
On October 18, the U.S. military confirmed that it had reached a strange cooperation agreement with Tom Dellonger, an expert from the Star Academy of Arts and Sciences, a civilian scientific research organization, to investigate some mysterious material that could not be recognized. Even more sensational, these mysterious metamaterials are said to be able to resist gravity, most likely from ufo!
On October 18, the U.S. Army's Center for Ground Vehicle Systems (GVSC) released a 26-page official document for a collaborative R&D agreement with the Star Academy of Arts and Sciences on a project titled "Novel and Emerging Technology Development." The cooperation was signed on October 10, 2019 and the amount of the cooperation is $1 million. Military experts include Bean Soave and Dr. Joseph Cannon, who are "principal investigators," while the Star Academy of Arts and Sciences is primarily responsible for docking with the organization's director of global security and special programs, Luis Elizondo, who has claimed to be in charge of the military's investigations into various UFO sightings.
The object of this project investigation is the military's hope to try to verify the metamaterials and related "technological innovation" statements reported by the Star Academy of Arts and Sciences. If the technology is successful, it will be very valuable to the entire U.S. military. According to the basic definition, metamaterials are engineered composites whose electrical properties are not present in any naturally occurring form of the material, resulting in unique properties, including certain effects on the transmission of electromagnetic waves. What's even stranger is that the Academy of Arts and Sciences stardom also provided the military with some mysterious samples!
These samples include: 1.75" x 1.25" x 0.25" large layered bismuth-magnesium-zinc alloy metal, 6 small bismuth-magnesium-zinc alloy sheets, 1 aluminum alloy sheet and 1 round black and silver metal sheet. The material originally came from the late American longtime host of the paranormal radio program by the famous DJ Arte Bell. Bell said he had bought the materials from a mysterious person. The man claimed that their grandfather had worked in an unspecified unit of the U.S. military and that the items were linked to the Roswell UFO crash.
These mysterious metals later passed into the hands of Tom Drunger, an expert at the Star Academy of Arts and Sciences. Introduced by investigative journalist Linda Morton, the U.S. military was intrigued by Tom Drlonger's mysterious metals. In 2004, Linda Morton openly discussed the peculiar properties of these metals. She claims that when exposed to electromagnetic radiation at specific frequencies, the metal samples show antigravity or suspension properties. Moulton also revealed that she submitted the materials to a number of labs and companies, including the Army's arsenal, but they were unable to replicate the materials or identify their source. Tom Drlonger made a similar claim in a 2018 interview.
In July 2019, the head of the newly established Aerospace Division of the Star Academy of Arts and Sciences (previously a senior member of the Senior Design Department at the Lockheed Martin Skunk Plant) confirmed that the structure and composition of these metallic materials did not come from any known existing military or commercial applications. So the organization focuses on verifying the special properties of materials and strives to study their scientific principles. While these mysterious materials have been documented since the mid-1990s, it is only now that the technology required to make the material has emerged. Multiple material samples are currently being analyzed by contracted laboratories and plans are planned to expand the scope of this research.
The group says that if the properties associated with these mysterious materials can be confirmed, then their technology can be studied and transformed into commercial and military capabilities. These new technologies will fundamentally change the capabilities of civilizations, revolutionizing the world's transportation, communications, and computing. This seems to be the main reason for attracting the attention of the U.S. military. However, compared with the statements of civil society organizations, the content of the military agreement is still more realistic. The Army believes that these substances could make significant progress in the safety, protection and weight reduction of vehicles on the ground. In particular, metamaterials can be applied in the stealth field in terms of "active camouflage and directional photon projection".
In addition, the agreement encourages the "Star Academy of Arts and Sciences" to cooperate with the U.S. military as soon as possible if they have technologies such as quantum communications, beam energy propulsion, and antigravity. The Academy of Arts and Sciences has released the concept of revolutionary beam propulsion vehicles in the past, but there is no indication that they have built actual prototypes or related hardware. The Army isn't the only branch of the service that has shown interest in science fiction. At the same time, the U.S. Navy has been funding patents for inventions in related fields, including "aircraft using inertial mass reduction devices" and "high-frequency gravitational wave generators."
In 2017, The New York Times reported that "mysterious metal alloys and other materials" were unveiled at a facility operating in Las Vegas, Nevada, by Robert Bigelow, a UFO and supernatural celebrity in the United States, millionaire, UFO and supernatural circles. This led to Bigelow Aerospace winning a contract to support the Defense Intelligence Agency's Advanced Aerospace Weapon Systems Application Program (AAWSAP), which eventually evolved into AATIP. Under Bigelow's direction, the AAWSAP project produced a number of very mysterious research reports, some of which were almost science fiction.
Whether these materials are as godly as mentioned above depends on the actual test. Recently, the US military has indeed made great efforts in UFO and other aspects, for example, the US Navy has publicly acknowledged the existence of UFO. However, the United States is so hyped, is it really to study UFO, or do you see other military powers chasing too fiercely, thinking that the current F-22, F-35, B-2, nuclear-powered aircraft carriers and so on, have been unable to hold the field?