The scientist is surprised by the new theory of the origin of the Coronacterius

Chandra Wickramasinghe, a 1939 British scientist born in Sri Lanka, has surprised the science and the public with his latest study. Wickramasinghe and other scientists claim that the Coronavirus reached Earth by a meteor that hit China in October of last year. Wickramasinghe was the disciple of Fred Hoyle, one [...]
Chandra Wickramasinghe, a 1939 British scientist born in Sri Lanka, has surprised the science and the public with his latest study.
Wickramasinghe and other scientists claim that the Coronavirus reached Earth by a meteor that hit China in October of last year.
Wickramasinghe was the disciple of Fred Hoyle, another scientist, whom life had not begun on Earth; she arrived from meteors or comets carrying particles of life sailing into cosmic dust. Its hypocrisy, although not approved by science, still stirs up debate and speculation.
Hoyle died in 2001, but Wickramasinghe, who was professor of Applied Mathematics and Astronomy at Cardiff University for more than three decades and has more than 70 articles published in “Nature”, has continued to combine his work with even more bizarre ideas.
His last article of influence, published in the magazine Advances in Genetics, states that the current coronary pandemic has its origin in space.
More specifically, he says it came from a meteor that fell in northern China on October 11, 2019.
According to Wickramaginghe and his colleagues, the rapid spread of the disease in the area and the appearance of cases away from Wuhan is better explained by a species bombing from space than conventionally, by a leap of the virus from animals to humans.
In earlier articles, he has argued that a spatial origin would be the most reasonable explanation for the behavior of the 1918 flu pandemic, and the same was true of the first outbreak of SARS.
Then, in a letter published in The Lancet magazine, he stated that although the virus did not seem very efficient, explosions can occur because of the remaining presence of pathogens in the stratosphere.
Moreover, he suggested that the virus would return seasonally, once a year, as meteor showers occur as they cross the space region in which a cloud of particles sail after a comet passes.
Wickramasinghe has published in the world's best scientific journals, but his strange ideas do not explain reality better than the official account.
People have been living with coronarys, through long-term SARS-CoV-2 structures (first was isolated in 1965) and in the vicinity of Wuhan, bats with species have been found that can explain the current pandemic.
Viral infections are known to affect people and their ancestors for millions of years, and evolutionary theory offers a better explanation.
Wickramasinghe has argued for years that some major pandemics such as Spanish flu in 1918 or SARS in 2002 have an alien origin.
Moreover, Wickramasinghe has shown that he is capable of relying on baseless studies when they serve to support his panspermic theory.
In 2003, Indian physicists Alfred Louis and Santhosh Kumar declared that a observed red shower in Kerala (andi) was the result of the arrival of biological - born particles that reached Earth in a comet. Later studies said the strange paint was linked to land algae.
Other but not confirmed data by those who still protect the steady arrival of microbes from space are the presence of microscopic living things in the stratosphere, more than 18 kilometers [18 km] above sea level.
Although there are hypothesiss to explain its arrival from the lower layer of the atmosphere, there is a certain uncertainty that those who prefer iconic theories benefit.
Their study, however, is unlikely to help understand the beginning and behavior of the pandemic, but it may be a good place to imagine alien life.
The consensus his study has found is currently more political and public than scientific.












