Posters

The NRGscapes LAB Posters page brings together a curated collection of visual research summaries, stakeholder briefs, and concept posters that communicate key areas of the lab’s work in a clear and accessible format. These posters translate complex research themes, including UAP field observations, anomalous experience studies, advanced mobility concepts, propulsion paradigms, ResearchGate portfolio development, and field-to-engineering pathways, into concise visual narratives for readers, collaborators, partners, funders, and research stakeholders. Each poster is designed to provide a snapshot of the evidence base, analytical framework, strategic relevance, and future-facing implications of NRGscapes LAB’s ongoing research program.


A practical observation-to-measurement workflow for analysing anomalous aerial objects captured in field imagery. The poster illustrates how pixel scale, angular size, field of view, elevation, azimuth, range modelling, and altitude estimation can be used to convert visual sightings into structured geometric data. Designed as a field-facing guide for NRGscapes LAB observations, it shows how raw frames can be translated into measurable parameters, uncertainty ranges, and modelling outputs that support more rigorous analysis of UAP and environmental anomaly recordings.


A lifespan-based study of recurring anomalous encounters and their possible role in human adaptation, cognitive integration, and preparation for coexistence. Drawing on more than 40 years of documented experience data, the poster maps encounters across six developmental stages, from early contact and threshold confrontation through to complex engagement, integration, and coexistence readiness. It offers a concise visual summary of how structured experience data, category prevalence, life-period density, and sub-phase complexity may reveal deeper patterns in anomalous experience and human readiness for a shared future.


Examines how historical, theoretical, and institutional conditions may have shaped the separation between publicly visible propulsion science and lower-visibility UAP-adjacent aerospace research. The poster contrasts mainstream force-based propulsion models with alternative field-interaction concepts, highlighting how pedagogy, classification structures, publication pathways, and bounded knowledge systems can influence which ideas become accepted, marginalised, or hidden from view. It presents epistemic divergence not as a rejection of science, but as a structural problem in how science is accessed, organised, and interpreted across different research domains.


Presents NRGscapes LAB’s stakeholder-facing pathway for translating UAP observations and field science into structured, testable engineering opportunities. The poster summarises three core technical reports, highlighting boundary-coupled mobility, field-mediated craft design, and cross-disciplinary foundations in physics, chemistry, biology, and engineering. It positions advanced mobility as a problem of controlled field interaction rather than propulsion alone, with potential relevance to defence, aerospace, industrial innovation, national capability, and future workforce development. The poster also outlines the NRGscapes LAB difference: independent, evidence-led, mission-relevant research designed to move from observation, through analysis and validation, toward engineered capability.


Introduces the newly curated NRGscapes ResearchGate portfolio as a structured, stakeholder-facing research record. The poster shows how archived publications, field observations, technical analyses, strategic syntheses, roadmaps, and operational documents have been reorganised into a clear evidence pathway, moving from raw data and environmental observations through validation, analysis, publication, and applied impact. It positions the portfolio as a practical navigation tool for academics, defence and security stakeholders, aerospace industry partners, collaborators, and funders seeking signal over noise, transparent methods, and a clearer view of NRGscapes LAB’s research direction.

Latest Notes

View Archive [ -> ]