BIZARRE SPHERICAL OBJECT DETECTED ON ASTEROID 25143 ITOKAWA BY A UNMANNED SATELLITE THAT ACTUALLY TOOK SAMPLES FROM THE ASTEROID.
IT IS CLASSED AS A PILE OF RUBBLE BY THE TEAM EXPLORING IT, GO FIGURE?
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THEY COULD OF NAMED IT BETTER DON'T YOU THINK? THERE'S BEEN NO REAL MENTION OF NOTE AS TO THE ORIGINS OF THE ABNORMALLY LOOKING (ALIEN - MADE, MAYBE) SATELLITE THAT IS RIGHT WITH IT?
YOU MUST ADMIT THAT IT LOOKS VERY DELIBERATELY AND A TYPE OF CRAFT THAT HAS BEEN MADE BY, PUT TOGETHER BY AND FROM A PROCESS (MAYBE) OF INTELLIGENT THOUGHT?
THAT'S HOW WE FEEL ABOUT IT HERE AT UFO SIGHTINGS FOOTAGE.
This is what Wikipedia has to say about this Asteroid;
Itokawa is a stony sub-kilometer asteroid, classified as near-Earth object of the Apollo group and potentially hazardous asteroid, that measures approximately 350 meters in diameter.
It was the first asteroid to be the target of a sample return mission, the Japanese space probe Hayabusa, and the smallest asteroid photographed and visited by a spacecraft.
In 2000, it was selected as the target of Japan's Hayabusa mission. The probe arrived in the vicinity of Itokawa on 12 September 2005 and initially "parked" in an asteroid–Sun line at 20 km (12 mi), and later 7 km (4.3 mi), from the asteroid (Itokawa's gravity was too weak to provide an orbit, so the spacecraft adjusted its orbit around the Sun until it matched the asteroid's).
Hayabusa landed on 20 November for thirty minutes, but it failed to operate a device designed to collect soil samples. On 25 November, a second landing and sampling sequence was attempted.
The sample capsule was returned to Earth and landed at Woomera, South Australia on 13 June 2010, around 13:51 UTC (23:21 local).
On 16 November 2010, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency reported that dust collected during Hayabusa's voyage was indeed from the asteroid.
Also our second source of information can be found at;
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/25143_I
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