The set of UAP imagery officially released by the U.S. government is small, conservative, and well-curated. It excludes the considerable trove of leaked or unofficially-shared imagery (the 2019 Sean Cahill 'Pyramid' photos, the 2022 'Mosul orb' video, etc.) and includes only material that an agency has cleared for public release with an accompanying provenance statement.
The canonical set begins with the three U.S. Navy ATFLIR videos — FLIR1, GIMBAL, and GO FAST — declassified and officially released by the Department of Defense on April 27, 2020. AARO's Official UAP Imagery page extends the set with case-resolution videos (resolved sightings the office has investigated) and unresolved AARO case footage. The Pentagon has occasionally released individual images alongside AARO Historical Record Report volumes.
What you'll find here. Each entry includes a direct link to the original release URL (DoD newsroom, AARO imagery page, or DVIDS), the date of declassification, the platform that captured the imagery (sensor, aircraft, ground asset), and a one-line provenance statement from the issuing agency.
What it excludes. Unofficial leaks. Reconstructed or 'enhanced' versions. Third-party uploads. The bar is: did the U.S. government release this directly, with a chain of custody we can cite.
Frequently asked
- What are FLIR1, GIMBAL, and GO FAST?
- Three short U.S. Navy ATFLIR sensor recordings captured by F/A-18 Super Hornet pilots and officially released by the Department of Defense on April 27, 2020. The Navy confirmed the videos are authentic and that the objects in them remain unidentified. The original DoD release URLs are linked from each event entry.
- What is AARO's Official UAP Imagery page?
- A curated library on aaro.mil where the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office posts case-resolution and case-pending UAP video clips. The library is updated as AARO clears new material for release; this hub mirrors every entry in the database with its primary AARO URL.
- Are leaked UAP photos and videos included?
- No. Unofficial leaks (e.g. the South Asian 'orb' images that surfaced in 2023, internal Coast Guard 'Aguadilla' footage, etc.) are not on this page. They may appear in individual event entries on the main site where the leak's provenance is well-established, but this hub is restricted to officially-released material.
- How can I verify a file's chain of custody?
- Each entry links to the original release page on a .gov or .mil URL. For the three 2020 Navy videos, the canonical source is the DoD Office of Public Affairs press release dated April 27, 2020. For AARO case footage, the canonical source is the AARO Official UAP Imagery page. We do not host the files ourselves; we link to the originals.
Looking for related material? Browse the full timeline, the on-the-record witnesses, or every topical tag.