Armenian Scientists Get In Touch With Foreign Civilizations

ARMENIAN SCIENTISTS GET IN TOUCH WITH FOREIGN CIVILIZATIONS

ArmInfo
2009-04-01 10:36:00

ArmInfo. The Armenian scientists have got in touch with foreign
civilizations.

Professor, member of the National Committee on investigation of
atmospheric phenomena Parandzas Kukushkyan was the first who could
decode the message of extraterrestrials. ‘We had been studying the
elementary neutrino particles with too small mass and high penetration
quality for many years.

Concentration of neutrino in the Space is rather high, and in view
of this the mass of elementary particles is important to explain the
phenomenon of a hidden mass in cosmology’, Kukushkyan told ArmInfo. He
recalled that the American scientists also support the idea that high
penetration quality of neutrino explains the fact that UFO can use
these particles for communication. A group of Armenian scientists
headed by Kukushkyan had been studying the neutrino for 8 years. ‘We
cooperate with many leading specialists from different countries of
the world, including the USA, Germany and Russia. As a result of this
fruitful cooperation, we created a new generation of supersensitive
device capable to receive and decode the signals which were earlier
‘soundless’ for our world’, the professor said. According to him,
March 30, 9:02 PM by local time has become an hour of triumph for
the Armenian scientists. ‘We have caught a signal from Andromeda =0
Anebula. To note, this super-giant galactic is at a distance of 2,52
mln light years from us. However, we succeeded to decode the received
signal as it recurred unchanged with periodicity of 0.12 seconds. The
professor found difficulty in saying whether this message should
be considered as a warning to the Earthmen. ‘The scientists will be
able to finally say about collision of the asteroid with out planet
only in 2012 when it will become possible to determine its orbit",
the scientists explained. ‘We have already contacted the biggest
scientific centers of the USA and Europe. A group of scientists headed
by professor of Harvard University J. Hateless will arrive in Armenian
in the near future’, he said.