The Nexus II

This blog is dedicated to the extraterrestrial phenomena

Chinese creates a remote controlled Flying Object

Another annoying toy for us, serious researchers.
A Chinese company has developed a prototype flying saucer that can hover in the air and be controlled remotely from afar, state press said Tuesday.

The aircraft is 1.2 metres (four feet) in diameter and is able to take off and land vertically and hover at an altitude of up to 1,000 metres (yards), Xinhua news agency said.

The unmanned disc is driven by a propeller and can be controlled remotely or sent on a preset flight path, it said.

Its top speed is 80 kilometres (50 miles) per hour, it added.

It took the Harbin Smart Special Aerocraft Co Ltd 12 years and 28 million yuan (4.1 million dollars) to develop the prototype craft, which is designed for aerial photography, geological surveys and emergency lighting, the report said.

(Source: http://www.breitbart.com)

Thursday, June 19, 2008 Posted by | China, Fake UFO | Leave a Comment

Ancient Chinese Texts Indicate Alien Sightings Four Thousand Years Ago

Strange stories of aliens visiting Earth are found not only in science fiction, but newspapers and magazines as well. But alien sightings are not merely a modern phenomenon—these accounts can also be found in ancient Chinese texts. These historical records provide evidence and clues for modern research on aliens.

(Full Article: http://en.epochtimes.com/news/8-3-17/67721.html)

Saturday, March 22, 2008 Posted by | 4000BC, China, ET Contact | Leave a Comment

China blocks YouTube

Tibet: China blocks YouTube, protests spread, bloggers react

(Source: http://www.boingboing.net/2008/03/16/tibet-china-blocks-y.html)

Sunday, March 16, 2008 Posted by | China, YouTube | Leave a Comment

China says there’s no space race in Asia

By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN, Associated Press Writer

BEIJING – Over a few short months, Japan, China, and India will all have lunar probes orbiting the moon, sparking talk of a new space race in Asia. China, for one, takes exception at that characterization.

On Thursday, a top official in its secretive military-backed lunar explorer program defended the probe launched last week as an innovation that is part of a future wave of cooperation, not competition, in outer space.

“It’s all peaceful,” said Pei Zhaoyu, assistant director of the Lunar Exploration Program Center, when asked whether a space race was on. “The countries involved in lunar exploration are developing an understanding. They’re evolving a mechanism for cooperation.”

China’s launch of the Chang’e 1 satellite put in motion an ambitious space exploration plan, and came just weeks after rival Japan launched its own moon probe. India plans to send its own lunar probe into space in April.

The three missions represent a new wave of lunar exploration following those begun in the Cold War by the United States and former Soviet Union, and another bout in the 1990s that saw Japan and Western Europe joining the club.

James Oberg, a space consultant in Houston, said the current glut of lunar missions is less of a space race and more a matter of those countries developing new technologies at similar rates. All three have lately developed more powerful booster rockets, along with experience with payloads gleaned from launching commercial satellites, said Oberg, a veteran of 22 years at NASA Mission Control.

However, he added that such missions do offer tangible benefits for a country’s business and reputation.

“Doing ‘moon probes’ advertises a country’s technological level and that’s good for high-tech exports, and for validating the threat-level of its high-tech weapons,” Oberg said in recent comments to The Associated Press.

Oberg likened the Chinese probe, named after a mythical Chinese goddess who flew to the moon Similar, to the orbiting U.S. moon explorers “Clementine” and “Prospector” launched in the 1990s.

In Beijing, Pei told reporters all was well with the satellite, which is due to move into lunar capture orbit Monday, when it will allow itself to be caught by the moon’s gravity.

“All the systems on board are currently in excellent condition and the spacecraft is on the expected trajectory,” said Pei, who is also spokesman for the China National Space Administration — China’s version of NASA.

The lunar mission adds depth to a Chinese space program that has sent astronauts orbiting around the Earth twice in the past four years and is a source of great national pride.

Pei dwelt extensively on the technical aspects of the lunar mission at a news conference that illustrated a growing openness within the space program.

Foreign observers were present at the satellite’s Oct. 24 launch from the Xichang site in the southwestern province of Sichuan, Pei said. He said data gathered during the yearlong mission would be shared with scientists from other nations.

China sent its first satellite into Earth orbit in the 1970s, but the space program only seriously took off in the 1980s, growing apace with the country’s booming economy.

In 2003, China became only the third country in the world after the United States and Russia to put its own astronauts into space.

But China also alarmed the international community in January when it blasted an old satellite into oblivion with a land-based anti-satellite missile.

Pei dodged a question about the anti-satellite weapon, but gave the budget for the engineering stage of the lunar program as $187 million.

“China has always adhered to the principle of peaceful use of outer space,” he said. “All goals, including engineering goals, and scientific goals, are without military purposes.”

Carried into space by a Long March 3A rocket, the Chang’e 1 satellite is expected to transmit its first photo back to China in late November.

It will survey the lunar surface using stereo radar and other tools as a precursor to a planned landing on the moon’s surface in 2012 and a recoverable mission by 2020.

Pei said China was being careful not to travel territory already covered by the space programs of Russia, the U.S., Japan and the European Space Agency.

He said that by launching the probe, China was playing to its science and technology strengths, while laying the groundwork for future innovations and benefiting the country’s economic and social development — a reference to the Communist Party’s use of the space program to drum up patriotism and loyalty.

“China’s lunar program got off to a relatively late start, but we hope to … try to do something that no one has done before,” Pei said.

“We’re fully confident that alongside the progress in our science and technology, our lunar and deep space exploration programs will advance rapidly from strength to strength,” he said.

(Source: http://news.yahoo.com)

Friday, November 2, 2007 Posted by | China, Moon Base, Moon Expeditions, Moon Research | Leave a Comment

China says there’s no space race in Asia

By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN, Associated Press Writer

BEIJING – Over a few short months, Japan, China, and India will all have lunar probes orbiting the moon, sparking talk of a new space race in Asia. China, for one, takes exception at that characterization.

On Thursday, a top official in its secretive military-backed lunar explorer program defended the probe launched last week as an innovation that is part of a future wave of cooperation, not competition, in outer space.

“It’s all peaceful,” said Pei Zhaoyu, assistant director of the Lunar Exploration Program Center, when asked whether a space race was on. “The countries involved in lunar exploration are developing an understanding. They’re evolving a mechanism for cooperation.”

China’s launch of the Chang’e 1 satellite put in motion an ambitious space exploration plan, and came just weeks after rival Japan launched its own moon probe. India plans to send its own lunar probe into space in April.

The three missions represent a new wave of lunar exploration following those begun in the Cold War by the United States and former Soviet Union, and another bout in the 1990s that saw Japan and Western Europe joining the club.

James Oberg, a space consultant in Houston, said the current glut of lunar missions is less of a space race and more a matter of those countries developing new technologies at similar rates. All three have lately developed more powerful booster rockets, along with experience with payloads gleaned from launching commercial satellites, said Oberg, a veteran of 22 years at NASA Mission Control.

However, he added that such missions do offer tangible benefits for a country’s business and reputation.

“Doing ‘moon probes’ advertises a country’s technological level and that’s good for high-tech exports, and for validating the threat-level of its high-tech weapons,” Oberg said in recent comments to The Associated Press.

Oberg likened the Chinese probe, named after a mythical Chinese goddess who flew to the moon Similar, to the orbiting U.S. moon explorers “Clementine” and “Prospector” launched in the 1990s.

In Beijing, Pei told reporters all was well with the satellite, which is due to move into lunar capture orbit Monday, when it will allow itself to be caught by the moon’s gravity.

“All the systems on board are currently in excellent condition and the spacecraft is on the expected trajectory,” said Pei, who is also spokesman for the China National Space Administration — China’s version of NASA.

The lunar mission adds depth to a Chinese space program that has sent astronauts orbiting around the Earth twice in the past four years and is a source of great national pride.

Pei dwelt extensively on the technical aspects of the lunar mission at a news conference that illustrated a growing openness within the space program.

Foreign observers were present at the satellite’s Oct. 24 launch from the Xichang site in the southwestern province of Sichuan, Pei said. He said data gathered during the yearlong mission would be shared with scientists from other nations.

China sent its first satellite into Earth orbit in the 1970s, but the space program only seriously took off in the 1980s, growing apace with the country’s booming economy.

In 2003, China became only the third country in the world after the United States and Russia to put its own astronauts into space.

But China also alarmed the international community in January when it blasted an old satellite into oblivion with a land-based anti-satellite missile.

Pei dodged a question about the anti-satellite weapon, but gave the budget for the engineering stage of the lunar program as $187 million.

“China has always adhered to the principle of peaceful use of outer space,” he said. “All goals, including engineering goals, and scientific goals, are without military purposes.”

Carried into space by a Long March 3A rocket, the Chang’e 1 satellite is expected to transmit its first photo back to China in late November.

It will survey the lunar surface using stereo radar and other tools as a precursor to a planned landing on the moon’s surface in 2012 and a recoverable mission by 2020.

Pei said China was being careful not to travel territory already covered by the space programs of Russia, the U.S., Japan and the European Space Agency.

He said that by launching the probe, China was playing to its science and technology strengths, while laying the groundwork for future innovations and benefiting the country’s economic and social development — a reference to the Communist Party’s use of the space program to drum up patriotism and loyalty.

“China’s lunar program got off to a relatively late start, but we hope to … try to do something that no one has done before,” Pei said.

“We’re fully confident that alongside the progress in our science and technology, our lunar and deep space exploration programs will advance rapidly from strength to strength,” he said.

(Source: http://news.yahoo.com)

Friday, November 2, 2007 Posted by | China, Moon Base, Moon Expeditions, Moon Research | Leave a Comment

Indian Prime Minister confess “I believe in higher Forces(E.T)"

It’s really been a exiting time for Blogger who always believe that India is already been contacted by Aliens “Higher Forces”. I got an exclusive video footage for all of you in this footage you saw Raj Chengappa, Managing editor, India time Group (No reason not to trust this guy). When this week he had Interviewed Prime Minster of India (Most reliable Man, no doubt about it), about 123 deal(After 2 year intensive dialogue between India,USA & Higher forces USA ready to share its nuclear technology with India ) & how communists party (CPM &CPI always been label pro China) in India opposing & creating hurdle about not to put this deal in effect. On times web site we can saw China is really happy if this deal don’t work out.


Now.here what Mr.Manmohan Singh Prime minister of India told in his interviewed to Mr.Raj that he really hurt about what all going on now days about this 123 deal. At this time opposition party (BJP,who had in power before Mr. Singh) had to support him in this matter which is really important for India(As india have to place a very crucial role in new world order).Prime minister told that BJP hold Hawana/Yagna (In Vida too, we find how ancient Guru hold Yagna to made their GOD happy & get their wish fulfill) for death of Prime minister.

What he told Mr.raj in this contest was really surprising & even he also get surprised as well when pm told him that “This is my destiny to be prime minister of India , I have courage of my conviction” “I believe in higher Forces” & that’s why I am here & Prime minister of India.Wows Boom…

If we listen his statement again which kind of words he used Distiny,Higher Force,Courage of my conviction…by using those world its feel like he is try to told the people & politician of India that Listen its more then a deal, now time came for India to play a big role in New world order. They are here to help India, to be a big player internationally & we have to take this responsibility very seriously. He don’t have any doubt about his credibility or he just said only to put pressure on other political parties ,We don’t have to forget about that as well he is most educated Prime minster of world at this time. If he said some thing like that it’s really important.

(Source: http://ufoblogger.blogspot.com)

Sunday, August 19, 2007 Posted by | China, India, New World Order | Leave a Comment

Huge Dust Plumes From China Cause Changes in Climate

One tainted export from China can’t be avoided in North America — air.

An outpouring of dust layered with man-made sulfates, smog, industrial fumes, carbon grit and nitrates is crossing the Pacific Ocean on prevailing winds from booming Asian economies in plumes so vast they alter the climate. These rivers of polluted air can be wider than the Amazon and deeper than the Grand Canyon.

“There are times when it covers the entire Pacific Ocean basin like a ribbon bent back and forth,” said atmospheric physicist V. Ramanathan at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, Calif.

On some days, almost a third of the air over Los Angeles and San Francisco can be traced directly to Asia. With it comes up to three-quarters of the black carbon particulate pollution that reaches the West Coast, Dr. Ramanathan and his colleagues recently reported in the Journal of Geophysical Research.

This transcontinental pollution is part of a growing global traffic in dust and aerosol particles made worse by drought and deforestation, said Steven Cliff, who studies the problem at the University of California at Davis.

Aerosols — airborne microscopic particles — are produced naturally every time a breeze catches sea salt from ocean spray, or a volcano erupts, or a forest burns, or a windstorm kicks up dust, for example. They also are released in exhaust fumes, factory vapors and coal-fired power plant emissions.

Over the Pacific itself, the plumes are seeding ocean clouds and spawning fiercer thunderstorms, researchers at Texas A&M University reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in March.

The influence of these plumes on climate is complex because they can have both a cooling and a warming effect, the scientists said. Scientists are convinced these plumes contain so many cooling sulfate particles that they may be masking half of the effect of global warming. The plumes may block more than 10% of the sunlight over the Pacific.

But while the sulfates they carry lower temperatures by reflecting sunlight, the soot they contain absorbs solar heat, thus warming the planet.

Asia is the world’s largest source of aerosols, man-made and natural. Every spring and summer, storms whip up silt from the Gobi desert of Mongolia and the hardpan of the Taklamakan desert of western China, where, for centuries, dust has shaped a way of life. From the dunes of Dunhuang, where vendors hawk gauze face masks alongside braided leather camel whips, to the oasis of Kashgar at the feet of the Tian Shan Mountains 1,500 miles to the west, there is no escaping it.

The Taklamakan is a natural engine of evaporation and erosion. Rare among the world’s continental basins, no river that enters the Taklamakan ever reaches the sea. Fed by melting highland glaciers and gorged with silt, these freshwater torrents all vanish in the arid desert heat, like so many Silk Road caravans.

Only the dust escapes.

In an instant, billows of grit can envelope the landscape in a mist so fine that it never completely settles. Moving east, the dust sweeps up pollutants from heavily industrialized regions that turn the yellow plumes a bruised brown. In Beijing, where authorities estimate a million tons of this dust settles every year, the level of microscopic aerosols is seven times the public-health standard set by the World Health Organization.

Once aloft, the plumes can circle the world in three weeks. “In a very real and immediate sense, you can look at a dust event you are breathing in China and look at this same dust as it tracks across the Pacific and reaches the United States,” said climate analyst Jeff Stith at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado. “It is a remarkable mix of natural and man-made particles.”

This spring, Dr. Ramanathan and Dr. Stith led an international research team in a $1 million National Science Foundation project to track systematically the plumes across the Pacific. NASA satellites have monitored the clouds from orbit for several years, but this was the first effort to analyze them in detail.

For six weeks, the researchers cruised the Pacific aboard a specially instrumented Gulfstream V jet to sample these exotic airstreams. Their findings, to be released this year, involved NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and nine U.S. universities, as well as the National Institute for Environmental Studies in Japan, Seoul National University in Korea, and Lanzhou University and Peking University in China.

The team detected a new high-altitude plume every three or four days. Each one was up to 300 miles wide and six miles deep, a vaporous layer cake of pollutants. The higher the plumes, the longer they lasted, the faster they traveled and the more pronounced their effect, the researchers said.

Until now, the pollution choking so many communities in Asia may have tempered the pace of global warming. As China and other countries eliminate their sulfate emissions, however, world temperatures may heat up even faster than predicted.

(Source: http://online.wsj.com)

Monday, July 23, 2007 Posted by | China, Climat change | Leave a Comment

   

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