BLUE FILES REPORT

About the Research

22 Years of Investigation · Convergent Analysis · Public Domain Sources


The Researcher

Chris Bounds is an independent researcher who has spent over two decades investigating UFO cases, physics texts, and scientific papers. While not a professional physicist, he approaches the subject as a seasoned investigator, compiling and correlating scattered technical information from books, documentaries, magazines, websites, and podcasts.

The Methodology

The core methodology of this research is convergence analysis: examining how independent sources — separated by decades, geography, and context — describe nearly identical systems using different language, different levels of technical understanding, and different frames of reference.

The First Rule: Always take each descriptive term literally. Direct interpretation — words mean exactly what they say, focusing on surface meaning. This approach has revealed technical specifications hidden in plain sight within historical UFO literature.

The Patent

Building on the technical analysis in the Blue Files Report, a provisional patent application has been filed for a Large-Format Polycrystalline Silicon Carbide Gammavoltaic Transistor with Heavy-Metal Lattice Doping. This device translates the convergent technical descriptions found across multiple UFO sources into modern materials science and engineering specifications.

The patent demonstrates that when the scattered, fragmented technical data is properly assembled and read literally, it describes real, potentially buildable technology using principles that cutting-edge materials science is only now beginning to explore.

The Goal

This research demands immediate discussion. The goal is to provide a single, comprehensive resource — equipping anyone interested in understanding or advancing this technology with a complete assembly of fragmented data and references, all in one volume.

All content is drawn from public-domain sources; no classified material is included. What you conclude is your decision.

Fair Use

Under U.S. copyright law (17 U.S.C. § 107), fair use permits limited verbatim quotation of copyrighted material for criticism, reporting, teaching, or research without permission.