A UFO expert claimed to have spotted a massive alien vessel blocking out the Sun and causing an eclipse. The expert said the event was captured by one of NASA’s Sun satellites.

UFO expert Scott Warring reported about the incident through his blog ET Data Base. According to Waring, he came across the UFO sighting after going through the images provided by NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). This satellite was launched by the space agency in 2010 with the sole mission of observing the Sun.

Using SDO’s website, Waring browsed through various observations of the Sun in different filters. After putting the images together to form a small-scale time-lapse video, Waring discovered an anomaly.

According to the UFO expert, the string of images showed a massive alien vessel moving upwards. Although the exact shape of the object cannot be seen, its shadow was very prominent as it covered the Sun and caused an eclipse.

“Something big just blocked out the Sun today and no one even seemed to notice it,” Waring wrote. “I found these images on an SDO NASA site that observes the Sun through different filters and I put them together so you can see them in real time as it happened.”

Waring said the event was not seen from Earth but was detected by SDO. He said the vessel may have passed in between the Sun and the NASA satellite.

This isn’t the first time that Waring spotted strange objects near the Sun. Many of his sightings came from the images provided by another NASA satellite that observes the Sun, which is called the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory.

Previously, the UFO expert reported seeing massive objects exiting the giant star. Waring even claimed that some of the objects he spotted caused solar flares to erupt from the Sun’s surface.

Waring noted that these objects prove that aliens exist and that the Sun is actually hollow. According to Waring, the hollow space inside the massive star houses various alien worlds. The beings on these planets enter and exit the Sun through an opening on its surface.

solar-flare
NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured these images of a solar flare May 5, 2015. Each image shows a different wavelength of extreme ultraviolet light that highlights a different temperature of material on the sun. NASA/SDO/Wiessinger