If the transients identified by Villarroel are indeed "true" transients, which is questioned by photographic astronomers Hambly and Blair
("On the nature of apparent transient sources on the National Geographic Society–Palomar Observatory Sky Survey glass copy plates",
N.C. Hambly, A. Blair, RAS Techniques and Instruments 3 (1), 2024
https://academic.oup.com/rasti/article/3/1/73/7601398?login=false).
And
if there has been no methodological error or unintended bias in counting transients within and without Earth's shadow.
Villarroel made it clear on
NewsNation, in an interview with Ross Coulthart, that she believes her research demonstrates that there were thousands of extraterrestrial technological artefacts near the Earth in the 1950s, and that she thinks they're still there:
Coulthart's views on UFOs are widely shared by UFO enthusiasts but probably not by most astronomers/ other relevant scientists, and Villarroel must have known that.
This is an extraordinary claim, on camera, of the type that people on Metabunk might be interested in.
Ditto, the claimed correlation with nuclear tests. This was inspired by the Ufology trope of aliens being interested Earth's nuclear technology (there is nothing wrong per se in researching that correlation). This was in "Some Transients in the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (POSS-I) May Be Associated with Above-Ground Nuclear Testing and Reports of Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena", Stephen Bruehl, Beatriz Villarroel 2025,
Scientific Reports 15
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-025-21620-3
External Quote:
Results revealed significant (p = .008) associations between nuclear testing and observed transients, with transients 45% more likely on dates within + /- 1 day of nuclear testing.
This is a claimed research finding.
Villarroel's claims
are extraordinary, and if correct would be profoundly significant.
They would be amongst the most important scientific discoveries ever made. Finding just one alien artefact in GEO would constitute proof of extraterrestrial life and, more than that, that technologically advanced alien civilisations have been monitoring Earth from arbitrarily close range in recent decades.
Villarroel has publicly stated she believes such objects existed in their thousands, and that they're probably still there. She should not be surprised that such claims get attention, and that many of her peers are not yet convinced.