Paul
Hill was a well-respected NASA scientist when, in
the early 1950s, he had a UFO sighting. Soon after,
he built the first flying platform and was able to
duplicate the UFO's tilt-to-control maneuvers.
Official policy, however, prevented him from
proclaiming his findings. "I was destined," says
Hill, "to remain as unidentified as the flying
objects." For the next twenty-five years, Hill acted
as an unofficial clearing house at NASA, collecting
and analyzing sightings' reports for physical
properties, propulsion possibilities, dynamics, etc.
To refute claims that UFOs defy the laws of physics,
he had to make "technological sense ... of the
unconventional object."
http://www.nicap.org/papers/1997synopsis_of_UFOs_hill_JSE_puthoff.pdfThe following synopsis was prepared by H. E. Puthoff in a JSE Review of the book written by Paul Hill. The book is not online in text form but available at Amazon.com. The text of the synopsis is provided here for web word-search purposes and the actual pdf of the synopsis is linked below. -------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Synopsis of Unconventional Flying Objects:
by Paul Hill, Hampton Roads Publ. Co.,
Charlottesville, VA, 1995 (ISBN 1-57174-027-9)
JSE Review by H. E. Puthoff. Ph.D., Institute for
Advanced Studies at Austin. TX 78759
To the degree that the engineering characteristics
of UFOs can be estimated by empirical observation in
my opinion the above-referenced, recently-published
book by Paul Hill provides Ihe most reliable, concise
summary of engineering-type data available. [1 ] The
data were compiled over decades of research by a Chief
Scientist-Manager at NASA's Langley Research Center
[2] who acted as an informal clearinghouse for
UFO-related data. The strength of the compilation lies
in its thoughtful separation of wheat from chaff, and
the analysis of the former into coherent patterns,
including detailed calculations. Perhaps surprising to
the casually interested, under careful examination the
observations, rather than defying the laws of physics
as naive interpretation might suggest, instead appear
to be solidly commensurate with them, as the following
discussion shows.
One of the most consistently-observed
characteristics of UFO flight is a ubiquitous pattern
in which they tilt to perform all maneuvers.
Specifically, they sit level to hover, tilt forward to
move forward, tilt backward to stop, bank to turn, and
descend by "falling-leaf" or "silver- dollar-wobble"
motions. Detailed analysis by Hill shows that such
motion is inconsistent with aerodynamic requirements,
but totally consistent with some form of repulsive
force-field propulsion. Not satisfied with paper
analyses alone, Hill arranged to have various forms of
jet-supported and rotor-supported circular flying
platforms built and tested. Hill himself acted as test
pilot in early, originally-classified, versions, and
found the above motions the most economical for
control purposes. Pictures of these platforms are
included in the text.
In an effort to examine the force-field propulsion
hypothesis yet further, Hill analyzed a number of
cases involving near-field interactions with an
apparent craft in which some form of force was in
evidence. These include examples in which a person or
vehicle was affected, tree branches were parted or
broken, roof tiles were dislodged, objects were
deflected, and ground or water were disturbed. Under
close analysis the subtleties of these interactions
combine to point unequivocally to a repulsive force
field surrounding the craft, while discriminating
against propulsion mechanisms involving jet action,
pure electric or magnetic effects, or the emission of
energetic particles or radiation (although the latter
may accompany the propulsive mechanism as secondary
effects. Further detailed investigation indicates that
the particular form of force field propulsion that
satisfies observational constraints is what Hill
labels a directed acceleration field; that is, a field
that is, in general, gravitational in nature-like in
nature, and, in particular, gravity-canceling. [3]
Such a field acts on all masses in its sphere of
influence as it does a gravitational field. Corollary
to this conclusion is that observed acceleration
accelerations -100 g's relative to the environment
could be sustained without on-board high-g forces.
One of the consequences of the above identification
of field propulsion type by Hill is his conclusion,
supported by detailed calculation, computer simulation
and wind-tunnel studies, that supersonic flight
through the atmosphere without sonic booms is easily
engineered. Manipulation of the acceleration-type
force field would, even at supersonic speeds, result
in a constant-pressure, compression-free zone without
shockwave in which the vehicle is surrounded by a
subsonic flow-pattern of streamlines, and subsonic
velocity ratios. An additional benefit of such field
control is that drops of moisture, rain, dust,
insects, or other low-velocity objects would follow
streamline paths around the craft rather than impact
it.
Another puzzle resolved by Hill's analysis is that
craft observed to travel continuously at Mach 4 or 5
do not appear to generate temperatures sufficiently
high to be destructive to known materials. In other
words, UFOs appear to prevent high aerodynamic heating
rates, rather than permitting a heating problem, then
surviving it with heat- resistant materials as is the
case of the Shuttle whose surface temperatures can
reach 1300 degrees C. The resolution of this potential
problem is shown by Hill to derive from the fact that
the force-field control that results in the prevention
of shockwave drag as discussed above is also effective
in preventing aerodynamic heating. In effect the
airflow approaches, then springs away from the craft,
depositing no energy in the process.
A further example of the type of correlation that
emerges from Hill's analytical approach is provided by
an analysis of the economy of various flight-path
profiles. It is shown that high-angle, high-
acceleration departures on ballistic-arc trajectories
with high-speed coast segments are more efficient
than, for example, intermediate-level, horizontal-path
trips, both in terms of required impulse-per-unit-mass
and time-of-flight parameters. This he correlates with
the observation that UFO departures are of the
dramatically high-angle, high-acceleration type.
Also of interest is Hill's analysis of the spectra
and intensity of an apparent plasma sheath surrounding
such craft, the details of which correlate with what
one would expect in terms of it being a secondary
effect associated with the propulsion system, for
example, a blue shift and intensity increase during a
"power-up" phase, and the opposite during hover or
landing maneuvers. An additional fine point that
emerges from this analysis is resolution of Ihe paradm
that observation on a direct line-of-sight to a near
part of the craft can reveal a metallic-like structure
while the attempt to observe the outline of the craft,
necessarily by an oblique line-of-sight, results in an
indistinct blur. Analysis shows this to be a
reasonable outcome of an expected re- absorption of
reflected light by the surrounding plasma in the
longer- length path associated with the more oblique
view.
Another typical nugget of information is found in
Hill's discussion of the results of the analysis of a
possible UFO artifact, the famous Ubatuba magnesium
fragments claimed to have originated from an exploded
unidentified craft near Ubatuba, Brazil. Laboratory
analysis of the samples found the magnesium to be not
only of exceptional purity, and anomalous in its trace
composition of other elements, but 6.7% denser than
ordinary pure magnesium, a figure well beyond the
experimental error of the measurement. Hill's
calculation shows that this observation can be
accounted for by assuming that the sample contained
only the pure isotope Mg26, rather than the
naturally-occurring distribution among isotopes Mg24,
Mg25 and Mg26. Since the only isotope separation on a
significant scale in terrestrial manufacture is that
of uranium, such a result must be considered at least
anomalous, and possibly as evidence for
extraterrestrial manufacture.
Additional calculations concerning the parameters
of interstellar travel (including relativistic
effects), and the energetics of such travel, have been
performed and are included in tabular and graphical
form. The wealth of material in these sections, along
with discussion of the broad implications of this
material, reveal the dedication and thoroughness of
Hill's approach to his self-assigned task.
In the final analysis, one must conclude that Hill
has assembled as good a case as can be made on the
basis of presently available data that the observation
of some "unconventional flying objects" is compatible
with the presence of engineered platforms weighing in
at something around 30 tons, which are capable of
100-g accelerations and 9000-mph speeds in the
atmosphere. Perhaps more important for the technical
reader, however, is Hill's supporting argumentation,
based on solid analysis, that these platforms,
although exhibiting the application of physics and
engineering principles clearly beyond our present-day
capabilities, do not appear to defy these principles
in any fundamental way.
1. The book also comes highly recommended in a
Frontispiece by Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell,
and in a Foreword by retired McDonnell Douglas R&D
manager Robert M. Wood. [Back]
2. Ass't Chief, Pilotless Aircraft Research
Div.; Assoc. Chief. Applied Materials and Physics Div.
Retired from NASA in 1970. [Back]
3. Recent examples of the discussion of the
technical aspects of candidate field propulsion
mechanisms of this type are given in M. Alcubierre,
"The warp drive: hyper-fast travel within general
relativity," Class, and Quantum Grav., vol. 11, p. L73
(1994), and in H. Puthoff, "SETI, the
velocity-of-light limitation, and the Alcubierre warp
drive: An
integrating overview," Phys. Essays vol. 9, No. 1,
p. 156 (March 1996). [Back]
Copyrighted ©1997 by H.E. Puthoff
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