Hidden Content
Their mission: legitimize the field with actual science.

There's never been a better time than now to research UFOs, especially after the Navy recently confirmed their existence.
Still, a new group—comprised of military veterans and an ex-NASA scientist—says the research can be more legitimate, and hopes to professionalize the study of UFOs.
The group has secured funding from Silicon Valley investors.
A new nonprofit will explore what the U.S Navy calls “Unidentified Aerial Phenomena” (UAPs). Backed in part by Silicon Valley investors, UAP eXpeditions hopes to “field a top-notch group of uber-experienced professionals providing the public service of field testing new UAP related technologies.”
The nonprofit is registered to a man named Kevin Day, a former U.S. Navy Chief Petty Officer and radar operator whose time in service has influenced his new organization. While serving in the Nimitz Carrier Strike Group on the USS Princeton in 2004, Day experienced the “Nimitz UFO Incident,” which concerned a "whitish oval object, about the size of a commercial plane, chased by two Navy F/A-18F fighter jets from the aircraft carrier Nimitz off the coast of San Diego," according to a 2017 New York Times report.

Day is focused on UAPs occurring along the Pacific Coast, it seems. A company white paper asks if "fleets of UAP 'migrate' from Catalina Island to Guadalupe Island with a certain frequency," and if so, "how well do whale songs correlate, if at all, to UAP appearances?”
There have been other UAP investigative groups, of course. The Center for UFO Studies and the Mutual UFO Network, among others, are alive and functioning. But those groups probably don't employ people like Dr. Kevin Knuth, a former scientist from NASA’s Ames Research Center, current associate physics professor at the University of Albany, and key member of UAP eXpeditions.
Knuth says the group is still in early phases, but "the goal of the expedition is to give us some ground truth. We aim to try to observe these objects directly, and record them using multiple imaging modalities.”

To that end, in August, Knuth was the lead author of a paper that examines "a handful of well-documented encounters, including the 2004 encounters with the Nimitz Carrier Group off the coast of California." In the paper, Knuth and his fellow authors look at the flight patterns of these UAP sightings and determine that the "observed flight characteristics of these craft are consistent with the flight characteristics required for interstellar travel. That is, if these observed accelerations were sustainable in space, then these craft could easily reach relativistic speeds within a matter of minutes to hours and cover interstellar distances in a matter of days to weeks, proper time."
From funders on down, the wide-ranging group uniting behind UAP eXpeditions seems to have one goal: raise the level of UAP inquiry.
“The failure to study these phenomena scientifically has resulted in a state of ignorance, which is unacceptable considering the aviation safety issues that have been reported by the U.S. Navy,” Knuth says.