The 100 Year Starship 2012 Public Symposium begins next week, with the recently announced news that former president Bill Clinton will serve as honorary chair for the event. I’m not sure whether a US president has ever spoken about starships before, but what Clinton said was this: “This important effort helps advance the knowledge and technologies required to explore space, all while generating the necessary tools that enhance our quality of life on earth.” The symposium takes a decidedly multi-disciplinary theme, with speakers on topics ranging from engineering to ethics, philosophy, the social sciences and biology.

Our recent discussions about experimenting with self-enclosed ecosystems flow naturally into the upcoming event in light of the range of topics to be covered. In addition to the speakers and scientific papers, four workshops have been announced. Let me pull some excerpts on the workshops directly off the 100 Year Starship page:

    Workshop 1: Research Priorities for the First Ten of 100 Years

    The capabilities required to successfully mount a human interstellar mission are numerous and daunting. Yet, we must start somewhere. Requirements range from achieving relativistic (approaching light speed) velocities and navigation, radiation shielding, robust crew and passenger health, training, dynamics, optimized skill mix, culture and compatibility, to selecting destinations, self-renewing machine and life support systems, and financial investment.

    Workshop 2: Path to the Stars—Evolutionary or Revolutionary

    Is the best approach to reaching the stars a giant leap or incremental baby steps? Is there a real and necessary requirement to colonize our solar system before attempting to travel to another star? Is a one-way trip ethical? Is it possible to achieve such an audacious goal as interstellar flight with a “slow and steady wins the race” strategy or does that method risk stagnation?

    Workshop 3: The Mission: Human, Robotic or Reconstituted?

    Some argue that taking humans along not only complicates the mission and equipment, but may also make an interstellar mission anytime in the foreseeable future extremely improbable.

    Workshop 4: Is It Everybody’s Space Mission?

    Who should and can participate in the quest for human interstellar space travel? How should that participation be facilitated, encouraged and measured? Should those who have technical backgrounds or declared “interstellar first” have the front row seats? Is this the purview of certain countries, socioeconomic groups or cultures?

Attendees can register to participate in workshops on the website.

Image: The Project Daedalus design, the first fully developed study of an interstellar craft, created by the British Interplanetary Society in the 1970s. Icarus Interstellar, a partner in the 100 Year Starship effort, is developing Project Icarus as the successor to Daedalus. The ongoing design study will doubtless be much in the air in Houston. Credit: Adrian Mann.

Among the speakers at the symposium will be, in addition to symposium chair Mae Jemison, anthropologist Johnetta B. Cole, director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art, space journalist Miles O’Brien, SETI Institute co-founder Jill Tarter, and two figures well known to Star Trek fans: Nichelle Nichols (Lt. Uhura from the first Star Trek series), and LeVar Burton, who played Geordi La Forge in Star Trek: The Next Generation. Although I’ll mostly be there for the scientific papers, it will be fun to see what the dose of popular entertainment lore can bring to the proceedings. Track chairs include Eric Davis (Institute for Advanced Studies-Austin ), Amy Millman (Springboard Enterprises), David Alexander (Rice University) and Ian O’Neill (Discovery News).

For those of you coming in late on all this, the 100 Year Starship effort grows out of seed money provided by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Last year’s conference in Orlando took place a few months before the award was allocated to The Dorothy Jemison Foundation for Excellence, named in honor of astronaut Mae Jemison’s mother. The winning proposal was crafted by Jemison’s team in partnership with Icarus Interstellar, which continues to explore research and development dedicated to interstellar hardware, and the Foundation for Enterprise Development. From a recent news release from 100YSS:

In its first year, 100YSS will seek investors, establish membership opportunities, encourage public participation in research projects and develop the vision for interstellar exploration. 100 Year Starship will bring in experts from myriad fields to help achieve its goal – utilizing not only scientists, engineers, doctors, technologists, researchers, sociologists and computer experts, but also architects, writers, artists, entertainers and leaders in government, business, economics, ethics and public policy. 100YSS will also collaborate with existing space exploration and advocacy efforts from both private enterprise and the government. In addition, 100YSS will establish a scientific research institute, The Way, whose major emphasis will be speculative, long-term science and technology.

The Houston event will run September 13-16, 2012 at the Hyatt Regency with details available on the 100 Year Starship site. Having handed off initial funding to the new organization, DARPA has stepped back to let the 100 Year Starship grow on its own. Thus Houston marks the first major event 100YSS has undertaken, and I’m hoping the sessions will have much of the same multi-disciplinary sparkle that enlivened Orlando one year ago.

tzf_img_post