Coming Thursday, April 9

A Duality in Mission Regarding UAPs:
the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO)

Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick

AARO was a Congressionally mandated organization with two missions: 1. organize, streamline, collate, and investigate current reports of military and government sightings of unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), and 2. Investigate the US Government's historical works and associated whistleblower accounts regarding UAP/UFO. This presentation will discuss the establishment of the office, the investigations into the allegations, and the associated findings and conclusions.

Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick is an American laser and materials physicist who served as the first director of the United States Department of Defense's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office. Kirkpatrick is also an adjunct assistant professor of physics at the University of Georgia.

Thursday, April 9, 2026
7:00 -- 9:00PM
Center for Naval Analyses
3003 Washington Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22201
Room 214 MPR


Near Clarendon Metro
There is also paid parking under the building.


IMPORTANT:
The presentation is free, but all attendees must register in advance. Please register by end of day April 1.

Please use the form below to register:



Coming Saturday, March 21

Industrial Scale Renewable Energy:
A Skeptic’s Scrutiny From The Hinterlands


Mark Haynes


Mark’s talk will be an examination of and a skeptic’s perspective of many of the claims about renewable energy from the rural, environmental, power grid, and “big picture” perspectives.  
Mark retired in 2021 as President of Concordia Power, a small consulting firm focused on strategic services in the areas of advanced fission and fusion energy development.  Previously in his professional career, he was a Vice President of General Atomics and a Professional Staff Member of the United States Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works.  He has a Master's degree in Environmental Science from Miami University in Ohio and a BS in Environmental Science from Morehead State University in Kentucky.  Mark and his wife Caroline have a home in Arlington, but spend much of their time working on their forested land in West Virginia, where they have an off-grid solar cabin.  As a volunteer, Mark is highly involved in energy development and land conservation issues.

March 21, 2026, 1:30 to 3:00PM
B-CC Regional Services Center
4805 Edgemoor Lane 2nd Floor (West Room)
Bethesda, MD


Directions: https://tinyurl.com/visitbcccenter

Parking: (Garage 49, $1.50/hr) https://tinyurl.com/BethesdaGarages


FREE admission – Everyone welcome, members and non-members

In person and livestreamed: https://www.youtube.com/live/Ckb0r_NiG9Q

Coming February 21, 2026

No Blueprint for the Moon:
Navigating the Unknowns of Extraterrestrial Construction


Dr. Caitlin Ahrens

This presentation examines lunar architecture not as science fiction, but as an applied problem in risk management, engineering under uncertainty, and evidence-based design. We will explore what it would actually mean to plan and build structures on the Moon, where our geotechnical data are sparse, environmental hazards are extreme, and many Earth-based design assumptions simply do not hold. We will delve into strategies for site planning in an extreme, unfamiliar environment, where Earth-based assumptions must be rethought. Key challenges discussed include working with limited data, potential hazards from the environment, and the need for adaptable, resilient design solutions in lunar conditions.

Dr. Caitlin Ahrens is an assistant research scientist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, and the University of Maryland. She is a member of the Diviner Science Team with the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. In collaboration with Artemis, she serves as a technical support scientist to assist in risk assessments of astronaut, rover, and lander activity at the lunar surface. Dr. Ahrens is Principal Investigator on a recent lunar sustainability work funded by the (former) NASA Office of Technology, Policy and Strategy. She also is a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) working on how lunar architectures should be monitored for hazards, including construction, at the lunar surface. 


February 21, 2026, 1:30 PM
B-CC Regional Services Center
4805 Edgemoor Lane 2nd Floor (West Room)
Bethesda, MD

Directions: https://tinyurl.com/visitbcccenter

Parking: (Garage 49, $1.50/hr) https://tinyurl.com/BethesdaGarages


FREE admission – Everyone welcome, members and non-members
Livestreamed: https://youtube.com/live/9jkezKUmI0Y