
017 - Astrophysicist Matthew Szydagis' Analysis of Possible Crashed UAP Material (Art's Parts) (pt2)
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Matthew Szydagis, Ph.D. is a professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Albany, where he works on solving basic mysteries of physics related to dark matter. He has a longstanding interest in UAP, and in this two-part episode we discuss two big questions he's working on. In part 1 he lays out his case for why we should expect "catastrophic disclosure" within our lifetimes. In part 2 we discuss the results of his lab's materials analysis of a piece of very strange material that may be part of a crashed UAP.
- Dr. Szydagis' course on The Physics of Exotic Propulsion, at the Society for UAP Studies: https://www.societyforuapstudies.org/thephysicsofexoticpropulsion
- His paper, "How much time do we have before catastrophic disclosure occurs?" https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.12738
- And, "The New Science of Unidentified Aerospace-Undersea Phenomena (UAP)" https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.06794
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