Chernobyl: mystical facts that have been hidden for a long time. Zhytomyr regional social and business newspaper "echo" Before the explosion of Chernobyl, unknown objects were flying there

  • 30.04.2021

Valery Kratokhvil

UFO - guests from the FUTURE

(unknown documents, photographs, research)

In blessed memory of Felix Yurievich 3igel

A lot of observations not only here, but throughout the world, compared with ancient and medieval evidence of UFOs, shows that humanity has long coexisted and involuntarily interacted with a large-scale phenomenon, the model of which does not fit into the usual picture of the world.

Director of "Soyuzufotsentr" Vladimir Azhazha

Minsk, IPF, "Georg", 1992

Chapter 1. UFO over the Chernobyl nuclear power plant ...

Tragic night in Chernobyl. Rumors and facts

In the sky over nuclear test sites

UFO over post-Chernobyl Kiev

Psychics, healers and UFOs

The phenomenon of long-range action, the principles of information transfer

Chapter 2

material traces

UFO fragment from 1989

UFO in space

A 12,000-year-old trail...

Chapter 3

Who are they"?

Where are "they" from?

The science of "time travel"

"Time Machine" and UFO

Instead of an afterword

Chapter 1. UFO over the Chernobyl nuclear power plant

Tragic night in Chernobyl. Rumors and facts.

A huge number of books, articles, reports and studies have been written about the tragic events at the fourth unit of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant*

We will leave aside the question of the dishonesty of the first publications and will not consider the well-known attempts to hide the truth about the scale of the Chernobyl accident in 1986 /especially in the first weeks and months after the explosion/. We only want to touch upon those unknown pages that allow a completely new assessment of the events of April 26 at the fourth block of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant and dispel the rumors that, in the author's opinion, were deliberately spread by interested persons who were / and are today / in power ... How It is known that the explosion of the reactor of the fourth unit occurred on the night of April 26, 1986 at 01:26. In practice, it was an explosion of an atomic bomb "smeared" in time / which is every "peaceful" reactor without exception - VK / The reactor of the power unit was still on fire. Awakened by the explosion, Chernobyl survivors saw a glow, but among the thousands of participants in the events of that terrible night there are hundreds of witnesses who saw an unidentified flying object in the sky above the burning 4th power unit of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant ...



Since it was impossible to hide the fact of UFO sightings in the sky over Chernobyl and Pripyat on the night of the accident, the authorities resorted to their usual trick - disinformation of the population. / They would be able to "shut their mouths" to individual observers, as has been done many times in our country. But it was about hundreds of eyewitnesses, and the authorities resorted to misinformation. - VK / For this purpose, a rumor was spread that the UFO was the "cause of the accident" and even that "the UFO blew up the reactor of the fourth block."

Four years later, in August 1990, the author of these lines managed to track down the man who was alerted on that tragic night. This person is Mikhail Andreyevich Varitsky, senior dosimetrist of the UDC / Dosimetric Control Department / Chernobyl, who has been working and living there since the very beginning of the construction of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.

The author has written evidence from M.A. Varitsky, which tells how on the night of April 26, 1986 he was alerted and sent as a senior dosimetrist of the group / with him was his partner, UDC dosimetrist Mikhail Samoylenko - V. K./ to the Chernobyl area, Their task included dosimetric control at the NUPe of government communications and the replacement of oxygen cylinders. The group left in a GAZ-51 car, state number 24-28 KITs. They had a dosimetric device DP-II "b" with them. In the line of sight of the fourth block, they were at 4 hours 15 minutes.

Seeing how the reactor of the power unit torn apart by the explosion was blazing / the "explosion smeared in time" was still going on / and feeling the "burning of the face" / they had no means of protection with them, and the device went off scale /, professional dosimetrists, realizing the threat of exposure, decided to refuse from immediately completing the mission and returning to base for protective equipment ...

They had already begun to turn the car around, when suddenly ... /here we quote the written testimony of M.A.Varitsky/- "We saw a fireball slowly floating in the sky of a bright brass color. It was 6-8 meters in diameter. We again made measurements, switching the scale of the instrument to another range.The instrument showed 3,000 milliroentgen/hour.Suddenly, two bright crimson spotlights /two beams/... These two beams were directed at the reactor of the fourth block. The object was located at a distance of approximately 300 meters from the reactor. All this lasted about 3 minutes... The searchlights suddenly went out, and the ball slowly sailed to the north-west, towards Belarus. Then we again turned our attention to the device. It already showed 800 milliroentgen/hour/!.4/.. We ourselves could not explain what happened and therefore sinned against the device / i.e. believed that it was faulty - V.K. / However, when we returned to the base and checked it, the device turned out to be serviceable. "

The cited testimony of M.A. Varitsky are of particular interest, because. here is a chronicle of the events of that night in minutes and dosimetric measurements.

Of course, M. Varitsky and M. Samoylenko's estimates of the size of the object and the distance from it to the reactor are subjective, because here we can only talk about angular dimensions and quantities, and not about linear ones. However, the readings of a serviceable instrument and clock are an objective thing, and we have the right to rely on them as documented evidence that on the night of the accident, an unidentified flying object that appeared in the sky almost three hours after the explosion practically extinguished the smeared atomic explosion, knocking down radiation from 3000 to 800 milliroentgen/hour. The rest was completed by the Kiev firefighters with difficulty and loss of life.

Reference: M.A.Varitsky - senior dosimetrist of the UDC of Chernobyl lives in Chernobyl, st. 25 years of October, 10 / private house / and is ready to confirm his testimony before any objective commission.

On the same night of April 26, B.C. was among the UFO observers in the sky over Chernobyl. Vasilevsky, who lives today in Kiev on the street. Lyatoshinsky, d.8a, kv.60, who is also ready to confirm his observations.

Of course, you can continue the list of UFO eyewitnesses over the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on the night of the accident, but malfunctions, emissions and fires at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant continued and again there were eyewitnesses who not only claimed to have seen a UFO over Chernobyl and the city of nuclear scientists Slavutich, but even provided the author with their drawings and photographs. But more on that in the next chapter...

UFO over Chernobyl after 1986

On September 16, 1989, problems were again noted at the fourth power unit, accompanied by emissions of large radioactive masses into the atmosphere. A few hours later, at 8:20 am, a doctor working in Chernobyl, Iva Naumovna Gospina, observed in the sky above the station, shown in photo1, which she describes as "amber", where you could distinguish its "upper part" and "bottom "...

Information: I. Gospina lives in Slavutych, Kievsky Quarter, 4/52. A year later, in October 1990, Chernobyl nuclear scientist Alexander Krymov photographed from the window of his apartment a UFO hanging over the residential buildings of nuclear scientists. The photograph clearly shows the landing legs of the vehicle, which, apparently, has just taken off. The picture shown here /photo2/ was handed over by A. Krymov to the author of these lines personally and is published for the first time.

Reference: A. Krymov lives in the city of Slavutich, Yerevan quarter * 1 and is ready to hand over the film, where the object was filmed, for a competent examination.

On October 11, 1991, at 20:09, a fire broke out at the second power unit of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant ... During the fire, a partial collapse of the roof over the electric generator occurred.

On October 16, five days later, Vladimir Chavran, a photojournalist for the Echo of Chernobyl newspaper, was filming in the damaged engine room of the generator. Here is what he says: "Just in case, I" clicked "up, trying to capture a part of the hole in the roof at the edge of the frame ...", - and further, - "being of sound mind and firm memory, I declare: in the sky - not up to , nor after that there was no UFO. In any case, visible to the eye. The sky was, although autumn gray, but absolutely clear. "

However, when Vladimir developed the footage, it turned out to be a UFO hanging over the failure of the roof of the second block,

reminiscent of the object that Iva Gospina had seen over the Chernobyl nuclear power plant a year before, only photographed from below / photoZ /.

In the November issue of the newspaper "Echo of Chernobyl" for 1991 / where this picture was first published /, the following editorial comment is given: "... the property of a UFO to be invisible to the human eye and" appear "only on photographs and film in the press was reported V. Savran apparently "caught" a similar object.

Specialists who, at the request of the editors, have already carefully studied the negative, do not allow any falsification."

Reference: Vladimir Savran is a professional photojournalist, has been working in Chernobyl since 1986, he has never been fond of "ufology" and did not believe in UFOs ... until he discovered it on a negative. The working address of V.Savran is Kiev, Vladimirskaya st., 47, the editorial office of the newspaper "Echo of Chernobyl9*.

Is it possible to attribute the above documented eyewitness accounts, drawings and photographs to coincidences, optical mirages, or simply hoaxes, as our "objective" press has repeatedly done?

At one time, cosmonaut Pavel Romanovich Popovich wrote: "In the process of cognition, mankind is constantly confronted with mysterious phenomena. The more boldly science undertakes to study them, the sooner it succeeds, and the less room remains for all kinds of conjectures ..."

This is precisely the purpose and meaning of this work, and this is what its subsequent sections are devoted to.

The explosion of the reactor of the fourth block of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant occurred on the night of April 26, 1986 at 01:26. In practice, it was an explosion of an atomic bomb “smeared in time”, which is every peaceful reactor without exception. Among the thousands of participants in the events of that terrible night, there are hundreds of witnesses who saw an unidentified flying object in the sky above the burning power unit ...

M.A. Varitsky, senior dosimetrist of the Chernobyl Dosimetric Control Department, was alerted that night and sent at the head of the group to the Chernobyl area. With him was his partner, UDC dosimetrist M. Samoylenko. The task of the group included dosimetric control using the device DP 2 "b".

The car of the group in the line of sight of the fourth block was at 4 hours 15 minutes. The “time-smeared” explosion was still going on. Seeing how the reactor of the power unit torn apart by the explosion was blazing and feeling the “burning of the face” (the device went off scale), the dosimetrists, realizing the threat of exposure, decided to abandon the immediate task and return to the base for protective equipment.

They had already begun to turn the car around, when all of a sudden, (we quote the written testimony of M. Varitsky): “We saw a fireball slowly floating in the sky of a bright brass color. It was 6-8 meters in diameter. We again took measurements by switching the scale of the device to a different range. The device showed 3.000 milliroentgen/hour. Suddenly, two bright crimson searchlights (two beams) flashed from the ball ... These two beams were directed at the reactor of the 4th block. The object was located at a distance of approximately 300 meters from the reactor.

All this lasted about 3 minutes ... The searchlights suddenly went out, and the ball slowly sailed to the northwest. Here we again turned our attention to the device. He showed already 800 mlr/hour! We ourselves could not explain what happened and therefore sinned against the device. However, when we returned to the base and checked it, the device turned out to be serviceable.”

The cited testimony of M. Varitsky is of special interest, because here is a chronicle of the events of that night in minutes and dosimetric measurements. Of course, estimates of the size of the observed object and the distance from it to the reactor are subjective, since here we can only talk about angular dimensions, and not about linear ones.

However, the readings of a serviceable instrument and clock are an objective thing, and we have the right to rely on them as documented evidence that on the night of the accident, a UFO that appeared in the sky above a burning power unit practically extinguished the “smeared” atomic explosion, knocking down radiation from 3000 to 800 mlr/hour . The rest, with heroic labor and human sacrifice, was completed by Kiev firefighters.

That night there were many eyewitnesses who can confirm their UFO sightings over the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. On September 16, 1989, problems were again noted at the 4th power unit, accompanied by emissions of large radioactive masses into the atmosphere. A few hours later, doctor I. Gospina observed an object in the sky above the station, which she describes as “amber”, where its “upper part” and “bottom” could be distinguished ...

In October 1990, A. Krymov, a nuclear scientist from Chernobyl, photographed from the window of his apartment a UFO hanging over residential buildings. The photograph clearly shows the landing legs of the apparatus, which, apparently, has just taken off.

5 days later, V. Chavran, a photojournalist of the Echo of Chernobyl newspaper, was filming in the damaged engine room of the generator. Here is what he says: “Just in case, I“ clicked ”upward, trying to capture a part of the hole in the roof at the edge of the frame ...” - and further, - “Being of sound mind and solid memory, I declare: in the sky - neither before nor after there was no UFO." However, when V. Chavran developed the footage, it showed a UFO hanging over a hole in the roof of the block, similar to the object that I. Gospina had seen a year before. Just photographed from below. It should be said that not only the Chernobyl nuclear power plant turned out to be the subject of UFO attention. In September 1988, a resident of Kiev, V. Shevchuk, observed two luminous objects hanging above the nuclear reactor tube of the Kiev Institute for Nuclear Research. These objects looked the same as the object observed by M. Varitsky and M. Samoilenko over the 4th unit of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on the night of the accident.

The increased interest of these objects in areas associated with the use of nuclear energy was noted back in the forties, when UFO sightings were recorded over the Los Alamos Nuclear Center (USA). According to a former employee of the Swiss consulate in Japan, on the day after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, on August 7, 1945, a kind of "phantom" appeared in the sky over the destroyed city. Beginning in 1947, objects similar to "silver disks" were repeatedly observed over the state of New Mexico, where nuclear tests took place during these years. UFOs have not bypassed any of the places of atomic tests on Earth. Over almost all the test sites where nuclear tests have been or are being carried out, such as the French test site in the Sahara, the American test site on the Bikini Atoll, the former Soviet nuclear test sites on the island of Novaya Zemlya and near Semipalatinsk - over all these areas, “patrollers” are observed almost after each explosion this area UFO.

UFO over Chernobyl updated: April 23, 2016 by: cross

As you know, the explosion of the reactor of the fourth block of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant occurred on the night of April 26, 1986 at 01:26. Awakened by the explosion, Chernobyl survivors saw a glow, but among the thousands of participants in the events of that terrible night there are hundreds of witnesses who saw an unidentified flying object in the sky above the burning fourth power unit of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant ...

Four years later, in August 1990, the author of these lines managed to track down the man who was alerted on that tragic night. This person is Mikhail Andreevich Varitsky, senior dosimetrist of the Dosimetric Control Department (UDC) of Chernobyl, who worked and lived there from the very beginning of the construction of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. The author has written testimony from M.A. Varitsky, which tells how on the night of April 26, 1986, he was alerted and sent to the Chernobyl area with his partner, UDC dosimetrist Mikhail Samoylenko. The group was in the line of sight of the fourth block at 04:15. Seeing how the reactor of the power unit torn apart by the explosion was blazing, and feeling a burning sensation (they had no means of protection with them, and the device "went off scale"), professional dosimetrists, realizing the threat of exposure, decided to abandon the immediate task and return to the base for protective equipment.

They had already begun to turn the car around when all of a sudden ... Further, we quote the written testimony of M.A. Varitsky "We saw a fireball of bright brass color slowly floating in the sky. It was 6-8 meters in diameter. We again took measurements by switching the scale of the device to a different range, the device showed 3000 milliroentgen / hour.

Suddenly, two spotlights flashed on the ball. Two bright crimson beams were directed at the reactor of the fourth block. The object was located at a distance of approximately 300 meters from the reactor. All this lasted about three minutes. The searchlights suddenly went out, and the balloon slowly sailed northwest, towards Belarus. Here we again turned our attention to the device. He already showed 800 milliroentgen / hour. We could not explain what happened, and therefore sinned against the device, believing that it had deteriorated. However, when we returned to the base and checked it, the device turned out to be operational. "Of course, M. Varitsky and M. Samoylenko's estimates of the size of the object and the distance from it to the reactor are subjective, since here we can only talk about angular dimensions and values, and not However, the readings of a serviceable device and clock are objective facts, and we have the right to rely on them as documented evidence that on the night of the accident, an unidentified flying object that appeared in the sky almost three hours after the explosion, practically extinguished the smeared atomic explosion, knocking down radiation from 3000 to 800 milliroentgens per hour.The rest, with great difficulty and loss of life, was done by Kiev firefighters.

It is scary even to imagine the scale of the consequences of the Chernobyl accident, from which we were saved by an unknown object that came to the rescue in time. It is significant that until April 1986, over the territories adjacent to Chernobyl and subsequently exposed to hard radiation from radioactive dust, UFOs were observed quite rarely (only four cases were recorded over Kiev over the previous thirty years, from 1956 to 1986), but starting from the summer In 1986, the appearance in the sky of strange luminous objects of UFO hovering over residential areas, their patrol flights and maneuvers began to be massive.

On September 18, 1988, a resident of Kiev, Vadim Shevchuk, observed two luminous objects hovering over the reactor tube of the Kiev Institute for Nuclear Research. According to his description, these UFOs looked exactly the same as the object observed by M. Varnitsky and M. Samoylenko over the fourth block of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on the night of the accident. On September 16, 1989, malfunctions were again noted at the fourth power unit, accompanied by emissions of radioactive substances into the atmosphere. A few hours later, Chernobyl doctor Iva Gospina observed an object in the sky above the station, which she describes as "amber" or "golden".

A year later, in October 1990, Chernobyl nuclear scientist Alexander Krymov, who lives in the city of Slavutich, photographed from the window of his apartment a UFO hanging over the residential buildings of nuclear workers. The photograph given here was handed over to the author of these lines personally and published in the periodical press for the first time. During the fire, the roof over the power generator partially collapsed.

Five days later, on October 16, photojournalist of the newspaper "Echo of Chernobyl" Vladimir Savran was shooting. However, when Vladimir developed the footage, it showed a UFO hanging over the failure of the roof. reminiscent of the object that Iva Gospina saw over the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, only photographed not from the side, but from below. In the November issue of the newspaper "Echo of Chernobyl", where this picture was first published, the following editorial commentary is given: "The property of a UFO to be invisible to the human eye and appear only in photos and film has been reported in the press more than once. Apparently, such an object was "caught" in Savran. Specialists who, at the request of the editors, have already carefully studied the negative, do not allow any falsification." The direct participation of UFOs in the liquidation of the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, as well as their increased interest not only in nuclear power facilities, but also in post-Chernobyl Kiev, suggests that even after April 1986, "they" continue to provide Kiev and Chernobyl with some kind of silent help unknown to us.

Valery KRATOKHVIL
http://ufodos.do.am

UFO OVER CHERNOBYL

A huge number of books, articles, reports and studies have been written about the Chernobyl disaster. Let's not say how objective they are in assessing the scale of this tragedy. We only note that along with the obvious attempts of some authors, especially the first publications, to hide the truth, later a lot of so-called "horrors" appeared - scary stories that our press does not neglect in order to tickle the nerves of readers. Here you have monster dogs that attack people, and meter-high mutant rats, and snakes no smaller than pythons, and ghoul bats.

In a word, nightmares generated by radiation. And, of course, the special forces, who are thrown to shoot all this living creatures, not thinking about the consequences of a long stay in a dangerous radioactive zone.

One fact is well known and indisputable: the Chernobyl radioactive zone exists, and it is dangerous to live in it. Experts confirm that even a nuclear explosion would not have polluted our earth as much as the explosion of the Chernobyl "atomic bomb" "smeared" in time did, turning a huge territory into an anomalous zone for centuries ...

As you know, the explosion of the reactor of the fourth block of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant occurred on April 26, 1986. Chernobyl residents awakened by the explosion saw the glow of a fire over the nuclear power plant. Among the thousands of participants in the events of that terrible night were hundreds of witnesses who observed an unidentified flying object in the sky above the burning 4th power unit.

I recall the information that flashed in those days in some newspapers that it was the UFO that was the "cause of the accident", and even that it was the UFO that blew up the reactor of the fourth block. Perhaps it was beneficial for someone to push the responsibility onto "someone else's head", even if it was onto "aliens".

Here is the testimony of Mikhail Varitsky, senior dosimetrist of the Chernobyl dosimetric control department. On the night of April 26, he was alerted and sent with his partner Mikhail Samoylenko to the Chernobyl area. The control group left in a gas truck, they were in the line of sight of the fourth block at 4 hours 15 minutes. We felt the "burning of the face", and looking at the dosimetric device "DP-116", they gasped - it "went off scale". We decided to return for protective equipment. "Already turning the car around, we saw a fireball slowly floating in the sky of a bright red color. It was 6-8 meters in diameter. We again took measurements by switching the instrument scale to a different range. The instrument showed 3000 milliroentgen / hour. Suddenly, two bright crimson searchlights (two beams)... These two beams were directed at the reactor of Unit 4. The object was located at a distance of approximately 300 meters from the reactor. All this lasted for about 3 minutes... The searchlights suddenly went out, and the ball slowly drifted away to the north- west towards Belarus. Here we again drew attention to the device. It already showed 800 milliroentgen / hour! We ourselves could not explain what happened, and therefore sinned on the device. However, when we returned to the base and checked it, the device turned out to be serviceable".

Of course, estimates of the size of the object and the distance from it to the reactor are subjective. We can only talk about angular dimensions and magnitudes. But the readings of a serviceable instrument and clock are objective. In any case, these testimonies claim that a UFO appeared over the power unit almost three hours after the explosion, "knocking down" the radiation from 3000 to 800 milliroentgen / hour. The rest, sacrificing themselves, was completed by firefighters ...

On September 16, 1989, malfunctions were again noted at the fourth power unit. Large radioactive masses were released into the atmosphere. A few hours later, a Chernobyl doctor, Iva Gospina, observed a strange amber-colored object in the sky above the station, in which one could distinguish the "top" and "bottom".

In October 1990, Chernobyl nuclear scientist Alexander Krymov managed to photograph a UFO from the window of his apartment above residential buildings.

On October 11, 1991, a fire broke out at the second power unit of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, as a result of which the roof collapsed over the power generator. Thank God, the second Chernobyl explosion did not happen. Five days later, Vladimir Chavran, a photojournalist for the Echo of Chernobyl newspaper, was filming in the damaged engine room of the generator. Decided to take a picture of the hole in the roof. He remembers very well that there was nothing there, but when he developed the film, he saw a UFO hanging over the failure, resembling, according to his description, the object that Yva Gospina had seen a year before, only photographed from below.

Many letters and reports about UFO sightings come from regions of Belarus "contaminated" with radiation.

Specialists studying anomalous phenomena note some kind of increased UFO interest in objects related to the use of nuclear energy. Back in the forties, UFO sightings were recorded over the Los Alamos Nuclear Center, where work was underway on the Manhattan Project (the creation of the first atomic bomb).

And in 1947, "silver discs" were repeatedly observed over the state of New Mexico, where nuclear tests were taking place in those years.

UFOs have not bypassed any of the places of nuclear tests on Earth. They appeared over the polygons after each explosion.

At first, this was hushed up, any information about UFO sightings was classified both from "them" and "us". When this became difficult, various kinds of misinformation were launched. "Refutations" and "revelations" appeared in the newspapers. Today, it has become almost impossible to keep information secret because there are too many witnesses and eyewitnesses of intelligent actions and even contactees with "aliens" on Earth.

... According to a former employee of the Swiss consulate, in Japan, the day after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, on August 7, 1945, a kind of "phantom" appeared in the sky above the destroyed city - the ghost of the center of Hiroshima, as it was before the atomic explosion. Houses, streets with passers-by, trees, flowers, a beautiful humpbacked bridge, along which children walked, etc. were clearly visible in the sky. This ghost appeared for three days after the explosion and was observed for several hours each time.

The impression, according to an eyewitness, was as if someone had specially demonstrated a film showing a beautiful city that existed yesterday and has been turned into radioactive ashes today. As if someone wanted to say: "People! Look what you have done."

(V. Ovcharenko. Soviet Belarus, No. 67, 1993)

"Plates" over the Kremlin Nepomniachtchi Nikolay Nikolayevich

UFO over Chernobyl?

UFO over Chernobyl?

On April 26, 1986, guessing 1 hour 22 minutes 30 seconds, the operator of a nuclear power plant saw numbers on a printout that clearly indicated that the reactor should be shut down immediately. But similar situations have happened before, so no one paid any attention to this signal. The tests have begun. However, an emergency situation arose: a growing rumble was heard in the hall with some deaf blows reverberating throughout the building; in the central hall of the reactor, as if during a strong earthquake, two thousand 30-kilogram pigs jumped across the floor.

Suddenly, the building was shaken by a blow: the floor and walls shook violently, the station employees were thrown at each other, suspended ceiling slabs, dust and small crumbs fell from the ceiling. The fluorescent lighting went out, all the equipment turned off, and for a few terrible seconds, the nuclear scientists were left in silence and emptiness, saturated with dust and overheated water vapor.

A few seconds later, the emergency lighting lamps dimly lit up, the instruments began to work, and the shift supervisor at the unit gave the command to press the emergency protection button AZ-5. At 1 hour 22 minutes 40 seconds, the emergency protection control rods went down, but it was too late ...

An uncontrolled chain reaction in the Unit 4 reactor has already caused local overheating of the cooling water. When the pressure became too high, the zirconium pipes of the technological channels could not stand it and burst. A huge mass of water, instantly turning into steam, hit the 2500-ton reactor cover with a giant fist, throwing it up. The lid, turning into a huge ram, tore the rest of the technological channels, the water from which also turned into steam, aggravating the destruction.

Having broken through the roof of the block, the lid of the reactor on a jet of steam, debris and graphite masonry flew up almost 15 meters high, rolled over on its edge and collapsed down. During the fall, the entire upper part of the core was crushed and crushed, which caused an additional release of radioactive substances into the atmosphere.

In parallel with this, various chemical reactions began in the reactor core, in particular, an exothermic steam-zirconium reaction. Due to it, within three seconds, about 5000 m 3 of hydrogen was formed at the accident site, which reacted with air and exploded like a vacuum bomb from a random spark. A light purple fire torch shot up half a kilometer, and the resulting shock wave shattered the roof, the central hall and other rooms of the fourth block to smithereens.

So on the night of April 26, 1986, the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, and with it the whole world shuddered from an explosion, which, in fact, was a nuclear one ...

Despite the fact that 20 thousand times more radioactivity was released into the environment than as a result of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, this was not the worst thing. Only in the reactor of the fourth unit there were about 180 tons of enriched uranium, and if the explosion for some reason were truly atomic, and not thermal, then the entire nuclear power plant would explode. In this case, half of Europe would turn into a kind of lunar surface, and very radioactive ...

But why didn't a full-scale explosion happen? Perhaps eyewitnesses who arrived at the crash site will be able to answer this question.

M.A. Varitsky, senior dosimetrist of the Chernobyl Dosimetric Control Department, was alerted that night and sent at the head of the group to the Chernobyl area. The task of the group included dosimetric control using the device DP 2 "b".

At 04:15 GAZ-51 of the group was in the line of sight of the fourth block. Seeing how the reactor of the power unit torn apart by the explosion was blazing, and feeling a “burning of the face”, the dosimetrists decided to refuse to immediately complete the task and return to the base for protective equipment: the dosimeter went off scale when turned on.

The car with the group was already turning around, when suddenly ... Here is what M. Varitsky says: “We saw a fireball slowly floating in the sky of a bright brass color. It was 6–8 meters in diameter. We again took measurements by switching the scale of the device to a different range. The device showed 3000 milliroentgens per hour. Suddenly, two bright crimson searchlights (two beams) flashed from the ball ... These two beams were directed at the reactor of the fourth block. The object was located at a distance of approximately 300 meters from the reactor. All this lasted about three minutes ... The searchlights suddenly went out, and the ball slowly sailed to the northwest. Here we again turned our attention to the device. He showed already 800 milliroentgens per hour! We ourselves could not explain what happened, and therefore sinned against the device. However, when we returned to the base and checked it, the device turned out to be serviceable.”

One of the first and fruitful researchers of the appearance of UFOs over the Chernobyl nuclear power plant was the Ukrainian ufologist from Gostomel Valery Kratokhvil, who collected and analyzed eyewitness accounts in his book "UFO - a time machine" and many publications in the press. The material for publications was the impressions of eyewitnesses whom Kratochvil saw personally, as well as their drawings and photographs.

Here is what he writes about this: “Of course, the estimates of M. Varitsky and M. Samoylenko (M. Varitsky’s partner) of the size of the object and the distance from it to the reactor are subjective, since here we can only talk about angular dimensions, and not about linear ones. . However, the readings of a serviceable instrument and clock are an objective thing, and we can fully rely on them as documented evidence that on the night of the accident, an unidentified flying object, appearing in the sky almost three hours after the explosion, practically extinguished the “smeared” atomic explosion, knocking down radiation from 3,000 to 800 milliroentgens per hour, and the rest, with difficulty and loss of life, was completed by Kiev firefighters.

However, UFOs appeared over Chernobyl after April 26, 1986. For example, three years later, on September 16, 1989, another malfunction was noted at the fourth power unit, accompanied by emissions of large radioactive masses into the atmosphere. At 8.20 am (several hours after the breakdown), Iva Naumovna Gospina, a doctor working in Chernobyl, observed an object in the sky above the station, which she describes as “amber”, where you can distinguish between the “upper part” and the “bottom”. A year later, in October 1990, the Chernobyl nuclear scientist Alexander Krymov photographed from the window of his apartment a UFO hanging over residential buildings.

On October 11, 1991, Chernobyl again reminded of itself: at 20.09 a fire broke out at the second power unit of the nuclear power plant. During the fire, a partial collapse of the roof over the power generator occurred, but the fire was quickly extinguished.

On October 16, five days later, Vladimir Savran, a photojournalist for the Echo of Chernobyl newspaper, photographed its consequences in the damaged engine room of the generator. Here is what he says: “Just in case, I“ clicked ”upward, trying to capture a part of the hole in the roof at the edge of the frame ... Being of sound mind and solid memory, I declare: there was no UFO in the sky either before or after. At least visible to the eye. The sky was, although autumn gray, but absolutely clear.

The fact is that after developing the film on one of the frames suddenly appeared ... a UFO hanging over the failure of the roof of the second block! With its outlines, it resembled an object that Iva Gospina had seen over the Chernobyl nuclear power plant a year before, only photographed from below. An examination conducted in Kiev showed that there could be no question of the marriage of the film or its special processing, and even more so of photomontage - the pictures were genuine.

Thus, we can say that the UFO in 1986 saved many millions of people from a painful death. But, as you know, truly good deeds are done incognito, so the question: “Whom to thank?” - is still open...