Scientific Advisory Board.

The purpose of the Science Advisory Board (SAB) for Sky360 is to provide expert guidance, independent assessment, and strategic advice to enhance the scientific excellence, integrity, and relevance of Sky360s activities. The SAB will offer insights, recommendations, and evaluations to ensure that our efforts align with the highest standards of scientific research and innovation.

The SAB is focusing on matters related to Sky360s scientific endeavors with regards to Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP), including but not limited to:
  • Research methodologies, design, and execution
  • Data collection, analysis, and interpretation
  • Technological advancements relevant to our mission
  • Emerging scientific trends and developments
SABs responsibilities:
  • Advisory Role
    The SAB is offering advice and recommendations to Sky360s management on scientific matters, research directions, and policy implications.

  • Review and Evaluation
    The SAB is reviewing Sky360s ongoing scientific projects, research outcomes, and technological initiatives periodically. It is providing assessments of the quality, validity, and significance of these efforts.

  • Strategic Guidance
    The SAB is contributing to the development of a long-term scientific strategy for Sky360, aligning research goals with societal interest in UAPs and advancements in the relevant fields.

  • Ethics and Integrity
    The SAB will assess and ensure that Sky360s scientific activities adhere to the highest ethical standards and scientific integrity.

Board Members.

Jannik Heusinger, PhD

Jannik Heusinger, PhD

SAB Chairman


Jannik Heusinger is a climatologist, who got his PhD in 2017 from TU Braunschweig, Germany. He was a post-doctoral researcher at Arizona State University and in 2019 returned to TU Braunschweig. He has authored and co-authored around 20 scientific peer-reviewed publications. In his spare time he enjoys going running, biking, reading, photography and coding stuff for Sky360.

Christian Ambros, PhD

Christian Ambros, PhD

Head of Development


Christian Ambros worked for Max-Planck-Institute for extraterrestrian physics (MPE) and later for Fraunhofer Institute for intelligente analysis and informations systems IAIS. He is a professional astronomer with a computer science background. He spends his freetime combining astronomy with being a maker, using 3d printing to enhance optical observations.

Tim Lou, PhD

Tim Lou, PhD


Tim Lou earned his PhD in theoretical particle physics from Princeton University. He was subsequently as a post-doctoral researcher at UC Berkeley, contributing to the publication of a dozen papers. He is currently a data scientist, specializing in AI and big data computation. During his leisure time, he enjoys hiking, writing, and staying updated with physics literature.

Karl Svozil, PhD

Karl Svozil, PhD


Karl Svozil is an Austrian physicist educated at the University of Vienna and Heidelberg University. Visiting scholar at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory of the University of California at Berkeley, US (1982–1983), the Lebedev Institute of the Moscow State University, and the Ioffe Institute, St. Petersburg (1986). Docent and Univ. Professor at the Institute for Theoretical Physics of the Vienna Technical University. External Researcher at the Centre for Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science of the University of Auckland. Research in quantum theory, applications of computability theory, algorithmic information theory, constructive mathematics (in Errett Bishop's sense) in theoretical physics and equilibrium dynamics.

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