KEY POINTS

  • An expert claimed to have spotted UFOs flying near the Sun
  • Images of the alleged UFOs were captured by NASA's satellite
  • The expert believes the UFOs are made of pure energy

A UFO expert claimed to have spotted spherical UFOs flying near the Sun while viewing the images captured by NASA’s satellite. According to the expert, the strange objects could be made of pure energy.

The strange sighting was made by Scott Waring of the UFO-centered blog ET Data Base. He came across the image of the alleged UFOs while browsing through NASA’s Helioviewer site, which features images captured by the agency’s Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO).

The SDO was a mission launched by NASA in 2010 with the main objective of observing the Sun. Through the Helioviewer site, the SDO is able to provide the public with daily images of the massive star.

While Waring was recently using the site, he came across an image of objects hovering near the Sun. Based on the image, the objects appeared spherical and had a diameter of about 1.5 kilometers.

According to Waring, most of the objects he saw moved around at high speeds in different directions near the Sun when he first spotted them. However, after a while, one of the objects stopped in front of the massive star. The object then moved towards the Sun before flying off again in the direction where it came from.

Due to the erratic movements of the objects, Waring speculated that the UFOs could be living beings that are made of pure energy. It is possible that the object that stopped in front of the Sun approached the star in order to reenergize itself.

“The object jumping like that and seeing trails of others similar shaped objects zooming around the sun makes me wonder are these living beings made of energy?” Waring wrote in a blog post.

“Energy travels at the speed of light too...and this would explain the speed of the objects,” he continued. “I believe these are incredibly large energy beings...intelligent beings.”

Although the exact nature of the objects is not yet clear, it is possible that their appearance was caused by a minor glitch in SDO’s imaging system or just debris in front of the satellite’s camera.

Solar Flare 2014
An X-class solar flare observed on Oct. 25, 2014. NASA/SDO