Kevin Knuth

Associate Professor Kevin Knuth

Dr Kevin Knuth is an astrophysicist, and is the Associate Professor in the Department of Physics at the University at Albany. He is permitted to pursue his passion in studying the UAP phenomenon with the university’s blessing and support.

Dr Knuth is a former NASA research scientist, having worked for four years at NASA Ames Research Center in the Intelligent Systems Division. He has 20 years of experience in applying Bayesian and maximum entropy methods to the design of machine learning algorithms for data analysis applied to the physical sciences.

Dr Knuth’s research interests include brain dynamics, the foundations of physics, inference and inquiry, autonomous robotics, and the search for and characterisation of extrasolar planets. He has over 100 peer-reviewed publications and has been invited to give over 80 presentations in 13 countries.

In this interview, we hear his considered opinion on the UAP phenomenon, where the phenomenon may originate in our galactic neighbourhood, as well as the duration of its presence on our planet.

Read his paper on UAP here:

Estimating Flight Characteristics of Anomalous Unidentified Aerial Vehicles

Also interesting a slideshow created by The StarDrive Report which is referred to in our interview. The presentation was prepared for the Anomalous Aerospace Phenomena Conference (AAPC) hosted by the Scientific Coalition for Ufology (SCU) in Huntsville, Alabama. Kevin’s talk was titled, Constraints on Societies Engaged in Relativistic Interstellar Travel. Here he presents an ‘if’ ‘then’ scenario of how travelers from a society that developed the means to travel at extreme relativistic velocity would function.

The closer one travels to the speed of light, the further one travels into the future of the planet they departed from. In other words, interstellar travel is essentially one-way travel, which for biological beings is a hugely significant issue.

The Stardrive Report

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