Do aliens exist or not? That is the question.

Well, one NASA scientist certainly seems to think there’s a chance.

Ivo Busko, a retired NASA developer who worked at the Space Telescope Science Institute, has backed a recently published study that investigated sky flashes during the early nuclear age, decades before humans had satellites to properly track them.

This week, NBusko published a preprint confirming the mysterious transient flashes first identified by astronomer Dr Beatriz Villarroel and her VASCO research team, and reported in the peer-reviewed journal Scientific Reports last October.

Busko reviewed studies conducted in the 1950s by Villarroel, a researcher at the Nordic Institute for Theoretical Physics in Sweden, that showed ‘transient’ lights appearing in the sky.

Before now, many struggled to explain these transients via natural means. According to Villarroel’s observations, the transients were ‘mirror-like’ and appeared to be rotating in the sky.

After reviewing Villarroel’s research, Busko followed through with his own research, sifting through archival sky photographs from the 1950s but using a separate analytical method to verify his predecessor’s earlier work.

From there, he discovered dozens of transient flashes with the same bizarre lights as previously reported by the VASCO team.

These ‘independently confirm the presence of such transients’, Busko concluded.