NASA is interested in believing.
Maybe it will at the conclusion of the study being conducted by the U.S. government. In the fall, NASA will begin a nine-month study to research unidentified aerial phenomena, with a focus on figuring out how to collect data and use that data to further understand them.
The leader of the study will be David Spergel, who is also the president of the Simons Foundation. NASA will put an emphasis on figuring out which UAPs are natural in origin for air safety and national security, according to a press release. If you know that the sky phenomenon is a quirk of nature, you can plan around it so it doesn't cause problems.
NASA poured cold water on the idea of finding extraterrestrial life through the study of UAPs.
NASA said there is no evidence that UAPs are extra-terrestrials.
Just because there is no evidence now doesn't mean there won't be evidence in the future. At the time, NASA said it needed a more sophisticated analysis of UAPs with additional investment.
Tom DeLonge might be a good addition to the team.