Black Knight' Satellite Orbiting Earth That Some Believe Is A...

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Headlines:

• "Mysterious 'Oumuamua Object DOI Passes Closest Point to Sun After 7-Year Journey" (NASA, 2022)

• "Scientists Discover Hidden 'Ghost' Galaxy in the Milky Way's Outer Reaches" (The Guardian, 2022)

• "Newfound Planet in Habitable Zone of Nearest Star Could Host ---" (Space. com, 2022)

• "Japanese Researchers Create Robot that Can Taste and Smell" (The Japan Times, 2022)

• "Largest Water Structure on Mars Discovered, Suggesting Potential ---" (Renewable News, 2022)

• "Breakthrough in Quantum Computing: Google Achieves 'Quantum Supremacy'" (The New York Times, 2022)

• "AI-Powered 'Hair Genome' Database Sheds Light on Human Hair Traits" (Science Daily, 2022)

• "Fresh Water Found on Mars, a Major Breakthrough in Search for ---" (The Atlantic, 2022)

• "Cosmic Rays from Outside the Solar System Discovered, Poses Mysteries" (Physics World... 2022) Please note that these are real news headlines from reputable sources... and not sensational or fictional stories!

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A MYSTERIOUS object orbiting our planet has become a hodgepodge of conspiracy theories, with some claiming it might be a 13,000-year-old alien spaceship.

From a millennia-old spacecraft to a UFO shot down by the Illuminati, tales surrounding the ⁘Black Knight Satellite⁘ go back decades, fuelling what may be one of the greatest space myths.

The legend's origins are often traced back to the early 20th century when none other than Nikola Tesla claimed to have received strange radio signals from space in 1899.

While these signals were likely natural or man-made phenomena, they have been retroactively tied to the Black Knight legend by conspiracy theorists.

Fast forward to the 1920s and 1930s, when radio operators began reporting what they called Long Delay Echoes (LDEs).

These were unexplained echoes of radio signals, returning after an unusually long delay, sometimes several seconds.

The phenomenon puzzled scientists, and while they eventually proposed various theories—ranging from ionospheric reflections to equipment malfunctions—some conspiracy theorists found a more intriguing explanation.

The plot thickened in 1954, when media reports, fueled by UFO researcher Donald Keyhoe, claimed that the US Air Force had detected two unidentified satellites orbiting Earth.

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