Jacques Vallee, Claude Poher. Basic Patterns in UFO Observations (AiAA, 1975)
Jacques Vallee, Claude Poher. Basic Patterns in UFO Observations (AiAA, 1975)
Jacques Vallee, Claude Poher. Basic Patterns in UFO Observations (AiAA, 1975)
Abstract
This paper presents the view that (1) a significant proportion of the thousands of
UFO reports analyzed by the authors come from witnesses who have really observed
an object in the sky or at ground level; (2) the objects these witnesses have seen have
characteristics very different from all identifiable objects and phenomena; (3) the
phenomenon is of high scientific interest; and (4) a systematic research approach
can be defined.
These conclusions are based on many years of research into the phenomenon, in the
course of which the authors have had at their disposal the official Air Force files of
the United States and of France, as well as files of several reliable private
organizations. The paper presents the results of computer statistics obtained
independently, and it describes some correlations between geomagnetic
disturbances and UFO observations.
*Dr. Claude Poher is a member of the Scientific Projects Division, Centre National d'Etudes
Spatiales, Toulouse (France). He holds a Ph.D in astrophysics and has been a pilot for 20 years.
**Dr. Jacques Vallee is the principal investigator of a computer research project in the United
States and a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Center for UFO Studies, Evanston
(Illinois). He holds an M.S. in astrophysics and a Ph.D. in computer science.
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 1
Introduction
During 1973 and early 1974, there has been a remarkable recurrence of a type of
phenomenon known as a "wave" of unidentified flying objects. Coming as it did less
than four years after the closing of Project "Blue Book" by the U.S. Air Force (1), this
series of observations has prompted a new scientific debate concerning the reality of the
objects or craft responsible for triggering the reports. Accordingly, we have examined
the files of UFO observations in France and in the United States in the light of the
following questions:
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 2
Another interesting result is obtained when we consider those unexplained reports (308
cases in the French files) in which angular elevation (h) is estimated by the observer and
in which the object is of small angular diameter. Plotting on Figure 2 the number of
reports against 1/sin h, we obtain a very good fit to the classical "Bouguer line" of optical
astronomy (used in atmospheric absorption corrections).
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 3
We conclude on this basis that the phenomenon under study presents the optical
characteristics of a real physical phenomenon, observed by the witnesses' own eyes,
through the imperfectly transparent atmosphere.
We have approached this question through a study of the reported duration of the
observations. In a book (16) published in 1966, one of us has already called attention to
the fact that "Manifestations of the UFO phenomenon were of considerable duration,
often in excess of five minutes and commonly of fifteen or twenty minutes." A statistical
study of 1,000 cases disclosed in 1974 that 50 percent of these reports included an
estimated duration and were distributed as shown in Figure 3.
This curve corresponds in no way to the characteristic distribution for identifiable objects,
which can be obtained as a composite of observations of meteors, balloons, stars, aircraft,
birds, satellites, etc. In fact, when we plotted, on the same scale, 350 cases of explained
reports (containing an estimated duration for phenomena that had been definitely
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 4
identified), we obtained the curve shown in Figure 3 as a dotted line. Furthermore, this is
a worldwide result, as shown by statistics based on 135 French cases and 373 non-
French cases and plotted on Figure 4.
Another important parameter, shown in Figure 5, is that of the distance (as calculated by
triangulation) between the observers and the source of the phenomenon. This parameter
can only be computed in that subset of the reports which come from witnesses separated
in space and observing the same phenomenon. Generally such reports have come from
military or police sources. (Examples are found in references 4, 6, 8, 9, 15, 16, and 18.)
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 5
To summarize, we are faced with the problem of finding a phenomenon X that can
present simultaneously the three patterns shown in Figures 6 a, b, and c. The authors have
not found any identifiable phenomenon that meet these three criteria. At this point, it is
appropriate to ask more precise questions about the conditions of the close encounters
with the phenomenon (type I reports) and about the witnesses who have made such
reports. Finally, we will present some preliminary findings regarding the magnetic
properties of the phenomenon.
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 6
3. Under what conditions is the phenomenon encountered at close range?
One of the most stable patterns in the study of close encounters with the phenomenon
(type-I cases*) has been found in the distribution of such reports as a function of time of
day. First published in 1963, this pattern can be verified on the basis of worldwide
catalogues of type-I sightings. It shows no significant variation in old and recent cases
and even yields the same distribution when a sample of previously unreported cases is
obtained from a country with low awareness of the phenomenon (Figure 7).
Typically, the number of type-I reports is very low during the day. It starts increasing
about 5 p.m. and reaches a maximum about 9 p.m. It then decreases until it reaches a
minimum at 1 a.m. It rises again to a secondary maximum at 3 a.m. and returns to a low
level at 6 a.m. Such a pattern suggests that the decrease in reports of close encounters
between 11 p.m. and 2 a.m. may simply be due to the fact that the number of potential
observers falls drastically as most people spend these hours at home.
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* In the classification used here, type-II reports correspond to cases in which secondary
objects are generated by a flying object, type-III to cases in which the object's trajectory
has a singular point, and type-IV to cases in which the trajectory is continuous across the
sky.
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 7
The result of this calculation is shown in Figure 9. (Nc represents the number of type-I
reports we would have in our files if people did not go home at night.) The ratio of Nc to
N is about 14 to 1. In other words, all other factors being held constant, witnesses are
only in a position to observe one in fourteen close approaches of the phenomenon to the
surface of the earth. In order to generate the 2,000 close-encounter observations we have
in our files, the phenomenon would have had to manifest itself close to the ground 28,000
times during the time interval and in the regions considered here.
We must next pose the question of the nature of the sites where such close approaches
take place. An earlier publication (16) noted that, in France, such observations were not
found in areas of high population density. This finding is substantiated by the statistics
of Figure 10, showing that in approximately 70 percent of the cases, the site of the close
approach is a relatively deserted or isolated area. If we pursue the hypothesis that the
phenomenon is caused by real objects, then a multiplying factor for population density
should be applied to the 2,000 close encounter observations mentioned above. However,
we still know too little about detailed patterns followed by the phenomenon to estimate
this factor.
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 8
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 9
4. What are the numbers and the ages of the witnesses?
A catalogue of 923 cases of type-I reports in the period 1868-1968 contains 878 incidents
in which the number of witnesses in the group is given.
Figure 11 gives the distribution of these witnesses tabulated according to the time interval
of the sightings.
It can be seen from this table that only slightly more than half of the cases involved
witnesses who were alone at the time of the sighting, and that this proportion has been
stable over the years.
The age of the witnesses, on the other hand, is known in 147 instances. This information
is reflected in the "age pyramid" shown in Figure 12; attention should be called to the fact
that we have a paucity of reports from adults in the age bracket of 20 to 40, presumably
because they would be most likely to be professionally harmed by the ridicule associated
with a report of an unidentified phenomenon. A detailed study of age distribution in old
and recent cases has failed to yield any significant difference. The phenomenon does not
seem to be associated preferentially with a particular generation.
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 10
We are led to the conclusion that there is nothing abnormal about the age distribution and
group membership of the witnesses of such events, which follow patterns that can be
explained from sociological factors alone. The only deviation from the expected norm is
the lack of reports from young adults, presumably due to fear of ridicule.
Secondary effects observed in connection with UFO phenomena are too varied and
numerous to be summarized here. They have been discussed in some detail by several
authors (4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 12, 13).
The most interesting of these effects from a physical point of view have been
electromagnetic in nature and deserve to be investigated in detail. Geophysical
researchers use an existing world-wide network of stations, which record, night and day,
the fluctuations of the earth's magnetic field. In France, such a station exists at Chambon-
la-Forêt, about 30 kilometers northeast of Orléans. This station has been recording the
three components of the field since 1886, with about 1 gamma accuracy and a bandwidth
of a few Hertz. We have, therefore, analyzed the UFO eye-witness accounts emanating
from an area around Chambon-la-Forêt (10).
In examining these records, we can limit ourselves to a particularly representative period
of UFO observations: in this case, the year 1954. (This year alone covers 23 percent of
French observations for the period 1944-1971.)
The results show a good correlation between the two phenomena for the month of
October. This can be more carefully examined by the analysis of the distribution of
witnesses' UFO accounts each day during October.
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 11
If we limit ourselves to the period between 1 and 18 October, which is the most
remarkable for UFO observations, we can calculate a correlation coefficient of UFO
observations with declination disturbances of 0.034 and a correlation coefficient with the
vertical component of 0.58 which is far from negligible.
On the basis of these same data, a very crude estimate of the upper limit of magnetic
disturbances caused by UFOs gives peak-to-peak values of 10 gammas for the field
vertical component when a UFO is observed at 40 km from the measuring station.
This distribution leads us to think that the magnetic field produced by the UFO could be
150,000 ampere turns per meter in its immediate neighborhood (Figure 13).
The complete study, which has been published in more detail elsewhere (10, 11), led to
the following conclusions:
- The method used here looks as if it might be very useful for an objective approach to
the study of the phenomena. The analysis would have to be considerably enlarged, using
a greater number of observation reports, associated with several geomagnetic recording
stations, in order to obtain results of better quality.
- The detection of UFOs by magnetic disturbances seems possible, but only if several
automatic, well-equipped stations are available, which would increase the probability of
Poher and Vallee Basic Patterns in UFO Observations AIAA paper 75-42 Jan.1975 page 12
seeing a UFO pass in the immediate neighborhood of one of them. At least ten stations
would be necessary.
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