Dr. Jacques F. Vallée

Astrophysicist and Computer Scientist, 1963–present (UAP research); 1995–2004 (NIDS); ongoing academic contributions

Case File

Background

Dr. Jacques Vallée is the closest thing to a living institutional memory of U.S. government UAP research. An astrophysicist by training and computer scientist by career - with a Ph.D. from Northwestern and a role in early ARPANET research at SRI - he began formally studying UAP in 1963 alongside J. Allen Hynek and has maintained continuous research engagement across six decades. His four-volume Forbidden Science diary series (covering 1957-1999, published 1992-2021) contains contemporaneous documented accounts of meetings with government officials, CIA contacts, and intelligence insiders about UAP programs - constituting a unique historical record written as events occurred rather than reconstructed from memory. He served as scientific advisor to Robert Bigelow's NIDS and has co-published peer-reviewed UAP methodology papers alongside Garry Nolan in Progress in Aerospace Sciences. He is best known for his theoretical challenge to the extraterrestrial hypothesis, which he considers insufficient to explain UAP phenomenology, and for Passport to Magonia - the 1969 landmark that first systematically compared UAP accounts to historical folklore and changed how researchers framed the question. He is the inspiration for the character Claude Lacombe in Steven Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977).

Research Period

1963–present (UAP research); 1995–2004 (NIDS); ongoing academic contributions

Clearance

No formal government clearance held; engaged as civilian scientific advisor to government UAP research programs through informal channels documented in his contemporaneous diaries

Organizations

Paris Observatory (astronomer, 1961-1962) · Northwestern University (research with J. Allen Hynek, 1963-1967) · Stanford Research Institute / SRI International (computer scientist) · National Institute for Discovery Science (NIDS) - scientific advisor · Sol Foundation (participant and advisor)

Education

B.S. Mathematics - Sorbonne, ParisM.S. Astrophysics - University of LillePh.D. Computer Science - Northwestern University (1967)

Career Background

  • Astronomer at the Paris Observatory (1961-1962); witnessed senior astronomers destroy computer tapes of Mars positional observations that didn't conform to existing models - formative experience with institutional suppression of anomalous data
  • Moved to Northwestern University (1963); introduced to J. Allen Hynek, USAF scientific consultant on Project Blue Book; began systematic UAP research as scientific collaboration
  • Joined SRI International as computer scientist; contributed to early ARPANET research while maintaining parallel private UAP research
  • Became venture capitalist in Silicon Valley; invested in early-stage technology companies while continuing research and writing
  • Published 15+ books on UAP phenomenology spanning 60 years, including the landmark Passport to Magonia (1969) and the Forbidden Science diary series (1992-2021)

Key Events

1939Born Pontoise, France
1955First personal UAP observation as a teenager in Pontoise; the experience is described in Forbidden Science as formative
1961Astronomer at the Paris Observatory; witnesses a senior colleague order the destruction of a computer tape containing Mars positional data that did not match existing models - documents this as his first experience with institutional suppression of anomalous observations
1963Arrives at Northwestern University; meets J. Allen Hynek, the USAF scientific consultant on Project Blue Book; begins formal UAP research collaboration. Hynek describes Vallee as the most rigorous scientific mind he encountered in UAP research.
1965Publishes 'Anatomy of a Phenomenon' - the first serious scientific classification and analysis of UAP reports; establishes him as one of the first credentialed scientists to take UAP research public
1967Receives Ph.D. in Computer Science from Northwestern; joins SRI International; contributes to ARPANET early development in parallel with UAP research
1969Publishes 'Passport to Magonia' - landmark work cataloging parallels between modern UAP accounts and centuries of folklore, fairy mythology, and religious apparition reports; proposes that the phenomenon predates the industrial era and cannot be explained solely by extraterrestrial spacecraft
1975Publishes 'The Invisible College' - documents the informal network of credentialed scientists privately studying UAP while avoiding official ridicule; term becomes the label for the serious UAP research community
1977Serves as the direct inspiration for the character Claude Lacombe (played by Francois Truffaut) in Steven Spielberg's 'Close Encounters of the Third Kind'; publicly acknowledged by Spielberg
1988Publishes the 'Dimensions,' 'Confrontations,' and 'Revelations' trilogy (1988-1991) - systematic examination of UAP physical evidence, close encounter cases, and the landscape of UAP fraud
1992Publishes 'Forbidden Science: Journals 1957-1969' (Volume 1) - contemporaneous diary series documenting his early career, meeting Hynek, interactions with government officials, and suppression of UAP data
1995Begins serving as scientific advisor to Robert Bigelow's National Institute for Discovery Science (NIDS); Bigelow's database grows to 240,000 structured UAP cases before funding is cut
2008Publishes 'Forbidden Science: Journals 1970-1979' (Volume 2) - documents his SRI period, interactions with CIA officials regarding remote viewing and UAP, and the early ARPANET years
2019Publishes 'Forbidden Science: Journals 1980-1989' (Volume 3) - documents interactions with government insiders during the 1980s, including meetings with intelligence officials about UAP programs
2021Publishes 'Forbidden Science: Journals 1990-1999' (Volume 4) and co-authors 'Trinity: The Best-Kept Secret' with Paola Harris, investigating a claimed 1945 New Mexico UAP crash with egg-shaped craft and three small entities
2021Co-authors peer-reviewed paper in Progress in Aerospace Sciences alongside Garry Nolan, Beatriz Villaroel, and others on UAP detection methodology; research findings published in what he describes as the most prestigious aerospace journal
2024Rice University acquires Vallee's personal UAP research archives along with those of 10-12 other UAP researchers, creating a major institutional repository for the field
Feb 2025Appears on That UFO Podcast discussing the NIDS database, Trinity case details, university-level UAP research expansion at Stanford, Columbia, and Harvard, and his personal close-range UAP experiences

Cross-References