Education
In 1966, Harley Rutledge completed his Doctor of Philosophy in solid state physics at the University of Missouri.
In 1966, Harley Rutledge completed his Doctor of Philosophy in solid state physics at the University of Missouri.
He subsequently took the position of Professor and Chairman of the Physics Department at Southeast Missouri State University. He was Department Chairman from 1964 to 1982 and retired from teaching in 1992. Challenged to explain sightings of unidentified lights and luminous phenomena in the sky around Piedmont, Missouri, Doctor Harley Rutledge decided to subject these reports to scientific analysis.
He put together a team of observers with college training in the physical sciences, including a large array of equipment: RF spectrum analyzers, Questar telescopes, low-high frequency audio detectors, electromagnetic frequency analyzer, cameras, and a galvanometer to measure variations in the Earth"s gravitational field
The resulting Project Identification commenced in April 1973, logging several hundred hours of observation time. This was the first unidentified flying object scientific field study, able to monitor the phenomena in real-time, enabling Rutledge to calculate the objects" actual velocity, course, position, distance, and size.
Observation of the unclouded night sky often revealed "pseudostars" - stationary lights camouflaged by familiar constellations. Some objects appeared to mimic the appearance of known aircraft.
Others violated the laws of physics.
The most startling discovery was that on at least 32 recorded occasions, the movement of the lights synchronized with actions of the observers. They appeared to respond to a light being switched on and off, and to verbal or radio messages. The final results of this project were documented in the 1981 book, Harley Rutledge, 80, former chairman of the physics department at Southeast Missouri State University, died on Monday, June 5, 2006 at the Missouri Veterans Home.
Project Identification: Thirteen Years and One-Hundred and Sixty Sightings Later, Doctorate. (presented at the 1986 MUFON symposium).