Declassified document:
On the night of June 18, 1982 (the 27th day of the intercalary fourth lunar month), an unidentified flying object appeared over northern North China in our country. While a certain PLA Air Force aviation unit was conducting night flight training, 7 pilots and more than 200 participating cadres and soldiers, both in the air and on the ground, witnessed the unidentified flying object. One of the pilots encountered it alone in the air. According to the witnesses, at about 22:06 Beijing time, this unidentified flying object appeared below the horizon as a beam of light and an orange spherical body. After several stages of development and change, it disappeared at 22:30 as a huge milky-white semicircular body in the sky north of Zhangbei County, Hebei Province.
That night, a certain Air Force aviation unit organized cross-day-and-night flight training. At the time, the northwest wind was 2 to 3 meters per second, with a small amount (1 or 2 patches) of light cumulus clouds at an altitude of 3 to 4 kilometers, and visibility was good. Shortly after flights began, the northwest wind shifted to a southeast wind of 5 to 6 meters per second, and the flight subjects proceeded as planned.
The earliest person to discover this unidentified flying object and encounter it was pilot Liu. At 21:55, he was flying a certain type of high-speed fighter. Because this unidentified flying object flew toward his flight path, radio communication was interrupted and the radio compass failed, forcing him to return to base midway. According to his own statement, after takeoff, weather conditions were good and the flight was normal. At 22:04:50, 3 minutes after turning from Gonghui toward Tuertai, noise appeared in his ears, like thunder and lightning in cumulonimbus clouds, the tower commander's voice became smaller and weaker, and the radio compass failed. At 22:06:50, about 10 kilometers from Shangdu, in the direction indicated by the radio compass, he saw a bright object below the horizon, seeming to emerge but not fully, and it quickly formed an orange beam of light, gradually rising and growing brighter. About 30 seconds later, the beam disappeared, and an orange spherical body appeared, like the full moon on the fifteenth day of the lunar month. Ten seconds later, this sphere came spinning toward him at high speed. During the spinning flight, ring after ring of halo-like ripples appeared, and he could clearly distinguish orange-yellow, light green, and milky white. The center was dark, the surroundings were light, the edges were sharp and bright, and the bottom was blurry. At the lower right was an irregular vertical long-shaped object, about 2 meters long, with a color close to green, very distinct; at an altitude of 7000 meters he had to look slightly upward to see its top. In order to avoid this object, he climbed to 3000 meters, but it did not work. When nearly at Tuertai, he was forced to turn back. Five minutes into the return flight, the vertical strip inside the object suddenly disappeared, and a blank space immediately appeared where it had vanished. Right after that, several irregular dark shadows swept past the aircraft. About 10 seconds later, the disappeared long strip reappeared in its original blank position. When the aircraft returned to within 40 kilometers of the airfield, radio compass indication and radio communication returned to normal. At 22:36, he landed safely.
During Liu's encounter with the unidentified flying object, 6 pilots on 4 other aircraft in the air (2 of them trainer aircraft) also separately witnessed the unidentified flying object over places such as Zhangbei and Huaian, and their radio communications were also interfered with to varying degrees. Because their flight subjects were different from Liu's and they were not allowed to divert their attention, they were unable to observe the full process of the unidentified flying object's development and changes.
According to statements by ground witnesses at the airfield, at 22:10, a milky-white object shaped like an “alarm clock cover” and an “astronomical fort” appeared in the sky north of Zhangbei. Then, like a balloon being inflated, it rhythmically and wave-like expanded outward all around. The speed of expansion was even more rapid and violent than the mushroom cloud rising from a hydrogen bomb explosion. In no time it stood in the air like a huge snow-covered mountain, and one had to look up to see its top. The whole object was milky white, glossy, with sharp and bright edges. Observed with the naked eye, its aerial span extended from Zhangbei in the west to Chongli in the east, at a distance of over 15 kilometers. Later the whole object changed from dense to faint and became translucent, and by 22:30 it had basically disappeared.
What was witnessed by the 6 pilots on the other 4 aircraft and the many people on the ground basically matched pilot Liu's sighting in terms of time, shape, light color, movement, visibility conditions, and apparent diameter.
On the night of June 18, 1982 (the 27th day of the intercalary fourth lunar month), an unidentified flying object appeared over northern North China in our country. While a certain PLA Air Force aviation unit was conducting night flight training, 7 pilots and more than 200 participating cadres and soldiers, both in the air and on the ground, witnessed the unidentified flying object. One of the pilots encountered it alone in the air. According to the witnesses, at about 22:06 Beijing time, this unidentified flying object appeared below the horizon as a beam of light and an orange spherical body. After several stages of development and change, it disappeared at 22:30 as a huge milky-white semicircular body in the sky north of Zhangbei County, Hebei Province.
That night, a certain Air Force aviation unit organized cross-day-and-night flight training. At the time, the northwest wind was 2 to 3 meters per second, with a small amount (1 or 2 patches) of light cumulus clouds at an altitude of 3 to 4 kilometers, and visibility was good. Shortly after flights began, the northwest wind shifted to a southeast wind of 5 to 6 meters per second, and the flight subjects proceeded as planned.
The earliest person to discover this unidentified flying object and encounter it was pilot Liu. At 21:55, he was flying a certain type of high-speed fighter. Because this unidentified flying object flew toward his flight path, radio communication was interrupted and the radio compass failed, forcing him to return to base midway. According to his own statement, after takeoff, weather conditions were good and the flight was normal. At 22:04:50, 3 minutes after turning from Gonghui toward Tuertai, noise appeared in his ears, like thunder and lightning in cumulonimbus clouds, the tower commander's voice became smaller and weaker, and the radio compass failed. At 22:06:50, about 10 kilometers from Shangdu, in the direction indicated by the radio compass, he saw a bright object below the horizon, seeming to emerge but not fully, and it quickly formed an orange beam of light, gradually rising and growing brighter. About 30 seconds later, the beam disappeared, and an orange spherical body appeared, like the full moon on the fifteenth day of the lunar month. Ten seconds later, this sphere came spinning toward him at high speed. During the spinning flight, ring after ring of halo-like ripples appeared, and he could clearly distinguish orange-yellow, light green, and milky white. The center was dark, the surroundings were light, the edges were sharp and bright, and the bottom was blurry. At the lower right was an irregular vertical long-shaped object, about 2 meters long, with a color close to green, very distinct; at an altitude of 7000 meters he had to look slightly upward to see its top. In order to avoid this object, he climbed to 3000 meters, but it did not work. When nearly at Tuertai, he was forced to turn back. Five minutes into the return flight, the vertical strip inside the object suddenly disappeared, and a blank space immediately appeared where it had vanished. Right after that, several irregular dark shadows swept past the aircraft. About 10 seconds later, the disappeared long strip reappeared in its original blank position. When the aircraft returned to within 40 kilometers of the airfield, radio compass indication and radio communication returned to normal. At 22:36, he landed safely.
During Liu's encounter with the unidentified flying object, 6 pilots on 4 other aircraft in the air (2 of them trainer aircraft) also separately witnessed the unidentified flying object over places such as Zhangbei and Huaian, and their radio communications were also interfered with to varying degrees. Because their flight subjects were different from Liu's and they were not allowed to divert their attention, they were unable to observe the full process of the unidentified flying object's development and changes.
According to statements by ground witnesses at the airfield, at 22:10, a milky-white object shaped like an “alarm clock cover” and an “astronomical fort” appeared in the sky north of Zhangbei. Then, like a balloon being inflated, it rhythmically and wave-like expanded outward all around. The speed of expansion was even more rapid and violent than the mushroom cloud rising from a hydrogen bomb explosion. In no time it stood in the air like a huge snow-covered mountain, and one had to look up to see its top. The whole object was milky white, glossy, with sharp and bright edges. Observed with the naked eye, its aerial span extended from Zhangbei in the west to Chongli in the east, at a distance of over 15 kilometers. Later the whole object changed from dense to faint and became translucent, and by 22:30 it had basically disappeared.
What was witnessed by the 6 pilots on the other 4 aircraft and the many people on the ground basically matched pilot Liu's sighting in terms of time, shape, light color, movement, visibility conditions, and apparent diameter.
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