As the eyes of humanity in space, NASA’s data remains central to the scientific study of the UAP phenomenon.
NASA UFO | UAP Index:
Does the world’s premier space agency hold the key to the UAP mystery? The NASA UFO | UAP Index explores the intersection of space exploration and unidentified phenomena. From the early Mercury and Gemini missions to modern satellite surveillance, this archive tracks NASA’s institutional relationship with the unknown. We dive into the specific legal battles involving NASA’s search for files on UFO incidents and the credible, firsthand accounts from pioneers like Gordon Cooper, who witnessed craft that defied the laws of known physics.
In this index, you will find a curated history of NASA’s public stance versus its internal data. Explore the controversy surrounding the Kecksburg incident and the agency’s 2026 role in the new era of scientific UAP transparency. Whether you are investigating “anomalies” in space-shuttle footage or reviewing the official NASA response to UAP task force inquiries, this index provides the documentation necessary to understand how NASA navigates the final frontier’s most elusive inhabitants.
Executive Summary
The NASA UFO | UAP Index acts as the “Extraterrestrial Research Hub” for the Think Aboutit platform. Its objective is to centralize and analyze the agency’s involvement in documenting—and sometimes distancing itself from—UAP data. By categorizing posts into Astronaut Testimonies, Satellite & Space Imagery, and Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Requests, this index provides a clear timeline of NASA’s awareness.
This archive is essential for the 2026 scientific disclosure movement, as NASA has been tasked with bringing a more rigorous, data-driven approach to the study of “unidentified” objects in our atmosphere and beyond. It connects historical witness accounts, like Astronaut Gordon Cooper’s 1957 encounter, with the modern legal requirements for NASA to search for UFO records. This is where the quest for space exploration meets the reality of the phenomenon.
“For many years I have lived with a secret, in a secrecy imposed on all specialists in astronautics. I can now reveal that every day, in the USA, our radar instruments capture objects of form and composition unknown to us.
Astronaut Gordon Cooper