A “runaway fireball” that crashed into the water off the coast of Papua New Guinea in 2014 could be an alien probe or extraterrestrial artifact similar to U.S. interstellar probes like NASA’s “Voyagers,” Harvard professor Dr. Avi Loeb told Fox News Digital.
That would be strong potential evidence of alien life.
The space object crashed into the Bismarck Sea with a percentage of the energy force of the Hiroshima bomb in 2014 and likely traveled “from the deep interior of a planetary system or a star in the thick disk of the Milky Way galaxy,” Loeb said.
It was originally classified as a meteor, but the object’s speed and trajectory were “outliers” that suggested it wasn’t beholden to the sun’s orbit, according to the Harvard professor, who authored a paper about the object with his student Dr. Amir Siraj.
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Harvard Professor Avi Loeb, of the Galileo Project, stands with the infrared and optical cameras of the Galileo Project Observatory (Avi Loeb)
Space Force’s Space Operations Command officially confirmed its findings to NASA, which was released on April 6, 2022.
Since then, Loeb raised $1.5 million to fund a 10-day “fishing expedition” to recover pieces of the object off the ocean floor to study it.
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“From a scientific point of view, it only takes one object that came from an extraterrestrial technological civilization to change the future humanity,” Loeb told Fox News Digital during an interview in late March. “That’s why we want to know what all the objects are.”
What he and his team will see on their voyage to Papua New Guinea is unknown, but he said he expects to find a “strip of fragments” on the ocean floor along the original path, with the smallest fragments at the beginning.

Harvard Professor Avi Loeb speaking at the annual conference ni Zurich, Switzerland in March (WORLD.MINDS)
Loeb predicts…