- subject, or that all scientists consider it insignificant? Does it
- imply that scientists have no reports to submit comparable with UFO
- reports published in newspapers and popular books? The purpose of this
- survey is to answer these questions.
-
- Of 2,611 questionnaires mailed to members of the American Astronomical
- Society, 1,356 were returned, 34 anonymously. Only two members offered
- to waive anonymity. These facts and many comments confirm that the UFO
- problem is a sensitive issue for most scientists. Nevertheless, only a
- few (13) respondents made critical remarks about the subject or the
- survey; 50 made encouraging statements, 34 offered to help, and 7
- indicated that they are actively studying the problem.
-
- Each respondent was asked to state his opinion on whether the UFO
- problem deserves scientific study: 23% replied "certainly", 30%
- "probably", 27% "possibly", 17% "probably not", and 3% "certainly not",
- which represents a positive attitude among 53% of the respondents, as
- against a negative attitude among 20%. Analysis of the returns shows
- that older scientists are markedly more negative to the problem than
- are younger scientists. One also finds that opinions correlate strongly
- with time spent reading about the subject. The fraction of respondents
- who think that the subject certainly or probably deserves scientific
- study rises from 29%, among those who have spent less than one hour, to
- 68% among those who have spent more than 365 hours in such reading. It
- appears that popular books and publications by established scientists
- exert a positive influence on scientists' opinions, whereas newspaper
- and magazine articles exert negligible influence.
-
- Respondents were asked to express their views on possible causes of UFO
- reports by assigning "prior probabilities" to four "conventional"
- causes [(a) a hoax, (b) a familiar phenomenon or device, (c) an
- unfamiliar natural phenomenon, and (d) an unfamiliar terrestrial
- device] and four "unconventional" causes [(e) an unknown natural
- phenomenon, (f) an alien device, (g) some specifiable other cause, and
- (h) some unspecifiable other cause]. There was a very wide spread of
- opinions on this issue. Averaging all returns gives the values: (a)
- .12, (b) .22, (c) .23, (d) .21, (e) .09, (f) .03, (g) .07. This average
- response is therefore quite open-minded, although many individual
- responses are not. Older people tend to give more credence to the
- possibility of a hoax and less to unconventional possibilities. By
- contrast, those who have studied the subject extensively attach less
- weight to the possibility of a hoax and greater weight to the
- unconventional possibilities.
-
- Over 80% of respondents expressed a willingness to contribute to the
- resolution of the UFO problem if they could see a way to do so but, of
- those expressing this interest, only 13% could see a way. This is a
- notable consensus which may encapsulate the dilemma which this problem
- presents to scientists. Those who have studied the subject are more
- willing to help and more likely to see a way to help.
-
- Most respondents consider that meteorology, psychology,
- astronomy/astrophysics and physics have relevance to the UFO problem
- and some consider that aeronautical engineering and sociology may also
- be relevant. Most respondents (75%) would like to obtain more
- information on the subject, but they express a strong preference for
- getting it from scientific journals rather than from books or lectures.
-
- The returns identified 62 respondents who had witnessed or obtained an
- instrumental record of an event which they could not identify and which
- they thought might be related to the UFO phenomenon. The total number
- of events reported was larger (65) since some respondents reported more
- than one event. In addition, ten _identified_ strange observations were
- mentioned, four investigations were described (including one detailed
- study of ground traces), and attention was drawn to a few strange
- events described in the scientific literature. It was found that these
- 62 respondents have spent longer than average studying the UFO problem,
- that they are more positive in their assessment of the scientific
- importance of the problem, and that they tend to be more open-minded
- about unconventional explanations. Only 18 (about 30%) of these
- respondents indicated that they had previously reported their
- observations; seven to the Air Force, Navy or NORAD, one to the police,
- two to airport authorities, seven to other scientists, and one to a
- newspaper.
-
- Sixty-three percent (63%) of those reporting events were night-sky
- observers, as against 50% of respondents who did not report events.
- Thirty-six (36) of the events comprised lights seen in the sky at
- night. Twelve (12) were of point lights which were more or less
- puzzling; four (4) were of formations of lights; and four (4) were of
- diffuse lights. Three respondents independently described what appeared
- to be a searchlight playing on a cloud when there were no clouds in the
- sky. Four described disk-like objects, and five described objects with
- different shapes. Three cases concerned objects which appeared to emit
- smaller objects or "sparks." One case described apparent interference
- with an automobile electrical system (as did also a daylight case).
-
- There were sixteen accounts of strange objects seen by day. Five were
- of small objects, seven were of disk-shaped objects, and four described
- other miscellaneous observations.
-
- Seven respondents described photographic records of strange phenomena,
- and three were kind enough to provide me with copies of the photographs
- or film. (With help, I was able to make plausible interpretations of
- two of these.) One respondent recalled a radar observation he had made,
- another described two strange radio records, and a third described
- puzzling records obtained by a satellite tracking station.
-
- This study leads to the following answers to the questions initially
- posed. To judge from this survey of the membership of the American
- Astronomical Society, it appears that:
-
- (a) scientists have thoughts and views but no answers concerning the
- UFO problem;
-
- (b) Although there is no consensus, more scientists are of the opinion
- that the problem certainly or probably deserves scientific study than
- are of the opinion that it certainly or probably does not;
-
- and (c) a small fraction (of order 5%) are likely to report varied and
- puzzling observations, not unlike so-called "UFO reports" made by the
- general public. As is the case with reports from the public, many may
- be unusual observations of familiar objects, but some seem to be
- definitely strange.
-
- These results are consistent with the findings of an earlier but more
- limited survey of members of the American Institute of Aeronautics and
- Astronautics (Sturrock, 1974b), except that the opinions of astronomers
- (expressed in 1975) concerning the significance of the UFO problem were
- more positive than were the views of aeronautical engineers (expressed
- in 1973).
-
-
-