Ghost particles or cosmic neutrinos do exist on earth, at least in Antarctica as confirmed by scientists. These particles of high-energy come from locations inside and outside of the Milky Way Galaxy. The discovery was made by researchers at the IceCube Neutrino Observatory.
To detect light from high-energy neutrinos that traverse most mass easily at the speed of light, researchers at the IceCube Neutrino Observatory used 86 optical sensors buried 8,000 feet into the polar ice.
The research was intended to prove that cosmic neutrinos were present on earth, which was initially acknowledged in 2013. The new report released in the journal Physical Review Letters revealed that the IceCube Neutino Observatory found 21 muons passed through its detectors between 2010 and 2012.
Created during the occasional collision between neutrinos and an atomic nucleus, muons are high-energy cosmic neutrinos that emit Cherenkov radiation. Scientists believe that the high-energy neutrinos are created deep inside some of the universe's most violent phenomena.
Months before the discovery of ghost particles in Antarctica, Prof. Milton Wainwright of the University of Sheffield told Daily Express that the ghost particle, which appears to be in its "deflated" state, is a "living balloon" that used to carry alien organisms.
"This is nothing short of a New Year's present from outer space," Wainwright told the publication. For him, the ghost particle could be inflated by the alien organisms using gases lighter than air to let them float in air or seas of unidentified environments.
Along with his team from the University of Sheffield and the University of Buckingham Centre for Astrobiology, Wainwright claimed that the discovery of ghost particles is the latest evidence that support the existence of aliens.