The interstellar community has seen a surprising number of conferences since the 2011 event in Orlando, which kicked off the 100 Year Starship effort and brought unusual media attention to the idea of travel between the stars. I had thought when 2015 began that further conferences were unlikely — it seemed to be a year for consolidation and, if you will, introspection, measuring how the effort to reach the public with deep space ideas was progressing and consolidating progress on various projects like the Icarus Interstellar starship redesign.

But both Icarus and the 100 Year Starship organization have surprised me with conferences announced for this fall. Icarus pulled off a successful Starship Congress in 2013, one I remember with pleasure because of my son Miles’ work with Icarus and the chance to meet up with him in Dallas to hear interesting papers and share news and good meals. There will doubtless be much to say about Project Icarus itself at the new meeting. After all, the organization is deep into the redesign of the original Daedalus starship, applying all the changes in technology, both real and projected, that have occurred in the past 35 years.

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Starship Congress 2015 is being billed as an ‘interstellar hackathon,’ one centered on “hacking the paradigm of interstellar space exploration.” The Icarus site notes that it occurs “With a nod to this year’s University setting and a Hollywood and video game-driven surge in popularity of deep space exploration (“Interstellar”, “Guardians of the Galaxy”, “EVE: Valkyrie”, “Kerbal Space Program 1.0″)…” Talks and presentations will be punctuated by workshops and speakers from the deep space community over the two days of the event — the schedule is here, as is the registration link for accommodations at the Sheraton Philadelphia University City Hotel.

The venue is Drexel University in Philadelphia for the event running September 4-5. Ticket prices are online and credit card orders are easily placed on the Icarus site. Icarus is distinguishing this event from the 2013 Starship Congress by saying “… the 2015 edition is being structured to quickly break-down status quo approaches in anticipation of reaping new results from looking at old challenges with fresh outlooks.”

I see that Rachel Armstrong has been designated “First Speaker” for the Hackathon, and Ralph McNutt, most recently in the spotlight as a co-investigator on the New Horizons mission, will give the keynote. McNutt (JHU/APL) has been involved with Icarus since its early days; I remember with appreciation his help on deep space mission concepts when I was writing Centauri Dreams (the book) back in the 2002-2004 era. And I’m delighted to see that Cameron Smith (Penn State), an anthropologist whose thinking on long-term interstellar missions has graced these pages, is also to be on hand as a special guest.

Icarus is trying to raise $20,000 through KickStarter to support Starship Congress 2015. The campaign is now live, with a page providing additional background about the organization and its plans for the event.

100 Year Starship Symposium 2015

Finding Earth 2.0 is the theme for the 2015 100 Year Starship Public Symposium, to be held from October 29 through the 1st of November at the Santa Clara Marriott in Silicon Valley. The focus draws on recent discoveries of planets either in or close to the habitable zones of their stars. While none of these can be definitively called Earth 2.0, it’s clear that we’re making progress toward that goal, finding smaller worlds around stars more like the Sun and heading for the day when a G-class star with a small rocky world in a habitable zone orbit will tantalize us with the possibility that it is as capable of developing life as our own green and blue world.

When we find such a planet, we’ll have an abundance of cross-disciplinary studies to invoke in its characterization. “The 100 Year Starship 2015 Public Symposium challenges participants to consider what specific capabilities and systems — scientific, technical and societal — will be needed over the next 5-25 years,” says the organization’s website, “not to merely suggest or catalog earth analogue candidate exoplanets, but to identify at least one definitive Earth 2.0—and to consider how such a discovery itself will impact our world and space exploration.”

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You can find background on Finding Earth 2.0, the schedule, registration and hotel information here. There is also a form for submitting abstracts. The technical tracks being examined are these:

  • Designing for Interstellar
  • Propulsion and Energy
  • Interstellar Space, Stars and Destination
  • Data Communications and Information Technology
  • Life in Space – Health, Astrobiology, Earth Biology and Bioengineering
  • Interstellar Technology Enhancing Life on Earth
  • Becoming an Interstellar Civilization

Also being introduced at the 2015 symposium is the Canopus Award, designed to recognize both fiction and non-fiction works that have contributed educationally and inspirationally toward the goal of interstellar flight. The awards are to be given in two categories: Previously Published Works of Fiction, with an award made for Long Form (40,000 words or more) and one for Short Form (between 1,000 and 40,000 words), and Original Works, based on this year’s 100YSS Public Symposium theme Finding Earth 2.0. An award will be made for Short Form Fiction (1,000-5,000 words) and one for Short Form Non-fiction (1,000-5,000 words).

Jason D. Batt, a writer who is also Canopus Award program manager, explains the award’s rationale:

“100YSS is launching the awards at a particularly fortuitous time. The recent announcements of Kepler-452b exoplanet, major financial support of searches for extraterrestrial intelligence and the space probe New Horizons close encounter with Pluto and the amazing images it is generating highlight how we all look up and dream of what’s out there. The Canopus award celebrates that passion that is common to the public, researchers and science fiction fans alike.”

The award is named after a star that has been used as a navigation beacon back to the days of the earliest civilizations and forward to spacecraft like Voyager, which tracks Canopus as one way to orient itself toward Earth for data transmissions. Submissions are being accepted here through August 31 for original works and nominations for previously published works.

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