The Mysterious Black Knight Satellite – Who Really Owns It?
The
Black Knight satellite is one of those space mysteries that will
continue to perplex everyone. Back in the early 1950’s when it was first
discovered, the U.S. thought it belonged to the Russians and the
Russians thought it belonged to the U.S. Its discovery pre-dated
man-made satellites launched in space, so its true ownership remains
questionable. Consequently, many claimed it had to be of
extraterrestrial origin operated by beings keeping tabs on us.
This story goes way back… In 1899,
Nikola Tesla picked up unusual signals from an unknown source on his
high-voltage receiver in Colorado Springs which he speculated were
“intelligently controlled signals” that originated “from another world.”
Astronomers have reported picking up similar radio signals since the
1930s. It was Dr. Lincoln La Paz, of the University of New Mexico, who
first sighted the mysterious satellite-like object in 1953.
The
U.S. Department of Defense commissioned astronomer Clyde Tombaugh to
look for it. Word quickly spread and a famous article about the Black
Knight was published in The St. Louis Dispatch and The San Francisco Examiner on May 14th 1954.
The story highlighted an interview with
retired Marine Corps Major Donald E. Keyhole who stated that Earth was
being circled by one or two artificial satellites. He added that
government scientists at White Sands, New Mexico, were making every
effort to locate and chart these satellites to determine origin.
This news article was written three years before Russia would launch the Earth’s first satellite, Sputnik 1, and the U.S. would follow a few years later with their own.
According to TIME Magazine on Monday, March 07, 1960:
“Three weeks ago, headlines announced that the U.S. had detected a mysterious “dark” satellite wheeling overhead on a regular orbit. There was nervous speculation that it might be a surveillance satellite launched by the Russians, and it brought the uneasy sensation that the U.S. did not know what was going on over its own head. But last week the Department of Defense proudly announced that the satellite had been identified. It was a space derelict, the remains of an Air Force Discoverer satellite that had gone astray.”
This was the Cold War Era and the
beginning of the age of spy satellites. Both NASA and the Pentagon
quickly claimed it was space debris from their early Discoverer
satellite program. The Discoverer V program was covertly part of the “Corona Project.”
It was one of the first U.S. classified spy satellites in space during
the Cold War with Russia. Only one problem with this explanation.
Neither the U.S., nor the Russians had the capability for Polar Orbit
when the Black Knight was spotted during 1953, and the first Corona
launch attempt did not occur until August 13, 1959 where it fell to
Earth on September 28, 1959. A successful launch would not come until
1960—so they claim.
It is interesting to note that on the
heels of the Black Knight discovery, both the U.S. and Russia quickly
got into the space reconnaissance business. Were they trying to get
equipment up there and see for themselves what this strange alien-based
satellite was doing?
According to Ancient-Code.com, an Ancient Astronauts Theory website:
“Interest in the Black Knight was higher each year. In 1957, an unknown “object” was seen “shadowing” the Sputnik 1 spacecraft. According to reports, the “unidentified object” was in polar orbit, at that time. The United States nor the Russians possessed the technology to maintain a spacecraft in polar orbit. According to our research the first polar-orbiting satellite was launched in 1960. Polar orbits are often used for earth-mapping, earth observation, capturing the earth as time passes from one point and reconnaissance satellites. This would put the Black Knight in the category of an observational satellite. The only question here is, who placed the Black Knight in a polar orbit and for what purpose?The object continued to amaze astronomers world-wide. In the 1960’s the Black Knight was located once again in polar orbit. Astronomers and scientists calculated the object’s weight to be over 10 tons, which would be at that time the heaviest artificial satellite to orbit our planet. The Black Knight’s orbit was unlike any other object orbiting Earth, as it was moving twice as fast when compared to any other man-made spacecraft.There are also several reports that the Grumman Aircraft Corporation gave much importance to this mysterious “Satellite.” On September 3, 1960, seven months after the satellite was first detected by radar, a tracking camera at Grumman Aircraft Corporation’s Long Island factory took a photograph of the Black Knight. At that point people all over the world started identifying the object in the sky, which could be seen as a red light moving at higher speed compared to other satellites in an East to West orbit. The Grumman Aircraft Corporation formed a committee to study the data received from the observations made but nothing was made public.In 1963, U.S. Astronaut Gordon Cooper was launched into space. On his final orbit, he reported seeing a glowing green object in front of his capsule in the distance moving towards his Spacecraft. The Muchea tracking station, in Australia, which Cooper reported the object to, picked up this unidentified object on radar travelling East to West. NBC reported this but after Cooper returned to Earth, the reporters were not allowed to ask Cooper about the unidentified object. The official explanation given to Cooper’s sighting was “high levels of carbon dioxide, which caused hallucinations.“
Even
though Cooper was known to be sympathetic to the UFO disclosure
movement, he later recanted his initial report. One can only surmise his
admission really pissed off someone at NASA.
After all this time, one wonders why
NASA and/or the Russians haven’t tried to capture this mysterious
satellite and put speculation to rest. The
American Space Shuttle has a payload to polar-orbit launch capacity of
about 14 tons, and payload recovery capability of about 16 tons.
Depending on the physical volume of the Black Knight satellite, it is
conceivable that the object might have been recovered and returned to
Earth during one of the classified missions of the shuttle. Then again,
perhaps they have already attempted this. Maybe they even know the
satellite’s true origin. If so, they’re not telling us and the
information will most likely remain classified.
The object is still believed to be in Orbit to this day. NASA’s explanation to what the object is has changed
several times and some stories have often been fused together. NASA
also claims the object is a thermal blanket that got loose during the STS-88 space mission in 1998.
But that mission was long after the first sighting of the Black Knight.
While this thermal blanket is probably up there floating in space
somewhere, along with other space junk, to explain it as the Black
Knight is really a stretch.
Right now there are somewhere in the
neighborhood of 100,000 man-made objects orbiting Earth. Some are
multi-billion dollar military satellites, or telecomm satellites or even
scientific instruments. Most are space junk off of old spacecraft
and/or dead satellites. Yes, we have even polluted outer space with our
garbage.
There are reports the Black Knight was
spotted near the moon by the International Space Station (ISS) crew, but
I haven’t seen the pics. One day this satellite enigma will finally be
solved. Are we indeed being watched? One of Nostradamus’ prophecies
seems to certainly suggest this. Time will tell.
NASA website – Black Knight – Pic 1 (with magnification zoom)