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First Round of Abstract Submission Ends: Jan 15, 2024
Extended Early Bird Ends: Jan 25, 2024

Keynote Speakers

Prof. Gregory Matloff
New York City College of Technology, CUNY, USA
Title: Progress on Interstellar Travel
Greg Matloff is a leading expert in possibilities for interstellar propulsion, especially near-Sun solar sail trajectories that might make interstellar travel possible. He is also a professor with the Physics Department of New York City College of Technology, CUNY, a consultant with NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, a Hayden Associate of the American Museum of Natural History, an Advisor to Breakthrough Project Starshot, and a Member of the International Academy of Astronautics. He co-authored with Les Johnson of NASA and C Bangs Paradise Regained (2009), Living Off the Land in Space (2007), and has authored Deep-Space Probes (Edition 1: 2000 and Edition 2: 2005). As well as authoring More Telescope Power (2002), Telescope Power (1993), The Urban Astronomer (1991), he co-authored with Eugene Mallove The Starflight Handbook (1989). Greg’s most recent books, co-authored with C Bangs, are Starlight, Starbright: Are Stars Conscious (2015) and Stellar Engineering (2019). His more than 100 pa-pers on interstellar travel, the search for extraterrestrial artifacts, observational panpsychism and methods of protecting Earth from asteroid impacts have been published in Journal of the British Interplanetary Society, Acta Astronautica, Spaceflight, Space Technology, Journal of Astronautical Sciences, Journal of Consciousness Exploration and Research, EdgeScience and Mercury. His popular articles have appeared in many publications, including Analog and IEEE Spectrum. In 1998, he won a $5000 prize in the international essay contest on ETI sponsored by the National Institute for Discovery Science. He served on a November 2007 panel organized by Seed magazine to brief Congressional staff on the possibilities of a sustainable, meaningful space program. In 2007 he participated in a workshop at the NASA Marshall Spaceflight Center that investigated ways to protect the Earth from asteroid impacts.