A retired NASA developer has published a preprint independently confirming mysterious transient flashes in the sky first identified by astronomer Dr. Beatriz Villarroel and her VASCO research team. The significance of the finding lies in when these flashes appeared: the early nuclear age, decades before any human satellite was in orbit, as reported by UNILAD.
Ivo Busko, who previously worked as a developer at the Space Telescope Science Institute, reviewed Villarroel’s peer-reviewed studies, published in Scientific Reports in October 2025, which analyzed photographic sky survey plates from the 1950s. Those studies documented “transient” lights appearing in the sky that many researchers struggled to explain through natural means. According to Villarroel’s observations, the transients appeared “mirror-like” and seemed to rotate.
Busko then conducted his own independent investigation, sifting through separate archival sky photographs from the 1950s using a distinct analytical method. He discovered dozens of transient flashes displaying the same unusual signatures previously reported by the VASCO team.
The flashes predate Sputnik-1, which is the entire problem
Busko concluded that his findings “independently confirm the presence of such transients.” In his study, published on arXiv, he wrote: “By analyzing pairs of plates taken in rapid sequence (about 30 minutes apart) of the same sky regions, we find evidence of transients similar to those previously reported by the VASCO Project.” The critical detail is that many of these bright lights predate the launch of Sputnik-1 in October 1957, the first man-made satellite to orbit Earth, meaning the lights could not have been produced by human technology.
Busko argues the findings point toward some form of “Non-Human Intelligence” operating in Earth’s skies long before the space age. The research also found a possible correlation between the frequency of transient sightings and nuclear test activity during that period, a detail that has drawn additional attention given the broader geopolitical climate of the era, amid ongoing nuclear-related developments continuing to generate concern today.
An additional 98,000 photographic plates from sky surveys conducted at the Hamburg Observatory in the 1950s, digitized through the APPLAUSE archive, also corroborated the findings. The glints found in those photographs were closely similar to those identified in the VASCO research.
Busko noted that unresolved flashes lasting less than a second naturally appear sharper and more circular than stellar images, and described the result as “further support for their interpretation as sub-second optical flashes, consistent with reflections from flat, rotating objects in orbit around Earth.” Both Villarroel and Busko have stopped short of claiming definitive proof of extraterrestrial activity, instead urging the scientific community to examine the observations more seriously.
Busko’s next step is to digitize additional archives in an effort to further confirm the transients identified in the original VASCO project. Researchers have noted that if the observations continue to hold, these objects could represent some of the earliest recorded evidence of unidentified objects functioning above Earth’s atmosphere, a prospect that has drawn scrutiny similar to the kind directed at other unexplained surveillance and tracking anomalies in recent years.
Published: Mar 31, 2026 07:00 am