Pentagon UAP office developing ‘Gremlin’ sensors to help identify UFOs in orbit
The Pentagon’s UFO office is developing sensor kits to help it collect data in real time on unidentified objects in the sky or in space.
That’s according to Tim Phillips, the acting head of the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or AARO, a U.S. Department of Defense office aimed at studying unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), a new term for UFOs that encompasses mysterious objects not only in the sky but also underwater or in space.
Phillips said that his office is working with government laboratories and academia to develop a highly portable sensor kit known as the “Gremlin System” that can capture data across multiple spectra, according to a report in DefenseScoop.
Phillips added that the Gremlin System has already proven capable of detecting a wide range of phenomena, including in space. “It’s picking up a lot of bats and birds. We’re learning a lot about solar flaring,” Phillips told a select group of reporters on March 7.
“We’re really starting to understand what’s in orbit around our planet and how we can eliminate those as anomalous objects,” he added.
The AARO director said that these Gremlin System sensors could be used to surveil sensitive sites for airspace intrusions, or even keep an eye on U.S. satellites in orbit.