Beam Me Up

Area 51 The Revealing Truth of Ufos, Secret Aircraft, Cover-Ups & Conspiracies

One of the more intriguing—and highly controversial—claims concerning Area 51 is that top-secret research is undertaken at the base in the field of teleportation. Yes, you read that right: the very same technology that has become famous in the likes of Star Trek and the 1958 movie (and its 1986 remake) The Fly. Before we get to the matter of the Area 51 connection to such incredible technology, let’s see what teleportation actually is.

IBM states the following concerning this decidedly fringe part of science: “Teleportation is the name given by science fiction writers to the feat of making an object or person disintegrate in one place while a perfect replica appears somewhere else. How this is accomplished is usually not explained in detail, but the general idea seems to be that the original object is scanned in such a way as to extract all the information from it, then this information is transmitted to the receiving location and used to construct the replica, not necessarily from the actual material of the original, but perhaps from atoms of the same kinds, arranged in exactly the same pattern as the original.

A teleportation machine would be like a fax machine, except that it would work on 3-dimensional objects as well as documents, it would produce an exact copy rather than an approximate facsimile, and it would destroy the original in the process of scanning it. A few science fiction writers consider teleporters that preserve the original, and the plot gets complicated when the original and teleported versions of the same person meet; but the more common kind of teleporter destroys the original, functioning as a super transportation device, not as a perfect replicator of souls and bodies.” With that background from IBM now digested, let’s take a look at the rumors concerning Area 51 and teleportation. In 2017, the Guardian said: “Chinese scientists have teleported an object from Earth to a satellite orbiting 300 miles away in space, in a demonstration that has echoes of science fiction.

The feat sets a new record for quantum teleportation, an eerie phenomenon in which the complete properties of one particle are instantaneously transferred to another—in effect teleporting it to a distant location.” The story that the Guardian referred to concerned a Chinese team that revealed its successes in the field of teleportation in 2017. The BBC ran an article on the astounding story titled “Teleportation: Photon Particles Today, Humans Tomorrow?”

It included the following under the subheading “What Has the Chinese Team Achieved?”: They created four thousand pairs of quantum- entangled photons per second at their laboratory in Tibet and fired one of the photons from each pair in a beam of light toward a satellite called Micius, which was named after an ancient Chinese philosopher. Micius has a sensitive photon receiver that can detect the quantum states of single photons fired from the ground. Their report—published online—says that it is the first such link for “faithful and ultralong-distance quantum teleportation.”

“‘It is a very nice experiment—I would not have expected everything to have worked so fast and so smoothly,’ says Professor Anton Zeilinger from the University of Vienna, who taught Chinese lead scientist Pan Jianwei.” As for the matter of teleportation in the real world—and possibly at Area 51 —we have to turn our attentions to a man named Eric W. Davis. In 2004, the U.S. Air Force quietly (as in extremely quietly) contracted Davis’s Las Vegas, Nevada-based Warp Drive Metrics company to prepare a report for them on the feasibility of teleportation. It became known as the Teleportation Physics Study.

We know that, as the Air Force has now placed the report in the public domain

The specific arm of the Air Force that had a particular interest in teleportation was the Air Force Research Laboratory, Air Force Materiel Command, which is based out of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio.

The Air Force states of the AFRL: “Air Force Research Laboratory, with headquarters at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, was created in October 1997. The laboratory was formed through the consolidation of four former Air Force laboratories and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research. The laboratory employs approximately 10,000 military and civilian personnel. It is responsible for managing an annual $4.4 billion (Fiscal Year 2014) science and technology program that includes both Air Force and customer funded research and development. AFRL investment includes basic research, applied research and advanced technology development in air, space and cyber mission areas. “With headquarters at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, and an additional research facility at Edwards AFB, Calif., the Aerospace Systems Directorate leads the effort to develop and transition superior technology solutions that enable dominant military aerospace vehicles.

Areas of focus include vehicle aerodynamics, flight controls, aerospace propulsion, power, rocket propulsion, aerospace structures, and turbine engines. Programs advance a wide variety of aerospace technologies including unmanned vehicles, space access, advanced fuels, hypersonic vehicles, future strike, and energy management.” It’s a little-known fact that the AFRL has an office at Area 51 chiefly because of the fact that certain sensitive and secret aircraft developed by the brains at the AFRL are tested at Groom Lake. Hence, the connection. In that sense, a good case can be made that when Eric W. Davis prepared his report for the AFRL, it almost certainly would have been shared with staff at Area 51.

With that said, read on

The Teleportation Physics Study states: “This study was tasked with the purpose of collecting information describing the teleportation of material objects, providing a description of teleportation as it occurs in physics, its theoretical and experimental status, and a projection of potential applications.

The study also consisted of a search for teleportation phenomena occurring naturally or under laboratory conditions that can be assembled into a model describing the conditions required to accomplish the transfer of objects.” Rather notably, the document reveals that officials were secretly interested in the field of teleportation, which predated the Davis report. On this matter, we have the following from Davis’s paper: “The late Dr. Robert L. Forward stated that modern hard-core SciFi literature, with the exception of the ongoing Star Trek franchise, has abandoned using the teleportation concept because writers believe that it has more to do with the realms of parapsychology/paranormal (a.k.a. psychic) and imaginative fantasy than with any realm of science.

Beginning in the 1980s developments in quantum theory and general relativity physics have succeeded in pushing the envelope in exploring the reality of teleportation. As for the psychic aspect of teleportation, it became known to Dr. Forward and myself, along with several colleagues both inside and outside of government, that anomalous teleportation has been scientifically investigated and separately documented by the Department of Defense [italics mine].”

Project Blue Beam (Part 1)

https://scienceandspace.com/ufos/project-blue-beam-part-2/