NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA

Friday, July 17, 2009 – Welcome to NewSpace 2009 The NewSpace 2009 conference will open on Friday with a from the heart speech by SFF Founder Rick Tumlinson. Following this will be a screening of the film Orphans of Apollo, which tells the extraordinary true story of a small group of entrepreneurs who commandeered the Mir . Saturday, July 18, 2009 – Enabling the Future Serving as the opening day of the full NewSpace conference, Saturday will begin with a special session organized by NASA Ames, which will explore public and private partnerships, small satellites, and commercial space initiatives at this leading edge research center. The afternoon will investigate what opportunities the future holds for NewSpace. Sunday, July 19, 2009 – The Business of New Space Sunday morning will host a Business Plan Competition, where submitters will com- pete for real prizes. The afternoon will investigate business and policy of NewSpace. The day will close with a series of business case studies, where both successful and unsuccessful startups will be investigated and compared. Monday, July 20, 2009 – Apollo 11 Anniversary: Moon, Mars and Beyond Monday will serve as a look at what destinations lie in the future for NewSpace. To this end, it will investigate not only what destinations exist and how they will be utilized, but also how will we get there. The day will conclude with a final view of “Where Do We Go from Here?” The annual gala will follow, which will serve not only to commemorate Apollo, but to investigate what Apollo means to the future.

Contents

Schedule Overview 2

Detailed Schedule 4

Sponsors 14

Exhibitors 17

Speaker Biographical Information 20

Volunteers 42

Ames Area Maps 42

Conference Organizers 45

1 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA

2 Schedule Overview Schedule Overview

Friday, July 17, 2009 – Welcome to NewSpace 2009 08:15PM – 08:45PM Manifesto for the Frontier - A Space Frontier Vision 08:45PM – 10:00PM Orphans of Apollo, Extended Edition 10:00PM – 10:45PM Orphans Q&A Session 11:00PM – 02:00AM Networking and Cocktail Reception Saturday, July 18, 2009 – Enabling the Future 07:30AM – 08:30AM Registration & Networking 08:30AM – 09:00AM Welcome to the Conference 09:00AM – 09:30AM Ames Opening Keynote 09:30AM – 10:20AM Ames Small Satellites 10:20AM – 10:40AM Networking Break 10:40AM – 11:30AM Ames Commercial Space Efforts 11:30AM – 12:20PM Ames Public/Private Partnerships 12:30PM – 01:30PM Lunch: COTS Networking (Ticketed Event) 01:30PM – 01:45PM Isle of Man Presentation 01:45PM – 02:30PM Big Opportunities in Tiny Satellites: NewSpace and Nanosats 02:30PM – 03:10PM Orbital Fuel Depots: Fueling the Frontier 03:10PM – 03:30PM Coffee and Networking Break 03:30PM – 04:15PM Suborbital Point-to-Point: Going Places or Taking Us For a Ride? 04:15PM – 05:15PM Space Solar Power: Is There Light at the End of the Tunnel? 05:15PM – 05:30PM Featured Speaker: Humanity’s Future in Space 06:00PM – 02:00AM Networking and Cocktail Reception Sunday, July 19, 2009 – The Business of New Space 07:30AM – 08:30AM Registration & Networking 08:30AM – 08:40AM Heinlein NewSpace Business Plan Competition Introduction 08:40AM – 09:40AM Business Plan Presentations 09:40AM – 10:00AM Networking Break 10:00AM – 11:00AM Business Plan Presentations 11:00AM – 11:20AM Networking Break 11:20AM – 12:00PM Judges Comments and Reviews 12:00PM – 01:00PM Boeing Lunch (Ticketed Event) 01:00PM – 02:00PM NewSpace Policy: Accelerating Development or Picking Winners? 02:00PM – 02:20PM Featured Speaker: Commercial Lunar Opportunities 02:20PM – 03:00PM Commercial Lunar Opportunities Panel 03:00PM – 03:20PM Networking Break 03:20PM – 04:00PM Orbital Debris: Should We Be Worried, and What Is Being Done About It? 04:00PM – 05:00PM NewSpace Case Studies: The Thrill of Victory and the Agony of Defeat 05:00PM – 05:15PM Featured Speaker: NewSpace in the Hawaiian Islands – Stepping Stones to the Stars! 05:15PM – 07:00PM Reception 09:00PM – 02:00AM Networking and Cocktails Monday, July 20, 2009 – Apollo 11 Anniversary: Moon, Mars and Beyond 07:30AM – 08:30AM Registration & Networking 08:30AM – 09:00AM Featured Speaker: Can We Even Live on Other Worlds? 09:00AM – 10:00AM The Google Lunar X-Prize: A Look into the Entrepreneurial Future 10:00AM – 10:40AM Featured Speaker: The Role of Commercial Space in Exploration 10:40AM – 11:00AM Networking Break 11:00AM – 01:00PM Lunch: Teachers in Space (Ticketed Event) 01:00PM – 02:00PM The Watch Presents: Asteroids – The Threat and Promise 02:00PM – 02:45PM Behind the Architecture: What Goals Should Drive Exploration? 02:45PM – 03:05PM Networking Break 03:05PM – 04:00PM Science of Settlement 04:00PM – 04:15PM Featured Speaker 04:15PM – 05:15PM Where Do We Go from Here? 06:00PM – 10:30PM Apollo 11 40th Anniversary Gala 10:30PM – 02:00AM Networking and Cocktail Reception

3 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Detailed Schedule

Unless otherwise noted, all sessions will be held in the Eagle room, with meals being held in the World room.

Friday, July 17, 2009 – Welcome to NewSpace 2009 08:15PM – 08:45PM Manifesto for the Frontier - A Space Frontier Vision Rick Tumlinson will present his and our “Vision” of the space frontier movement and concept in a moving talk that goes far beyond the NewSpace industry or government projects and programs. It comes from the heart, and takes us from the spiritual and cultural mandates of our cause and why we must succeed in expanding humanity and life beyond the Earth, through today’s conflicts between the public and private sector and why and how we need both to work together to save the Earth, expand life and open the frontier to all humanity. Rick Tumlinson – Co-founder, Space Frontier Foundation, Orbital Outfitters

08:45PM – 10:00PM Orphans of Apollo, Extended Edition

10:00PM – 10:45PM Orphans Q&A Session Michael Potter – Executive Producer, Free Radical Productions James Muncy – Co-founder, Space Frontier Foundation, President, PoliSpace Rick Tumlinson – Co-founder, Space Frontier Foundation, Orbital Outfitters

11:00PM – 02:00AM Networking and Cocktail Reception Located At Domain Hotel

4 Detailed Schedule: Saturday, July 18, 2009 – Enabling the Future Saturday, July 18, 2009 – Enabling the Future 07:30AM – 08:30AM Registration & Networking

08:30AM – 09:00AM Welcome to the Conference James Muncy – Co-founder, Space Frontier Foundation, President, PoliSpace

09:00AM – 09:30AM Ames Opening Keynote The director of research at Ames discusses the current highlights of work at the center. Steve Zornetzer – Director of Information Sciences and Technology, NASA Ames

09:30AM – 10:20AM Ames Small Satellites John Hines – Astrobionics Manager, NASA Ames Dan Andrews – Project Manager, LCROSS Mission, NASA Ames

10:20AM – 10:40AM Networking Break

10:40AM – 11:30AM Ames Commercial Space Efforts Dan Rasky – Director, Space Portal, NASA Ames John Hogan – Environmental Scientist, NASA Ames Yvonne Cagle – Suborbital Science and Advanced Life Support, NASA Ames

11:30AM – 12:20PM Ames Public/Private Partnerships Jeffrey Smith – Deputy Chief, Entrepreneurial Initiatives Division, NASA Ames Gary Martin – Director of New Ventures and Communications, NASA Ames Michael Marlaire – Director of Partnerships, NASA Ames

12:30PM – 01:30PM Lunch: COTS Networking (Ticketed Event) With Dennis Stone

01:30PM – 01:45PM Isle of Man Presentation Bob Richards – CEO, Odyssey Moon, LTD

5 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA 01:45PM – 02:30PM Big Opportunities in Tiny Satellites: NewSpace and Nanosats Small satellites show great potential, particularly for Operationally Responsive Space concepts and catalyzing the development of cheap access to space. The question is, when do we go small and when do we go large? Belgacem Jaroux (Session Chair) – Director, Mission Design Center, NASA Ames Pete Klupar – Director of Engineering, Earth Observation Through Small Satellites, NASA Ames Milind Pimprikar – Founder and Chairman, CANEUS Rob Call – Pumpkin Inc Dave Masten – President and CEO, Masten Aerospace

02:30PM – 03:10PM Orbital Fuel Depots: Fueling the Frontier Orbital fuel depots may be an ideal tools for building a self-sustaining space industry, so why are they not part of the present ESAS plan? Should they be? How might orbital fuel depots accelerate/assist development of the space frontier, and how do we pay for them? Jon Goff (Session Chair) – Propulsion Engineer, Masten Space Systems Dallas Bienhoff – In-Space and Surface Systems Manager, Boeing Derek Hinspater – Lead, DCSS Propulsion Analysis, United Launch Alliance Dave Huntsman – Special Assistant, Innovative Space Systems Solutions, NASA Glenn

03:10PM – 03:30PM Coffee and Networking Break

03:30PM – 04:15PM Suborbital Point-to-Point: Going Places or Taking Us For a Ride? Can suborbital point-to-point reach a marketable price point? Charles Lauer (Session Chair) – Vice President of Business Development, - plane Inc. Paul Damphousse – Chief of Advanced Concepts, National Security Space Office Kelvin Coleman – Special Assistant for Programs and Planning, FAA A.C. Charania – President, SpaceWorks Commerical Randall Clague – Government Liaison, XCOR Aerospace

04:15PM – 05:15PM Space Solar Power: Is There Light at the End of the Tunnel? Space-based solar power is touted as potential cure for our long-term energy needs, but is it a commercially viable product? If you build it will the customers come? What technical hurdles remain and is it possible to justify SSP investment over ground-based, domestic renewable energy sources? Taylor Dinerman (Session Chair) – Writer and syndicated weekly columnist Paul Damphousse – Chief of Advanced Concepts, National Security Space Office Tom Olson – Co-Founder, ColonyFund.com Amaresh Kollipara – Co-founder & Managing Partner, Earth2Orbit LLC Paul Contursi – President, Colony Fund LLC. Gary Barnhard – Chairman, NSS Executive Committee

05:15PM – 05:30PM Featured Speaker: Humanity’s Future in Space David Livingston – Business consultant, financial advisor, and strategic planner

6 Detailed Schedule: Saturday, July 18, 2009 – Enabling the Future 06:00PM – 02:00AM Networking and Cocktail Reception Located At Domain Hotel

7 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Sunday, July 19, 2009 – The Business of New Space 07:30AM – 08:30AM Registration & Networking

08:30AM – 08:40AM Heinlein NewSpace Business Plan Competition Introduction Bob Werb – Co-founder, Space Frontier Foundation

08:40AM – 09:40AM Business Plan Presentations The finalists in the Heinlein business plan competition will present their plans to the judges and audience. The first presentations by finalists will include Aeronautic Enterprises, Aerospace Technologies, Daniel Sterling Sample, Flagsuit LLC, and Next Giant Leap.

09:40AM – 10:00AM Networking Break

10:00AM – 11:00AM Business Plan Presentations The presentations conclude with finalists NoumeniaC Inc., PD Aerospace, Santa Clara Satellite, Syntiant Social Systems, and Thunderbird Communication.

11:00AM – 11:20AM Networking Break

11:20AM – 12:00PM Judges Comments and Reviews Art Dula – Trustee of America Heinlein Prize Trust Bob Werb – Co-founder, Space Frontier Foundation Esther Dyson – EDventure Holdings John Vornle – President, Long Term Capital Robert Jacobson – President, Desert Sky Holdings & Co-Founder, 62 mile Club David Livingston – Business consultant, financial advisor, and strategic planner Rex Ridenoure – CEO, Ecliptic Enterprises Tom Olson – Co-Founder, ColonyFund.com Armin Ellis – Director at Pine Aerospace LLC Guillermo S¨ohnlein – Managing Director, Space Angels Network; Founder and Chairman, International Association of Space Entrepreneurs Brandi Gallegos – Barclays Global Investors Eva-Jane Lark – Vice President, BMO Nesbitt Burns

12:00PM – 01:00PM Boeing Lunch (Ticketed Event) Paul Eckert – International and Commercial Strategist, The Boeing Company

8 Detailed Schedule: Sunday, July 19, 2009 – The Business of New Space 01:00PM – 02:00PM NewSpace Policy: Accelerating Development or Picking Winners? The government is becoming more involved with NewSpace. Is government market distortion in NewSpace a bad thing if they pay for it? What are the advantages and disadvantages of government involvement from the public/private sector’s perspective, and can the government be a good customer? Ken Davidian (Session Chair) – Program Lead, Federal Aviation Administration’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation (AST) James Muncy – Co-founder, Space Frontier Foundation, President, PoliSpace Bruce Pittman – Flight Projects Director, NASA Ames Space Portal David Livingston – Business consultant, financial advisor, and strategic planner Doug Comstock – Director, Inovative Partnership Program, NASA

02:00PM – 02:20PM Featured Speaker: Commercial Lunar Opportunities Robert Kelso – Manager, Commercial Space Development, NASA JSC

02:20PM – 03:00PM Commercial Lunar Opportunities Panel With NASA currently working to return to the Moon, how can NASA engage NewSpace companies in the very near term to reduce costs and improve efficiency? Specifically, can NASA utilize commercial surface payload delivery, commercially provided communication and navigation, commercial lunar site preparation and site surveys, and commercial commodities derived from the Moon, for example oxygen? Can the NewSpace industry be prepared to provide these commodities within the next 2-3 years? Bruce Pittman (Session Chair) – Flight Projects Director, NASA Ames Space Portal Robert Kelso – Manager, Commercial Space Development, NASA JSC Dennis Wingo – Founder, Skycorp, Inc., CTO, Orbital Recovery Corporation Tom Taylor – Vice President, Lunar Transportation Systems

03:00PM – 03:20PM Networking Break

03:20PM – 04:00PM Orbital Debris: Should We Be Worried, and What Is Being Done About It? Orbital debris is a pressing and ever-growing threat to orbital access, but whose job is it to track that debris, and perhaps more importantly, who is responsible for fixing it? We must consider the specific risks to different orbits and applications, and how we can minimize that risk without compromising capabilities. However, every problem is also said to be an opportunity: how can we use this problem to further develop the frontier. James Dunstan (Session Chair) – Partner, Garvey Schubert Barer Dennis Wingo – Founder, Skycorp, Inc., CTO, Orbital Recovery Corporation Joe Carroll – Tether Applications, Inc Tony DeTora – Legislative Assistant to Congressman Dana Rohrabacher

9 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA 04:00PM – 05:00PM NewSpace Case Studies: The Thrill of Victory and the Agony of Defeat A look at successful and non-successful NewSpace companies, and associated insights for why it turned out the way it did. A good concept and team will only get you so far – what are the factors that determine a company’s capability to raise funding and overcome technical hurdles in a timely manner? Rich Pournelle (Session Chair) – Advocate, Space Frontier Foundation Rex Ridenoure – CEO, Ecliptic Enterprises Dave Masten – President and CEO, Masten Aerospace Ken Davidian – Program Lead, Federal Aviation Administration’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation (AST)

05:00PM – 05:15PM Featured Speaker: NewSpace in the Hawaiian Islands – Stepping Stones to the Stars! Jim Crisafulli – Director, Office of Aerospace Development, State of Hawaii

05:15PM – 07:00PM Reception Located At Conference Center. Sponsored by Tetra Wine (Hill and Wollack Wine Estates).

09:00PM – 02:00AM Networking and Cocktails Located At Domain Hotel

10 Detailed Schedule: Monday, July 20, 2009 – Apollo 11 Anniversary: Moon, Mars and Beyond Monday, July 20, 2009 – Apollo 11 Anniversary: Moon, Mars and Beyond 07:30AM – 08:30AM Registration & Networking World Room Entrance

08:30AM – 09:00AM Featured Speaker: Can We Even Live on Other Worlds? Jim Logan – Associates

09:00AM – 10:00AM The Google Lunar X-Prize: A Look into the Entrepreneurial Future The Google Lunar X-Prize is one of the most visible NewSpace programs at present, but is now the time for it, can it be won, will the result really matter? Some prizes, such as the Ansari X-Prize, have succeeded. Others, such as Bigelow’s America’s Space Prize, go unclaimed, while still others, such as the GLXP, are still pending. Competitors will share some of the business plans behind going to the moon, and consider how we quantify the value of the potential markets on the moon that GLXP competitors may tap to help fund the mission – media, advertising, science, and . Nicole Jordan (Session Chair) – Team Liaison, Fred Bourgeois – Founder, President and CEO at Team FREDNET Bob Richards – CEO, Odyssey Moon, LTD Kevin Myrick – InterPlanetary Ventures Mike Joyce – Founder, Next Giant Leap

10:00AM – 10:40AM Featured Speaker: The Role of Commercial Space in Exploration John Olson – Director, Directorate Integration Office, NASA

10:40AM – 11:00AM Networking Break

11:00AM – 01:00PM Lunch: Teachers in Space (Ticketed Event) Progress on the Teachers in Space project will be discussed. Guests will include the Pathfinder Finalists: Don McMahon, Kathie McMahon, Colleen Howard, Maureen Adams, James Kuhl, Lanette Oliver, Stephen Heck, Rachael Manzer, Chantelle Rose, and Robert “Mike” Schmidt. Edward Wright – Program Manager, Teachers in Space

01:00PM – 02:00PM The Watch Presents: Asteroids – The Threat and Promise Near Earth Objects pose obvious threats, but also represent a promise of vast resources. What infrastructure must be in space before asteroid mining may be considered economically viable, and how can we accurately evaluate the value of certain asteroids in terms of market saturation? Is it possible to eliminate our risk of being blind-sided by an asteroid, and can the the risks and potential of asteroids play off each other to justify action? Rick Tumlinson (Session Chair) – Co-founder, Space Frontier Foundation, Orbital Outfitters David Morrison – Senior Scientist, NASA Astrobiology Institute, NASA Ames John Lewis – Professor of Planetary Sciences, University of Arizona

11 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA 02:00PM – 02:45PM Behind the Architecture: What Goals Should Drive Exploration? With the Augustine panel reevaluating America’s method of reaching the Moon and Beyond, the country is open to many possibilities. What level of risk should be taken by NASA’s plans, and how does this apply to NewSpace initiatives such as COTS? Ultimately, we must consider the goal: to reach destinations and explore, or to create stepping stones and build a lasting and evolving architecture?

James Muncy (Session Chair) – Co-founder, Space Frontier Foundation, President, PoliSpace John Olson – Director, Directorate Integration Office, NASA Dennis Stone – Assistant Manager for Commercial Space Development, NASA Commercial Crew & Cargo Program

02:45PM – 03:05PM Networking Break Sponsored by Space Age Publishing & International Lunar Observatory Associa- tion

03:05PM – 04:00PM Science of Settlement While launch costs are still a significant driver of settlement costs, other scientific and technical challenges must be overcome as well if we are to create sustainable off-world colonies. Can the human body survive a life in an L-5 colony, on the Moon, or on Mars? Can the human race practically reproduce in these environments? Stewart Nozette (Session Chair) – Principle Investigator, LRO Mini-RF Paul Spudis – Senior Staff Scientist, Lunar and Planetary Science Institute Clive Neal – Professor of Civil Engineering and Geological Sciences, University of Notre Dame Gary Barnhard – Chairman, NSS Executive Committee

04:00PM – 04:15PM Featured Speaker Alex Heiche – Executive Vice President, Zero-G Corporation

04:15PM – 05:15PM Where Do We Go from Here? Moon, Mars & Beyond – How, when, and with what tools? Do we go with baby steps or giant leaps? Pete Worden (Session Chair) – Director, NASA Ames Rick Tumlinson – Co-founder, Space Frontier Foundation, Orbital Outfitters Chris McKay – Planetary Scientist, Space Science Division, NASA Ames Jim Logan – Space Medicine Associates

12 Detailed Schedule: Monday, July 20, 2009 – Apollo 11 Anniversary: Moon, Mars and Beyond 06:00PM – 10:30PM Apollo 11 40th Anniversary Gala Held at the Domain Hotel, the annual Gala will reflect on the legacy of Apollo on its 40th anniversary, and consider its significance to the future. The annual NewSpace Industry Awards will be presented, a special announcment regarding Google Earth, and the winner of the Heinlein NewSpace Business Plan Competi- tion will be announced. Networking, drinks and hors d’ouvres are served at 6:00, with dinner at 7:00, and presentations at 7:30. Rick Tumlinson – Co-founder, Space Frontier Foundation, Orbital Outfitters Peter Diamandis – Founder and Chairman, X PRIZE Foundation Bob Richards – CEO, Odyssey Moon, LTD David Webb – Founder, ISU Gwynne Shotwell – President, SpaceX Kevin Stirling – Writer and Producer, Moon Beat John Olson – Director, Directorate Integration Office, NASA Vanna Bonta – Novelist, poet and actress

10:30PM – 02:00AM Networking and Cocktail Reception At Domain Hotel

13 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Sponsors

Boeing Boeing is the world’s leading aerospace company and the largest manufacturer of com- mercial jetliners and military aircraft combined. Additionally, Boeing designs and man- ufactures rotorcraft, electronic and defense systems, missiles, satellites, launch vehicles and advanced information and communication systems. As a major service provider to NASA, Boeing operates the Space Shuttle and International Space Station. The com- pany also provides numerous military and commercial airline support services. Boeing has customers in more than 90 countries around the world and is one of the largest U.S. exporters in terms of sales.

DNK Co., Ltd

Heinlein Trust The Heinlein Prize for Advances in Space Commercialization, generally known as the Heinlein Prize, was founded in 1988 to reward individuals who make practical contri- butions to the commercialization of space. The Heinlein Prize, offers a cash award of $500,000 to one or more individuals for practical accomplishments in the field of com- mercial space activities rewarded by the International Aeronautical Congress in Bremen, Germany. The Heinlein Prize honors the memory of Robert A. Heinlein, one of the most popular science fiction writers of the 20th century. The trust was established soon after his death in 1988 by his widow, Virginia Gerstenfeld Heinlein, whose estate will fund the prize.

NASA Ames Research Center Ames Research Center (Silicon Valley) enables exploration through selected develop- ment, innovative technologies, and interdisciplinary scientific discovery. Ames provides leadership in astrobiology; robotic lunar exploration; technologies for CEV, CLV, and HLV; the search for habitable planets; supercomputing; intelligent/adaptive systems; advanced thermal protection; and airborne astronomy. Ames develops tools for a safer, more efficient national airspace and unique partnerships benefiting NASA’s mission.

National Space Society The National Space Society’s vision is people living and working in thriving communities beyond the Earth. NSS members promote change in social, technical, economic, and political conditions to advance the day when people will live and work in space.

14 Sponsors

Space Age Publishing Company and International Lunar Observatory Association Space Age Publishing Company, publisher of Lunar Enterprise Daily and Space Calen- dar weekly, operates offices on Hawaii Island, Hawaii (1988), and in Palo Alto, California (1977), USA, and pursues a business plan for its third office on the Moon. With its Lu- nar Enterprise Corporation subsidiary, Space Age advances and supports a wide variety of scientific, commercial and international lunar activities and enterprises such as the International Lunar Observatory consistent with a human return to the Moon within the decade. Space Age also promotes Hawaii Space Tours, Stanford on the Moon and the Ad Astra Kansas initiatives – To The Stars. The International Lunar Observatory Association (ILOA) is a Hawaii-based non-profit organization dedicated to expanding human knowledge of the Cosmos through observation from the Moon, via its ILO Pre- cursor, ILO Polar and ILO Human Service missions.

Space Angels Network Space Angels Network is the premier source of aerospace dealflow for investors and of early-stage capital for aerospace-related ventures across a wide spectrum of technologies, markets, and industries. We are a professionally managed national network of accredited investors focused on aerospace-related opportunities.

Space Frontier Foundation The Space Frontier Foundation is an organization composed of space activists, scientists and engineers, media and political professionals, entrepreneurs, and citizens from all backgrounds and all nations. The Space Frontier Foundation is transforming space from a government-owned bureaucratic program into a dynamic and inclusive frontier open to people. SFF is determined to convert the image held by many young people that the future will be worse than the present, and rejects the idea that the world’s greatest moments are in its past.

Space Investment Summit Space Investment Summit 7 (SIS-7) will continue the series of forums hosting en- trepreneurs and investors in a frank dialogue about the best investment opportunities in new space-related ventures. The summit also features presentation of a limited number of pre-qualified space-related business plans from reputable entrepreneurs to an audi- ence of leading seed and early stage investors. The summit series helps investors gain knowledge that might guide future investment decisions, and helps entrepreneurs gain from an increased investor interest in their efforts and development of new opportunities for partnership.

SpaceIsle.com International finance dedicated to space, Independent financial advisors. The Isle of Man Government is pro-space and committed to helping the Space industry flourish..

Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS) SEDS, the Students for the Exploration and Development of Space, is a group dedicated to expanding the role of human exploration and development of space. SEDS seeks to educate the public in such a way as to attain this goal. SEDS has many ways of doing this, including educational outreach, conferences, and chapter projects.

15 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA

Tetra Wine Tetra-a harmonious fusion of four. Our 2006 Tetra Red Wine is a classic blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet franc and Petit Verdot. Each lot was individu- ally harvested from exceptional vineyards in the cooler southern part of the Napa Valley, and then vinified separately in order to fully capture and showcase the essence of the fruit sources. Fermentation variables included cold soak (to increase extractability of color and tannin), inclusion of whole berries (to amplify primary fruit), fermentation temperature, cap management, and extended maceration (to soften tannins and stabi- lize color). Following fermentation, the free run was racked to small French oak barrels (75% new), where the wines underwent malolactic conversion. Wines were aged for 18 months in barrel, and then the final blend was painstakingly crafted through many sessions of trial-and-error tastings, finally honing in on the best-of-the-best. The wine was bottled without fining or filtration to maximize flavors and textures.

16 Exhibitors Exhibitors

Aerospace Technology Working Group We are a group of seasoned aerospace and other professionals who seek to further hu- manitys exploration of space while simultaneously benefiting people on earth. We hold semi-annual and special forums to discuss and treat topics judged pertinent to devel- oping a space-faring people. Using our substantial base of engineering and scientific expertise, we provide fee-based strategic and technical consulting, public speaking, and ATWG member teams to work specific targeted areas. Emphasis is on the use of sys- tems engineering and system of systems engineering, while accounting for the broader effects on other industries, programs, the environment, and the day-to-day lives of this planets inhabitants. We collaborate actively with other space-related national and in- ternational organizations. We conduct our work using both conventional and advanced communication and computer methods.

Astronaut Teacher Alliance

Ecliptic Enterprises Ecliptic designs, builds and tests hardware that gets launched, flown or used in the field. We’re often involved with headline-making and award-winning projects, applying our extensive experience in the design, analysis, assembly, test and operations of aerospace systems and subsystems. Our staff’s combined experience includes dozens of space missions and aerospace projects. From the Big Picture to the details, we know our business.

International Space University International Space University provides graduate-level training to the future leaders of the global space community at its Central Campus in Strasbourg, France, and at locations around the world. In its two-month Summer Session and one-year Masters program, ISU offers students a unique Core Curriculum covering all disciplines related to space programs and enterprises.

Lost Arts Media and Entertainment We produce audio and video services at alternative-themed conferences throughout the country. We have a portable video production suite, including the ability to insert titles and introductory music with two or more camera switching onto a digital format. Ask about our below-market pricing or no-upfront-cost video packages. We can also provide onsite audio, video and DVD duplication and sales to your audience.

National Space Society The National Space Society’s vision is people living and working in thriving communities beyond the Earth. NSS members promote change in social, technical, economic, and political conditions to advance the day when people will live and work in space.

17 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA

Space Investment Summit Space Investment Summit 7 (SIS-7) will continue the series of forums hosting en- trepreneurs and investors in a frank dialogue about the best investment opportunities in new space-related ventures. The summit also features presentation of a limited number of pre-qualified space-related business plans from reputable entrepreneurs to an audi- ence of leading seed and early stage investors. The summit series helps investors gain knowledge that might guide future investment decisions, and helps entrepreneurs gain from an increased investor interest in their efforts and development of new opportunities for partnership.

Space Teddy Bear Collection by ZSpace The Teddy Bears, which awaken our childhood memories, have been loved as a symbol of peace, happiness, and tenderness all over the world. Now Space Teddy Bears have come to NewSpace! Space Teddy Bears can play a big role to encourage space activities for children as space ambassadors. The Space Teddy Bears Project has started educational “Missions” for children.

Space Tourism Society Imagine floating in zero gravity while gazing at our beautiful planet Earth majestically rolling by your view port. Millions of people from around the world would love to have such a wonderful life-enhancing experience. Founded in 1996, the Society is the first organization specifically focused on the space tourism industry. Our goals are to conduct the research, build public desire, and acquire the financial and political power to make space tourism available to as many people as possible as soon as possible.

Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS) SEDS, the Students for the Exploration and Development of Space, is a group dedicated to expanding the role of human exploration and development of space. SEDS seeks to educate the public in such a way as to attain this goal. SEDS has many ways of doing this, including educational outreach, conferences, and chapter projects.

The Development of : Book Signing Interest in outer space property rights has been growing since Congress funded NASA’s Project Constellation to enable missions to the Moon and Mars for eventual colonization. Public debate is intensifying over proper ways to incentivize private enterprise in space and under what circumstances title may be acquired over lunar and Martian resources. Thomas Gangale will be signing his new book, “The Development of Outer Space: Sovereignty and Property Rights in International Space Law”.

VirtuePlay Lunar Explorer Some day, you will be able to book a trip to the Moon. Until then, we bring the Moon to you. The VirtuePlay Lunar Explorer is a realistic interactive visual representation of the Moon using actual data collected by NASA spacecraft and earthbound telescopes. It uses real-time 3D graphics techniques to provide an immersive virtual environment for the user to explore our nearest neighbor in a variety of ways - at a distance, in orbit, or walking on the lunar surface.

18 Exhibitors

XCOR Aerospace Founded in 1999, XCOR Aerospace is a small, privately-held California C-Corporation. Our headquarters and development facilities are located at the Mojave Spaceport and Civilian Aerospace Test Center in Mojave, California. XCOR engages in research, development, and production of reusable rocket-powered, horizontal launch vehicles for suborbital, and ultimately, orbital travel.

19 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Speaker Biographical Information

Dan Andrews Dan Andrews is the Project Manager for the LCROSS Mission, led from NASA’s Ames Research Center. He is an electrical & mechanical engineer by training, and has served on many projects in that capacity, including the Personal Satellite Assistant (PSA), with a particular interest in Robotics. He earned his B.S. in Electrical Engineering from San Jose State University, and his M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Stanford University.

Gary Barnhard Gary Barnhard is the owner and president of Barnhard Associates, LLC, a systems engineering consulting firm and Internet Service Provider (Xisp.net) based in Cabin John, Maryland. He is a robotic space systems engineer whose professional work includes a wide range of robotic, space, and computer systems engineering projects. Over the last 32 years he has been extensively involved in the space advocacy community. Mr. Barnhard received a B. S. in engineering from the University of Maryland College Park (UMCP), and participated in NASA’s Graduate Student Researchers Program. Mr. Barnhard subsequently served as Space Systems Engineer and Information Systems Architect for EER Systems, and as a Senior Space Systems Engineer on the Grumman Space Station Systems Engineering and Integration Contract (SSEIC) responsible for advanced automation and robotic systems support. Mr. Barnhard is a senior member of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. He was the Executive Secretary of the Space Station Freedom Program Robotics Working Group and received a NASA Group Achievement Award for the Robotic Systems Integration Standards Interface Design Review Team, as well as an Outstanding Support Award from the Canadian Space Agency Space Station Freedom Program Liaison Office. He received the National Space Society’s Space Pioneer Award in 2004 and the NSS Award for Excellence in 2005 for his efforts on the behalf of the Society.

Dallas Bienhoff Dallas Bienhoff is the Boeing Manager for In-Space and Surface Systems for the Vision for Space Exploration as well as new commercial opportunities in cislunar space. Mr. Bienhoff has 33 years of experience at Boeing, Rockwell, The Aerospace Corporation, Rocketdyne, and Martin Marietta. Key programs he has worked include: International Space Station (ISS), X-38 Crew Return Vehicle, X-33 Operational RLV, Space Explo- ration Initiative, the Space Shuttle Main Engine and the Titan launch vehicle. Dallas earned his Master of Science in Engineering at California State University-Northridge in 1985 and his BSME at Florida Institute of Technology in 1974. He is a member of AIAA, AAS, and the following grassroots organizations: The National Space Society, The Planetary Society, The Oasis Society, and The Mars Society. Dallas is also a Space Frontier Foundation Advocate

Vanna Bonta Vanna Bonta is a novelist, poet and actress who is best known as the author of “Flight: A Quantum Fiction Novel” (Meridian House 1996) the story of an amnesiac girl with no navel, and award-winning collections of poetry as well as for a cameo role as Zed’s queen in the fantasy movie The Beastmaster. She is also the inventor of the 2suit, a garment designed to facilitate effortless intimacy in the weightless environments such as outer space, or on planets with low gravity.

20 Speaker Biographical Information Fred Bourgeois Fred J. Bourgeois, III has been dreaming and making plans to pursue space exploration since he was two. Growing up in a “NASA family” in Huntsville, Alabama, where he attended Virgil I. “Gus” Grissom High School probably had a lot to do with it. Bourgeois was early recognized for his mathematical talents, and went on to receive his BSCS degree from Tulane University’s School of Engineering. After attending the Tu- lane Graduate School, he began a career in academia teaching Computer Science at the University of Minnesota, and later for Eaton Corporation’s Information Management Systems Division, and several University extension programs. Bourgeois’ teaching for Eaton included support for clients utilizing satellite systems and networks, and com- mand, control, and communications programs. Bourgeois next worked as a contractor on classified programs at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Weary of the classified world, his next endeavour brought him to Santa Cruz, California, where he initially worked for MetaWare Incorporated as a Senior Compiler Developer, and then into his own software development and consulting business, FREDNET. Now operating for more than 16 years, the company was renamed Applios Inc. (Applied Open Source Technol- ogy) in 1999 and continues to provide Software Development, Systems Engineering, Networking, and Information Security solutions today. Applios’ current and former clients include Lockheed Martin, NEC, AMD, Transmeta, Resilience, Sun, SJSU, many Silicon Valley startup companies, and a number of local, regional, and national Internet Service Providers.

Yvonne Cagle During May 1989, while a flight surgeon assigned to the 48th Tactical Hospital, United Kingdom, Dr. Cagle volunteered to serve as the Air Force Medical Liaison Officer for the STS-30 Atlantis Shuttle Mission to test the Magellan Spacecraft. She was assigned to the Trans Atlantic (TAL) Landing site at Banjul, West Africa, to provide emergency rescue and evacuation of the shuttle crew should it have been required. Dr. Cagle has contributed on-going data to the Longitudinal Study on Astronaut Health, and served as a consultant for space telemedicine. She was a member of the NASA Working Group and traveled to Russia to establish international medical standards and procedures for astronauts. She also conducted health screenings of Mir-18 consultants from the Russian Federation. Selected by NASA in April 1996, Dr. Cagle reported to the Johnson Space Center in August 1996. She completed two years of training and evaluation, and is qualified for flight assignment as a mission specialist. Initially assigned to the Astronaut Office Operations Planning Branch, supporting Shuttle and Space Station, followed by a special assignment to NASA Ames Research Center. Dr. Cagle is currently assigned as the lead ARC Astronaut Science Liaison and Strategic Relationships Manager for Google and other Silicon Valley Programmatic Partnerships. Dr. Cagles groundbreaking work is preserving historic NASA space legacy data while, simultaneously, galvanizing NASAs lead in global mapping, sustainable energies, green initiatives, and disaster preparedness.

Rob Call Robert Call represents Pumpkin Inc., manufacturers of the popular CubeSat Kit, a standardized chassis and electronics platform for building picosatellites. Originally de- veloped in 2000 while assisting students at Stanford University and Santa Clara Univer- sity on how to use their Salvo RTOS embedded software on microcontrollers destined for microsatellite missions, the project eventually developed into a comprehensive, off-the- shelf CubeSat kit. The first three production CubeStat Kits were delivered to the first commercial customer in Q4 2003, as the CubeSat Kit has evolved into a very powerful and versatile design that meets the needs of a wide range of picosatellite missions.

21 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Joe Carroll Mr. Carroll was born in San Francisco and grew up in the Bay Area. He received a BA in Philosophy in 1969 from Catholic University of America. Over the next 12 years he worked as a math teacher, store manager, photographer, and solar energy researcher. Since 1981 his main focus has been advanced space transportation concepts, with an emphasis on the use of long tethers to sling payloads into higher or lower orbits. He proposed and led the development of the Small Expendable Deployment System (SEDS), which was used 3 times in orbit. SEDS deployed tethers 4 to 20 km long, proving out tether concepts for spacecraft stationkeeping and controlled deorbit without . He also developed the deployer and wire for the Plasma Motor Generator (PMG), which tested electrodynamic reboost in 1993. He has also worked on several electrodynamic concepts, including reboost of the Mir station, and a NIAC study of debris removal by electrodynamic tether which he will discuss at the Sunday panel. He has also worked on unmanned and manned reentry vehicle concepts for NASA MSFC and Ames and several startups. Mr. Carroll has 5 patents: 3 on electrodynamic tether operation (with Eugene Levin), and two on enhanced “tile-type” thermal protection materials (with co-inventors from NASA Ames). His most recent work was design lead for the Naval Research Lab on a high-voltage electron collection experiment which was launched 2 months ago.

A.C. Charania Mr. A.C. Charania is President of SpaceWorks Commercial, a division of SpaceWorks Engineering, Inc. (SEI). Mr. Charania works with entrepreneurial and established aerospace clients to explore future commercial opportunities and to develop businesses to service those markets. He also champions and incubates SpaceWorks- led ventures. As head of SpaceWorks Commercial, he is an advocate for and analyst of commercial space markets, venture-driven space initiatives, and international space activities. Mr. Charania has been with the firm since 2000. He was previously Senior Futurist and head of the Engineering Economic Group (EEG) of SpaceWorks Engineering. Mr. Charania holds an B.S. and M.S. in Aerospace Engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology (with a concentration in systems design and optimization) and a B.A. in Economics/Mathematics from Emory University. He is currently a Senior Member of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA), a member of the Space Power Association, and a Board Member of the Space Frontier Foundation (SFF).

Randall Clague Randall Clague is the Government Liaison for XCOR Aerospace.

Kelvin Coleman Kelvin Coleman is a Special Assistant for Programs and Planning at the Federal Avia- tion Administration.

22 Speaker Biographical Information Doug Douglas A. Comstock is the director of NASA’s Innovative Partnerships Program (IPP). Comstock The IPP provides leveraged technology for NASA’s mission directorates, programs and projects through investments and technology partnerships with industry, academia, gov- ernment agencies and national laboratories. Comstock also is responsible for directing the IPP portfolio of technology investments and partnering mechanisms including Small Business Innovative Research, Small Business Technology Transfer Research, the Cen- tennial Challenges and the Innovative Partnerships Seed Fund. Additionally, he is re- sponsible for intellectual property management and technology transfer that will provide broad societal benefits from the nation’s investment in NASA’s space and aeronautics missions, and for encouraging and facilitating partnerships with the emerging com- mercial space sector including the agency’s purchase of emerging commercial services. Comstock previously served as the NASA comptroller, as well as the founding director of NASA’s Strategic Investments Division. Before coming to NASA, Comstock spent four years as a program examiner in OMB, with responsibility for NASA’s human space flight activities, biological and physical research and personnel. Prior to his government service, he was Director of Engineering with the Futron Corporation, a Bethesda, Md.- based technology consulting firm, and began his career with General Dynamics Space Systems Division, conducting preliminary design and systems analysis for numerous aerospace systems, from strategic defense to advanced space transportation. Comstock has undergraduate degrees from the University of Washington in both mechanical en- gineering and architecture. He did his graduate studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and received masters degrees in both aeronautics and astronautics, and technology and policy.

Paul Contursi Paul Contursi was already a seasoned amateur astronomer and space activist when he was chosen, at age twelve, to be one of about 18 students selected from the New York City public school system for a special NASA space science summer program. In the 1970s, he wrote about space issues for such organizations as The Viking Fund and The Planetary Society. He is a lifetime and founding member of the Mars Society and was elected President of the New York Chapter. Two years ago, he and fellow Mars Society member George Smith converted the New York Chapter into a separate non-profit corporation, now known as the Mars Society of New York, Inc., as a tool to facilitate local fund raising activities. He has regularly lectured, written and met with elected officials on behalf of the Mars Society and is also engaged in fund raising activities for the national organization. In addition, Mr. Contursi is President of The Colony Fund LLC, a company he co-founded with fellow Mars Society of New York veteran, Tom Olson. The Colony Fund’s goal is to offer a retail venture capital fund priced to enable millions of potential investors to participate in building the commercial space infrastructure of the 21st century.

23 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Jim Crisafulli Jim Crisafulli pursued joint undergraduate studies in Physics and Zoology at Harvey Mudd College and Pomona College. Following a two-year assignment with the Peace Corps as a secondary school physics teacher in Fiji, he returned to Claremont Graduate niversity to obtain a Masters Degree in International Studies, with special emphasis on the technologies and economies of Asia/Pacific societies. In 1978, Jim was awarded a 3- year international research fellowship with the East-West Center in Honolulu, where he continued to investigate technology development issues affecting Asia/Pacific communi- ties. He subsequently held positions as an economic development specialist and program director for the Honolulu Community Action Program (HCAP) and the Economic De- velopment Corporation of Honolulu. In 1988, Jim joined the Hawaii State Government to serve as Space Program Projects Manager for the State Office of Space Industry (until its closure in May, 1995), and subsequently served as Science & Technology Officer and Research & Development Coordinator for the State’s Dept. of Business, Economic De- velopment & Tourism (DBEDT). In his current capacity as Director of DBEDT’s new Office of Aerospace Development (OAD), Jim serves as the State’s representative for the aerospace industry in Hawaii, and continues to work with various municipal, state, federal, and international agencies and institutions to promote innovative applications of advanced space-related technologies, with special emphasis on satellite telecommuni- cations and space-based remote sensing networks, space-based power systems, disaster management networks, and commercial space launch activities. As Executive Director for the -U.S. Science, Technology & Space Applications Program (JUSTSAP), Jim also coordinates bilateral and multinational space activities through Hawaii, in- cluding development of the Pacific International Space Center for Exploration Systems (PISCES) on the Big Island of Hawaii, to facilitate the research, development, testing and evaluation of innovative technologies, as well as professional training and aerospace education programs, to support future robotic and human missions to the Moon, Mars and beyond.

Paul Lieutenant Colonel Damphousse currently serves as the Chief Engineer for the Com- Damphousse munications Functional Integration Office of the National Security Space Office. He attended the University of Arizona on a NROTC scholarship graduating with a Bach- elor of Science degree in Business and Public Administration in 1989. In August 1990, Second Lieutenant Damphousse completed the Basic School in Quantico, Virginia. In January 1991, he began flight training in Pensacola, Florida and Corpus Christi, Texas, was designated a Naval Aviator in July 1992, and served overseas and at home in this role for seven years. In June 1999, Major Damphousse reported to the Naval Post- graduate School in Monterey, California. Graduating in December 2001 with a Master of Science degree in Astronautical Engineering, he was assigned to the Operations Di- rectorate (J32) of US Space Command in Colorado Springs. There he served as Space Control and Special Technical Operations action officer and was involved in planning for Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom. Maj Damphousse reported to HMH- 361 in December 2003 as the squadron operations officer and deployed to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) II. Promoted to his present rank in September 2005, Lieutenant Colonel Damphousse served as the Director of Safety and Standardization for Marine Aircraft Group (MAG) 16 (Reinforced) between combat deployments. In February 2006 he deployed to Iraq as the Operations Officer for MAG-16 (Rein) in sup- port of OIF 05-07. In this capacity he was responsible for planning and overseeing the daily operations of all Marine aircraft in the OIF theater of operations.

24 Speaker Biographical Information Ken Davidian Ken Davidian currently works as the Program Lead for the “Encourage, Facilitate, and Promote” mission element in the Federal Aviation Administration’s Office of Commer- cial Space Transportation (AST) in Washington, D.C. In addition to his FAA work experience, was the Program Manager for and the ESMD Com- mercial Development Policy leader, and has worked for Paragon Space Development Corp. as Program Manager and also as Director of Operations consulting to Cargo Lifter Development. Mr. Davidian spent the first 18 years of his career working for NASA Glenn Research Center in the area of analytical and experimental research on the performance of liquid rocket engines. For a three-year period, NASA Glenn loaned Mr. Davidian to work at the International Space University as the Assistant Director of Operations for the 1997-1999 Summer Session Programs.

Tony DeTora Tony DeTora is a legislative assistant for Congressman Dana Rohrabacher.

Peter Dr. Peter H. Diamandis is a pioneer and leader in the commercial space arena, hav- Diamandis ing created many of the leading entrepreneurial space companies opening the personal spaceflight industry. Dr. Diamandis is the Chairman and CEO of the X PRIZE Foun- dation, which awarded the $10,000,000 for private spaceflight and is now implementing prizes in a variety of different arenas and has launched the Archon X PRIZE for Genomics, the Google Lunar X PRIZE and Progressive Automotive X PRIZE. Diamandis also serves as the Co-Founder and Managing Director of Space Ad- ventures Ltd, CEO of the Zero Gravity Corporation, and Chairman & Co-Founder of the Rocket Racing League. In 1987, Diamandis co-Founded the International Space University (ISU) where he served as the University’s first managing director. Today he serves as a Trustee of the $30M ISU that is based in Strasbourg, France. Prior to ISU, Diamandis served as Chairman of Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS) an organization he founded at MIT in 1980. Dr. Diamandis attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) where he received his undergraduate degree in molecular genetics and graduate degree in aerospace engineering. After MIT he attended Harvard Medical School where he received his M.D. In 2005 he has was also awarded an honorary Doctorate from the International Space University. He is the winner of the 2007 Arthur C. Clarke Award for Innovation, the 2006 (inaugural) Heinlein Award, the 2006 Lindbergh Award, the 2006 Wired RAVE Award, the 2006 Neil Armstrong Award for Aerospace Achievement and Leadership, the Konstantine Tsiolkovsky Award, twice the winner of the Aviation & Space Technology Laurel, and the 2003 World Technology Award for Space. Diamandis’ mission is to open the space frontier for humanity. His personal motto is: “The best way to predict the future is to create it yourself!”

Taylor Taylor Dinerman writes a syndicated weekly column for the Space Review Dinerman (www.thespacereview.com) and has written on space and defense issues for the Wall Street Journal, National Review and Ad Astra the magazine of the National Space Society, Space News and elsewhere. He was an author of the textbook Space Science for Students and has been a part time consultant for the US Defense Department. His views in no way represent those of the department.

25 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Art Dula Arthur M. (“Art”) Dula is a space lawyer, a patent attorney, the literary executor for major science fiction author Robert Heinlein, and the CEO of the private spaceflight company, Excalibur Almaz. He has taught space law for the University of Houston, and was a Visiting Distinguished Professor of Law, University of Akron. He consulted NASA on the space shuttle payload contract, and served as legal advisor to the U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment. He has been awarded the Space Pioneer Award from the National Space Society, and the Gagarin Medal from the Russian Federation of Cosmonautics.

James Dunstan James E. Dunstan is a partner in the Washington, D.C. office of Garvey Schubert Barer, where for over 25 years he has concentrated on issues of high technology, communica- tions, and space law. Jim represents a significant number of burgeoning outer space companies: he drafted and negotiated the first commercial lease for the Russian Mir space station on behalf of MirCorp. He has drafted and helped negotiate contracts with several potential commercial space passengers. Jim was a founding board member of LunaCorp and assisted in negotiating with the Russian Space Agency and NASA to shoot the first television commercial onboard the International Space Station (ISS). He helped arrange for the first pitch of the 2002 baseball World Series to be conducted onboard ISS. Mr. Dunstan has also been involved in export issues (ITAR) related to experimental hardware launched on Russian rockets. Jim assisted in the drafting of the Virginia Spaceflight Liability and Immunity Act, as well as the Virginia “Zero G/Zero Tax” legislation as a member of the Virginia Joint Commission on Technology and Sci- ence (JCOTS) Aerospace Advisory Committee, and a member of the Space Frontier Foundations Teachers In Space project.

Esther Dyson Esther Dyson is an active investor in a variety of mostly disruptive start-ups. Her portfolio of private space and air travel investments includes Coastal Aviation Software, XCOR Aerospace, /Zero G, Icon Aircraft, and Airship Ventures. She has flown weightless on Zero-G four times, and hopes to go up again soon. She is also the organizer of Flight School, an executive workshop for air and space entrepreneurs. (It took a break this year in the face of a crumbling economy, but will return for the fourth time in 2009.) On the IT side, her investments have included Flickr and del.icio.us, both sold to Yahoo! and Medstory, sold to Microsoft. Currently, she sits on the boards of 23andMe, Meetup, WPP Group, Eventful.com, Evernote, Boxbe and Yandex, the leading Russian search company. Dyson sold her business EDventure Holdings, along with its Release1.0 newsletter and PC Forum conference, to CNET Networks in 2004; PC Forum and Release 1.0 played key roles in the early development of the PC software marketplace and the commercial Internet. Dyson left CNET at the end of 2006 and (with permission) has resumed doing business under the name of EDventure Holdings.

26 Speaker Biographical Information Paul Eckert Dr. Paul Eckert holds the position of International & Commercial Strategist within the Space Exploration division of The Boeing Company. In this role, Dr. Eckert devel- ops strategies to strengthen global business relationships and explore new commercial markets. He serves as Coordinator of the international Space Investment Summit Coali- tion, which presents events linking investors and entrepreneurs in order to encourage investment in entrepreneurial innovation. Within the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Dr. Eckert chairs the Emerging Markets Working Group of the Space Enterprise Council. He also chairs the Entrepreneurship and Investment Technical Committee of the In- ternational Astronautical Federation and acts as commercial coordinator for the Lunar Exploration Analysis Group. Having joined The Boeing Company in 2003, Dr. Eckert’s prior roles have involved space exploration planning, infrastructure design, Earth ob- servation, space science, government relations, and communications. Previously, within the U.S. Department of Commerce, he helped promote the growth of the commercial space industry, as part of the Office of Space Commercialization. Earlier, in the NASA Office of Legislative Affairs, Dr. Eckert coordinated liaison with the U.S. Congress in- volving space and aeronautics research, information technology, systems engineering, and technology transfer to industry. Prior to this, he served as science and technology advisor to U.S. Senator John Breaux, a key member of the Senate Commerce Commit- tee, with jurisdiction over NASA. Dr. Eckert holds a bachelor’s degree with high honors from Harvard University and a doctoral degree from Michigan State University.

Armin Ellis Dr. Ellis recieved his Ph.D. from Dartmouth College in 2008, focusing on Instrumenta- tion, Imaging, Nonlinear Optics, Lasers, Spacecraft Systems. After graduating he began working at JPL in the Mission Systems Concepts group, and founded the recently pur- chased Pine Aerospace LLC.

Brandi Gallegos Brandi Gallegos currently works as an Associate at Global Active Advanced IT, and Barclays Global Investors. She recieved her Masters of Financial Engineering degree from the University of California, Berkeley, in 2006, after receiving an MBA from Oxford in 2003 and a BA in Finance from NYU in 1999.

Jon Goff Jonathan has a Masters degree in Mechanical Engineering and a Bachelor’s degree in Manufacturing Engineering from Brigham Young University. Jonathan is a recognized expert in the area of cis-lunar architecture and low cost space flight systems. Jonathan has been instrumental in the design and testing of the XV500LIT and XVT750LIT engines.

27 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Alex Heiche Alex Heiche is the Executive Vice President of Zero Gravity Corporation. Mr. Heiche graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in Criminal Justice from the University of Maryland in College Park, MD. In 1995 he became the Director of Marketing and Product Man- ager for ICARUS Corporation in Rockville, Maryland. While at ICARUS, Mr. Heiche oversaw the marketing of Artificial Intelligence (AI) engineering software and services to petrochemical, chemical, utility, pulp and paper, food and nuclear power industries worldwide. In 2000 Mr. Heiche became the Vice President of Sales, Marketing and Business Development for Livingnexus in Arlington, Virginia. Later in 2002, Mr. He- iche worked for OC Systems as their Vice President of Sales, Marketing and Business Development. OC Systems specialized in the development and marketing of enterprise- wide application monitoring systems and software development testing/debugging tools. Customers included variety of Federal Government and Fortune 1000 software compa- nies. Mr. Heiche became the Senior Vice President of Seneca One in 2006 which is located in Bethesda, Maryland. Seneca One provides cash and finance raising strategies to annuity recipients. Mr. Heiche joined ZERO-G in 2009 where he helps oversee the marketing and development of weightless flights for entertainment, research, education and filming purposes.

John Hines Mr. Hines is the Biomolecular Systems Research Program (BSRP) program manager and manager of the AstroBionics group at NASA Ames Research Center.

Derek Derek Hinspater is currently the lead of the DCSS Propulsion Analysis group at United Hinspater Launch Alliance.

John Hogan John Hogan is an Environmental Scientist at NASA Ames.

Dave Dave Huntsman is a 34-year NASA engineer with extensive experience in space oper- Huntsman ations, system engineering and integration and large domestic and international space program management while working at several NASA Centers including the Johnson Space Center, NASA Headquarters, and most recently the Glenn Research Center in Cleveland. His positions have included Skylab flight controller; space shuttle systems and payloads flight controller for 25 shuttle flights; system engineering and program management in both the Space Shuttle and Space Station Program Offices, in the lat- ter as head of System Engineering and Project Integration; and head of the Systems Engineering, and Engineering Design and Analysis Divisions at NASA Glenn. He has served as the Chairman of the Board of the non-profit Japan-America Society of North- east Ohio.He received his Bachelor’s in Aerospace Engineering from the University of Cincinnati and has done other studies at the University of Houston, Middlebury Col- lege, and Keio University in Tokyo, Japan. He is currently the Special Assistant for Innovative Space Systems Solutions at the NASA Glenn Research Center.

28 Speaker Biographical Information Robert Mr. Jacobson is President of Desert Sky Holdings, LLC and Co-Founder of the 62 Mile Jacobson Club. Robert’s professional experience includes real estate marketing & brokerage, music performance/production, business development, and publishing. He is the co- founder of 62MileClub a business dedicated to broadening and mainstreaming the ‘New Space’ movement. Desert Sky Holdings was notably the first institutional style investor in XCOR Aerospace, a prominent ‘New Space’ engineering firm. Robert currently works closely with Desert Sky Holdings portfolio companies in the areas of business innovation and development. He attended the University of Southern California where he studied Music and Business. Robert also holds an MFA from California Institute of the Arts.

Belgacem Dr. Belgacem Jaroux is Chief of the Small Satellite Division at NASA Ames Research Jaroux Center, as well as the director of the Mission Design Center, also at Ames. He is also a Consulting Professor for the Aeronautics and Astronautics Department at Stanford.

Nicole Jordan Nicole Jordan is the Team Liaison for the Google Lunar X-Prize.

Mike Joyce Next Giant Leap was founded in November of 2007 by Mr. Michael Joyce and forms the core of the organization. By leveraging his business and leadership abilities, Michael has built a small but focused team that is unsurpassed in terms of experience and resources.

Robert Kelso Rob Kelso is the manager of Lunar Commercial Services for NASA. He has been with NASA for 35 years. He has a bachelor degree in physics and an MBA. During the 1980’s and 90’s, Rob served as a Space Shuttle Flight Director in Mission Control for 25 missions. In 2000, Rob served as the Deputy Director for Safety and Mission Assurance at NASA Johnson Space Center. In 2002, Rob took a senior rotational assignment to the Houston Technology Center in accelerating innovative technologies within entrepreneurial startup companies. Rob then lead the technology investing at the Johnson Space Center for several years before occupying his current post of engaging the private sector in early lunar service capabilities. Rob has been awarded both the NASA Exceptional Service Medal and the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal.

Pete Klupar Pete Klupar is the Director of Engineering for Earth Observation Through Small Satel- lites at NASA Ames.

29 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Amaresh Amaresh is Co-Founder and Managing Partner of Earth2Orbit, LLC, which is a global Kollipara provider of satellite launch services. Earth2Orbit works with the Indian Space Research Organization to provide commercial launch services to a variety of satellite clients. In addition to his role at Earth2Orbit, Amaresh serves as a management consultant and financial advisor to a generation of entrepreneurs by helping them develop viable busi- nesses and prepare for the world of venture finance. Amaresh’s vision to provide man- agement guidance to entrepreneurs led him to co-produce the first and second annual Space Venturing Forum, an entrepreneurial event hosted by the National Space Society. Amaresh enjoyed a successful career with the Strategy group of Accenture, where he managed key strategy offerings and developed recommendations for Global 500 clients such as Cisco, HP, and Siemens. He specialized in creating business cases, operational plans, Internet strategies, and M&A assessments. He has been influential in pricing multi-million dollar private equity deals as well as in assisting clients to strategically allocate large-scale investments. Amaresh holds an MBA degree from the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University. He also earned a B.A. in Molecular and Cell Biology with an emphasis in Neurobiology from the University of California at Berkeley.

Eva-Jane Lark Eva-Jane Lark is a Vice-President and Investment Advisor with BMO Nesbitt Burns, one of Canadas largest full-service investment firms. For over 20 years, she has provided expert advice on a wide variety of investment and wealth management issues. In 2003, EVA revived her childhood passion for seeing humanity live and thrive beyond Earth. Researching the state of the space industry, she began to consider how to contribute to such a future by taking a more active role. She has presented papers at space conferences, starting with the Investment Financing of Exploration. In that effort, she took a probing look at how historical journeys of exploration had been funded, discovering a number of parallels facing the space exploration community today. She has been invited as a speaker and panelist to discuss topics including: financing for new space companies and markets; business accelerators; business case issues facing Space- based Solar Power as a future energy source; and for her insights as a keen observer of the emerging new space industries. She was among the contributors to the NSSOs (National Security Space Office) Space-Based Solar Power Architecture Study in 2007, with her work featured as the studys central business case analysis. She has been both a guest and a guest host on The Space Show and is the creator, author and host of the newly launched “EVA Interviews: The Business of the new Space Age”. Eva-Jane Lark is a Fellow of the Canadian Securities Institute and holds an Honors Bachelors Degree in Commerce. She is a member of the Management Advisory Board for the Center for Space Power at Texas A&M University (now called SERC Space Engineering Research Center).

Charles Lauer Mr. Lauer is a graduate of the University of Michigan College of Architecture & Urban Planning. He is Vice President of Business Development for Rocketplane, Inc. He is also a successful real estate consultant and developer, and the President of Peregrine Properties, Ltd. in Lansing, Michigan. Mr. Lauer has been responsible for negotiating, obtaining regulatory approvals and arranging financing for over $350 million in numerous successful real estate development projects. He has been researching and developing potential business opportunities in space since 1991, and has published numerous general interest articles and technical papers on commercial space development. Mr. Lauer has been a consultant to Boeing, NASA and several space start-ups on commercial space development. He is now actively involved in several new spaceport projects around the world; and is an Advocate and a member of the Board of Advisors of the Space Frontier Foundation.

30 Speaker Biographical Information John Lewis John S. Lewis, Professor of Planetary Sciences at the University of Arizona, has research interests in two distinct areas: applications of chemistry to planetary sciences, and space development. The former program includes modeling of chemical processes in the early Solar System, condensation-accretion models of the terrestrial planets and giant-planet satellite systems, the compositional relationships between meteorites, asteroids, comets, and planets, and the chemical evolution of planetary atmospheres and surfaces. His other interests center on the characterization and economic development of the material and energy resources of near-Earth space. Lewis is the author of numerous books on planetary science and space development, including Space Resources: Breaking the Bonds of Earth (with Ruth A. Lewis, 1987), Resources of Near-Earth Space (principal editor, 1993), Rain of Iron and Ice: The Very Real Threat of Comet and Asteroid Bombardment (1996), Mining the Sky: Untold Riches from the Asteroids, Comets, and Planets (1996), Physics and Chemistry of the Solar Sytem (1997), Worlds Without End: The Exploration of Planets Known and Unknown (1998), and Comet and Asteroid Impact Hazards on a Populated Earth: Computer Modeling (1999). Dr. Lewis is also on the Board of Directors of the Space Studies Institute.

David Dr. David Livingston is a business consultant, financial advisor, and strategic planner. Livingston He currently specializes in solving business problems for entrepreneurial operations, start-ups, and businesses with ten or fewer employees. Dr. Livingston is also an accom- plished personal speaker, writer and consultant in the area of future space exploration. He has lectured extensively on the topics of: business ethics and corporate responsibility for off-Earth business ventures and New Space Industries, and he has written a Code of Ethics for Off-Earth Commerce. In addition, Dr. Livingston frequently lectures on venture capital financing for new space businesses, RLVs and space tourism, effective business planning, and developing solutions to the barriers to space enterprise. Liv- ingston has spoken at or had papers presented at many international space conferences, including Space and Robotics, The Mars Society conferences, the Lunar Development Conference, the IAA, the Cato Institute, the World Space Conference, and the National Space Society Conference. Dr. Livingston has also served as an adjunct professor in the Graduate School of Business at Golden Gate University teaching Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management. He earned his BA from the University of Arizona, an MBA in International Business Management from Golden Gate University in San Francisco, and his doctorate in business administration (DBA) at Golden Gate. His doctoral dissertation was titled Outer Space Commerce: Its History and Prospects.

31 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Jim Logan Dr. Jim Logan has held numerous positions in his eighteen-year career at NASA in- cluding Chief of Flight Medicine where he was the personal physician to the astronauts and their families and Chief of Medical Operations. He served as Mission Control Sur- geon, Deputy Crew Surgeon or Crew Surgeon for twenty-five space shuttle missions and Project Manager for the Space Station Medical Facility, developing the initial design for a telemedicine-based inflight medical delivery system for long duration missions. After a year at NASA Headquarters as the Medical Liaison Officer for the Life Sci- ences Division and the Space Station Program Office, he left the space agency to serve as Provost for International Space University, Strasbourg, France. Upon returning to the USA, he consulted for The RAND Corporation and created Logan & Associates, Inc., an independent telemedicine consulting firm. A founding board member of the American Telemedicine Association, Dr. Logan served as a telemedicine resource for a variety of professional organizations including a stint as Telemedicine Clinical Direc- tor for the DOD’s Pacific Regional Program Office at Tripler Army Medical Center in Honolulu. Dr. Logan returned to NASA’s Johnson Space Center in 1999 and is now a senior aerospace medical officer in the Clinical Services Branch of the Space Medicine Division. Board certified in Aerospace Medicine and recipient of NASA’s Distinguished Speakers Award, his lecturing activities have taken him around the world. As an expert in space medicine and biomedical issues for long-duration spaceflight, Dr. Logan has been featured on the Public Broadcast System (PBS), CanadaAM, The History Channel and numerous radio talk shows. He is a co-founder of Space Medicine Associates and currently writing a book entitled Frontier and Destiny: Risks, Riches and Renaissance in the Solar System.

Michael Michael Marlaire is the Director of Partnerships at NASA Ames. Marlaire

Gary Martin Mr. Martin currently works as the Director of New Ventures and Communications at NASA Ames. He began his career at NASA in 1990 and has worked at both NASA Headquarters and at Goddard Space Flight Center. He began in the Office of Space Science at NASA Headquarters before moving to Goddard Space Flight Center, as a Program Integration Manager for two space science organizations (Structure and Evo- lution of the Universe and the Astronomical Search for Origins). He was the chief of a GSFC office created to manage technology programs for Headquarters, such as, the Cross-Enterprise Technology Program, Earth Science Technology Office, and the agency’s Small Business Innovative Research/Small Business Technology Transfer Pro- gram. Mr. Martin returned to Headquarters in 2000 and served as Assistant Associate Administrator for Advanced Systems in NASA’s Office of Space Flight. During this time, he chaired multi-enterprise, multi-center strategic planning teams, the Decadal Planning Team and the NASA Exploration Team. He was named NASA’s Space Archi- tect in October 2002, and led the development of strategic architectures and identified high-level requirements for new space systems. These studies became the foundation for the Nation’s Vision for Space Exploration. From 2005 to 2007, Mr. Martin was detailed from NASA to serve as the director of the Summer Studies Program (SSP) at the International Space University.

32 Speaker Biographical Information Dave Masten David Masten is a manufacturing, mechanical, and information technology engineer with extensive experience in managing complex IT projects for Cisco Systems, Andi- amo Systems, and SBC/Ameritech (now AT&T). As past President of the Bay Area’s Experimental Rocket Propulsion Society (ERPS), David oversaw the development of the KISS hydrogen peroxide flight vehicle, the Gizmocopter VTVL test platform, and numerous bipropellant and monopropellant engine development projects and tests.

Chris McKay Dr. Christopher P. McKay, Planetary Scientist with the Space Science Division of NASA Ames. Chris received his Ph.D. in AstroGeophysics from the University of Colorado in 1982 and has been a research scientist with the NASA Ames Research Center since that time. His current research focuses on the evolution of the solar system and the origin of life. He is also actively involved in planning for future Mars missions including hu- man exploration. Chris been involved in research in Mars-like environments on Earth, traveling to the Antarctic dry valleys, Siberia, the Canadian Arctic, and the Atacama desert to study life in these Mars-like environments. He was a co-I on the Titan Huy- gen’s probe in 2005, the Mars Phoenix lander mission in 2008, and the Mars Science Laboratory mission for 2011. He is the deputy program scientist for Constellation - the NASA program for future human exploration of the Moon and Mars.

David Morrison David Morrison is the senior scientist at the NASA Astrobiology Institute, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif., where he participates in a variety of research programs in astrobiology – the study of the living universe. Dr. Morrison obtained his doctorate in astronomy from Harvard University. He is the author of more than 155 technical papers and has published a dozen books. He has been a science investigator on NASA’s Mariner, Voyager and Galileo space missions. Morrison is recipient of the Dryden Medal for research of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, the Sagan Medal of the American Astronomical Society for public communication, and the Klumpke-Roberts award of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific for contributions to science education. He has received two NASA Outstanding Leadership medals and he was awarded the Presidential Meritorious Rank for his work as director of space at NASA Ames. Morrison was a founder of the multidisciplinary field of astrobiology, and he provides on-line answers to questions from the public sent to “Ask an Astrobiologist,” found at http://nai.arc.nasa.gov/astrobio/. Morrison is perhaps best known for his leadership since 1991 in defining the hazard of asteroid impacts and seeking ways to mitigate this risk. Asteroid 2410 Morrison is named in his honor.

33 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA James Muncy James A. Muncy founded PoliSpace, an independent space policy consultancy, in early 2000 to help space entrepreneurs and intrapreneurs succeed at the nexus of business, public affairs, and technology. His clients have included several companies in the emerg- ing private human space flight industry, firms offering commercial services to NASA spaceflight programs, and government managers of Air Force military space projects. Immediately prior to establishing PoliSpace, Muncy spent over five years working for the U.S. House of Representatives. Before joining congressional staff in late 1994, Muncy spent nine years as a space policy and marketing consultant for various clients including NASA, NOAA, several private firms, and the not-for-profit space community, while also securing a graduate degree. In the mid-1980’s he worked for two and a half years as a policy assistant in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy under President Reagan. Muncy began his career in space policy in 1981 as a staff advisor in the Office of Congressman Newt Gingrich. Muncy co-founded the Space Frontier Foundation in 1988 and served as its Chairman of the Board for six years. Earlier he had served on the Board of Directors of both the National Space Society and the L5 Society. Muncy holds an MS in Space Studies from the Center for Aerospace Sciences at the University of North Dakota and a BA from the University of Virginia, where he was an Echols Scholar.

Kevin Myrick Kevin Myrick started InterPlanetary Ventures with the idea of creating partnerships between companies, organizations and individuals interested in space eXploration, Re- search snd Development. InterPlanetary Ventures is a membership based corporation that provides opportunities for our members to get involved in space related activi- ties, and achieve their space related goals. Their goal is to create the terrestrial and space based infrastructures required to support humanity’s permanent expansion into the bountiful reaches of our solar system, and then to continue to provide support for people who want to get into space and for people living and working in space.

Clive Neal Neal uses petrology and geochemistry to investigate the environment from planetary differentiation to heavy metal pollution. His research is not constrained to the earth and his research projects use samples and geophysics to explore the moon as well as studies of Martian meteorites. His interests also include the evolution of the moon and Mars and the origin of the solar system. Neal is chair of NASAs Lunar Exploration Analysis Group (LEAG) and also sits on the Planetary Science Subcommittee of the NASA Advisory Council. He also is chair of the readiness assessment team for the JOIDES Resolution, a riserless drilling vessel operated by the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program for scientific exploration of the ocean floor.

Stewart Stewart Nozette is the Mini-RF Principal Investigator on Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Nozette andd Co-investigator on Chandrayaan-1.

34 Speaker Biographical Information John Olson Dr. Olson is the Director of the Directorate Integration Office (DIO) in the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate (ESMD) at NASA Headquarters in Washington, DC. He is Responsible for a broad range of Exploration architecture and integration activities including Lunar and Mars architecture development and refinement, International part- nerships and bi-lateral discussions as part of the Global Exploration Strategy, Commer- cial Partnerships, and integration of Science and other government agencies. Prior to assuming his current role, Dr. Olson was the Exploration Transition Manager in ESMD at NASA Headquarters, where he was responsible for directing, integrating, and coor- dinating all exploration transition activities, processes, plans, and structures in support of the NASA Transition from the Space Shuttle Program to the Constellation Program. He started his NASA career as the Manager of International Space Station (ISS) Oper- ations in the Office of Safety and Mission Assurance (OSMA) at NASA Headquarters. Prior to joining NASA in June 2004, Dr. Olson served in the US Air Force in several capacities, most recently as the Chief of the Test, Operations, and Programs Division in the Space Vehicle Operations Directorate at Kirtland AFB NM where he was an X-vehicles program manager and space acquisition leader.

Tom Olson For nearly a quarter-century, Thomas Andrew Olson has been a business systems engi- neer and analyst in the Communications, Aerospace, and Publishing sectors. In addi- tion, he has worked in an investment analysis and operations capacity in the Financial Services area (cash and fund management). A serial entrepreneur, he helped found Ex- odus Group as a way to bridge the gap of understanding between entrepreneurial space tech startups and Angel/VC/Institutional investors seeking new opportunities. He is also on the organizing committee for the “Space Investment Summits”, a semi-annual event bringing together interested investors and entrepreneurs for knowledge sharing and professional networking.

Milind Dr. Milind Pimprikar is listed in the “World’s Who’s Who” and the “Oxford Dictionary Pimprikar of International Biography.” He was nominated as an individual of “National Interest” by the Government of Canada. Dr. Pimprikar is founder and chairman of CANEUS, a network of countries developing micro and nanotechnologies for aerospace applications as well CANEUS NPS, an entity to produce nano and pico satellites for mass commer- cialization. He is also chairman of the Centre for Large Space Structures and Systems in Montreal, Canada.

35 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Bruce Pittman Bruce Pittman is the President of the Silicon Valley Space Club and a Founding Member of the Alliance For Commercial Enterprise in Space, and has been involved in high technology product development, project management and system engineering for over 30 years. He spent 11 years working at the NASA Ames Research Center working on a number of flight projects including Pioneer Venus, IRAS, and several advanced studies programs, and is now back at Ames under a Space Act Agreement as the Director, Flight Projects for the NASA Commercial Space Portal/ACES. He has also worked with NASA as a consultant on a number of projects including the High Speed Civil Transport (1997- 1998), the Lunar/Mars program (1989-1991) and Space Shuttle Processing (1987-1988). Startups and early stage companies have always been very alluring for Bruce and he has participated in a number of such efforts including SpaceHab, Kistler Aerospace, New Focus, Product Factory, II Ltd., and Industrial Sound and Motion. Bruce was a founding team member of both SpaceHab and Kistler Aerospace which have raised more than $700 million in private financing and Bruce helped New Focus grow from 150 people to 2000 people in 2 years and where revenues increased from $25 million to $150 million including a very successful IPO. Bruce co-founded Profit Engineering Technologies a high tech consulting firm in 1994 to develop tools and methodologies to assist project teams and organizations to perform better, produce superior results and have more fun doing it. Bruce has provided training, consulting and mentoring to a number of Fortune 100 companies and government. Bruce has a BS in Mechanical Engineering from U. C. Davis and a MS in Engineering Management from Santa Clara University.

Michael Potter First time documentary film maker Michael Potter, who is one degree of separation from most of the key players in this remarkable and historic epic, is an expert on international technology and business projects. Potter, has published extensively on technology policy issues. Potter worked together with the key figure in the “Orphans of Apollo” Walt Anderson in creating a publicly traded pan-European telecommunications network. Potter previously worked on the 13 part WGBH Series, “War & Peace in the Nuclear Age.” Michael is a graduate of the London School of Economics. He serves on the Board of Trustees of the International Space University.

Rich Pournelle Rich Pournelle has been involved in start-ups companies for over ten years. His previ- ous experience includes work as the Director of Business Development at XCOR, and involvement in the software and telecommunications for many years. He is now working on a book with his father. He began his career as staff assistant to congressman Bill Thomas and in this role developed the THOMAS legislative information system for the Library of Congress. Most recently, he was co-founder of WarrantyNow and helped the company raise more than $18 million in equity before its acquisition by CNET. Mr. Pournelle has a communications degree from UCLA.

36 Speaker Biographical Information Dan Rasky Dan Rasky serves as the Space Portal Director and NASA Senior Scientist, and also co-founded of the Space Portal. He has been a significant contributor to flight hard- ware for seven NASA flight systems, including the Shuttle, DC-XA, SHARP-B1&B2, Mars/Pathfinder, DS-II, MER Spirit & Opportunity, and Stardust. His work partic- ularly helped enable the Stardust comet sample return mission. He is also a former Chief for the Thermal Protection Materials and Systems Branch at Ames and an in- ternationally recognized expert for thermal protection and entry systems. He began his professional career working for a small Aerospace Company (Acurex) doing R&D contracting work for the Air Force. He currently serves as a member of the business evaluation team for COTS.

Bob Richards Dr. Robert (Bob) Richards is the Founder and CEO of Odyssey Moon Limited, a com- mercial lunar enterprise based in the Isle of Man and the first official registrant in the $30M Google Lunar X PRIZE competition. He is also the Director of Space Technology at Optech Incorporated of Canada, where he presided over the first commercial lidar scanner flown in space as well as the first meteorological lidar flown to another planet aboard the NASA Phoenix Mars Lander. Bob studied aerospace and industrial engi- neering at Ryerson University; physics and astronomy at the University of Toronto; and space science at Cornell University where he became special assistant to Carl Sagan. In 1987 Bob founded the International Space University (ISU) with Peter Diamandis and Todd Hawley, where he served as the university’s first Associate Administrator for Strategic Planning and chaired the board’s administrative and strategic planning com- mittees during ISU’s first phase of development. Today Bob continues to serve on the Board of Trustees of ISU. Bob first joined forces with Diamandis and Hawley in the creation of Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS).

Rex Ridenoure Rex Ridenoure has been a champion of and active participant in the emerging market sector of private and commercial space missions to the Moon and beyond since 1980. For the first 20 years of his career while working at Hughes, Lockheed and JPL, Rex made significant technical contributions to more than a dozen pioneering space projects. In the late 1990s he successfully transitioned into the entrepreneurial space arena. He was co-recipient with three other engineers of a 1999 Laurel Award (the aerospace “Os- car”) for playing a key role in the 1998 salvage of the stranded HGS-1 comsat, using a novel orbit method that made HGS-1 the first commercial spacecraft to reach the Moon’s distance. From 1998-2000 Rex was Chief Mission Architect at SpaceDev, one of the first commercial space-exploration and development companies. During 2000-2001 he was Chief Mission Architect and VP for Commercial Payloads at BlastOff! Cor- poration, which made the most progress to date toward sending the first commercial spacecraft to the surface of the Moon. Since co-founding Ecliptic in 2001, he has di- rected stra’egic planning and partnering, business development, marketing and sales. Ecliptics popular RocketCam product family is the worlds leading brand of onboard video systems for use with rockets and spacecraft. Ecliptic was a team member on the pioneering SpaceShipOne effort and will support future ‘space-tourist’ missions offered by the path-finding commercial space company Space Adventures. Rex earned his M.S. in Aeronautics from Caltech in 1979, and his B.S. from Iowa State University (Ames) in 1978.

37 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Guillermo Managing Director, Space Angels Network. Guillermo S¨ohnleinhas spent almost ten S¨ohnlein years in leadership roles with various technology startups in the Washington D.C. area as well as Silicon Valley. His recent East Coast ventures include an online service helping commuters to share rides, a mobile games distribution platform, and a Web- based communication suite for small and mid-sized businesses. Previously, he was Co- founder of a San Francisco-based speech recognition application development firm that was acquired in 2001. Guillermo is the Founder and Chairman of the International Association of Space Entrepreneurs, an online community focused on promoting global entrepreneurship in space ventures. He served on active duty in the United States Marine Corps as a Judge Advocate and currently serves on various Advisory Boards and teaches entrepreneurship. Guillermo earned an A.B. in Economics from the University of California at Berkeley and a J.D. from the University of California Hastings College of the Law.

Gwynne Ms. Shotwell has built the Falcon vehicle family manifest to 13 launches, representing Shotwell almost $400M in revenue. In addition to developing the customer base, she is also responsible for all strategic relationships and licensing. Her experience prior to SpaceX includes ten years at the Aerospace Corporation where she held positions of increasing responsibility in Space Systems Engineering and Technology and Project Management. Highlights include promotion to Chief Engineer of an MLV-class Satellite program, managing a landmark study for the Federal Aviation Administration’s on Commercial Space Transportation, and completing an extensive space policy analysis for NASA’s future investment in space transportation. After Aerospace Corporation, Mrs. Shotwell was recruited to be Director of the Space Systems Division at Microcosm, where she served on the Executive Committee and directed corporate business development. Mrs. Shotwell received, with honors, her Bachelors and Master’s Degree from Northwestern University in Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mathematics. She is a member of the Board of Directors for the California Space Authority, the Chair of the AIAA Space Systems Technical Committee, and Chair for the Frank J. Redd Student Scholarship competition. She has authored papers in a wide variety of areas including standardizing spacecraft/payload interfaces, conceptual small spacecraft design, infrared signature target modeling, Space Shuttle integration, and reentry vehicle operational risks.

38 Speaker Biographical Information Jeffrey Smith Dr. Smith has served as the Deputy Chief of the Entrepreneurial Initiatives Division. which is responsible for partnership development, new business services, and intellec- tual property management at NASA Ames Research Center. The Division supports teams the devlopment of more than 100 public/private partnerships each year that leverage NASA Ames resources and expertise with the commercial, academic and inter- governmental sectors. In addition to his Division management responsibilities, Dr. Smith manages the Ames Greenspace, which provides strategy, planning and imple- mentation support for the diverse portfolio of green initiatives and partnerships hap- pening across the Center. Prior to his current assignment with NASA, Dr. Smith has been the manager for Ames Space Life Sciences Research Branch and the Ames Acceleration Facilities Office (2003-2006). Prior to that, as a Computer scientist for NASA (beginning in 1996), he performed numerous basic and applied research stud- ies and technology development/evaluation projects for NASA which have focused on cell biology, gravitational biology, biological data visualization technologies, life sciences spaceflight hardware testing and computer-based simulation for astronaut training. He has published over 40 journal articles, proceedings, technical reports and abstracts in the scientific literature. Recently (2006-2007) Dr. Smith served a 1-year fellowship to the Program Analysis and Evaluation Office at NASA Headquarters where he partic- ipated and led Agencywide studies and analyses on topics spanning the One NASA Initiative, IT Tools Management, workforce planning, small satellite missions and the NASA safety Center. Before taking his current position as the Deputy Chief for the En- trepreneurial Initiatives Division (2007-2008) Dr. Smith worked for the Ames Office of Strategic Management and Advanced Planning to support Ames Center-level objectives including the development of Green Initiatives and new partnerships.

Paul Spudis Paul D. Spudis is a Senior Staff Scientist at the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Hous- ton, Texas. He was formerly with the Branch of Astrogeology, U. S. Geological Survey in Flagstaff, Arizona and the Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel MD. He is a geologist who received his education at Arizona State University (B.S., 1976; Ph. D., 1982) and at Brown University (Sc.M., 1977). Since 1982, he has specialized in research on the processes of impact and volcanism on the planets and studies of the requirements for sustainable human presence on the Moon. He is a former member of the Committee for Planetary and Lunar Exploration (COMPLEX), an advisory committee of the National Academy of Sciences, and the Synthesis Group, a White House panel that in 1990-1991, analyzed a return to the Moon to establish a base and the first human mission to Mars. He was Deputy Leader of the Science Team for the Department of Defense Clementine mission to the Moon in 1994 and currently, is the Principal Investigator of an imaging radar experiment on the Indian Chandrayaan-1 mission, now orbiting the Moon since October 2008. He was a member of the Presidents Commission on the Implementation of U. S. Space Exploration Policy, whose report was issued June, 2004 and in September 2004, was presented with the NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal for his work on that body. He is the recipient of the 2006 Von Karman Lectureship in Astronautics, awarded by the American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics. He is the author or co-author of over 100 scientific papers and three books, including The Once and Future Moon, a book for the general public in the Smithsonian Library of the Solar System series, and (with Ben Bussey) The Clementine Atlas of the Moon, published in 2004 by Cambridge University Press.

Kevin Stirling Kevin Stirling is the writer and producer of the film “Moon Beat”.

39 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Dennis Stone Dennis Stone is Assistant Manager for Commercial Space Development in NASA’s Com- mercial Crew & Cargo Program at the Johnson Space Center. This Program manages NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) initiative. During both COTS competitions, he chaired the Business Committee. He also negotiated the Pro- gram’s agreements with unfunded commercial space transportation partners. He leads efforts to support this emerging industry as a whole. Prior to his COTS assignment, Dennis spent 20 years in NASA’s Space Station Program in a variety of positions, includ- ing Chief System Engineer of the Assured Crew Return Vehicle, Manager of Avionics Integration, and Co chair of the ISS Commercialization Working Group. Prior to NASA, he worked for McDonnell Douglas, Ford Aerospace, and Rockwell. Throughout his ca- reer, he has encouraged efforts to build the commercial space industry. Dennis serves as volunteer President of the World Space Week Association which coordinates UN- declared World Space Week, celebrated each October 4-10 in over 50 nations. He has bachelor degrees in Physics and Electrical Engineering from the University of Hawaii. He is an Associate Fellow of the AIAA and Advocate of the Space Frontier Foundation.

Tom Taylor Thomas C. Taylor is an entrepreneur, inventor and a Professional Civil Engineer in the commercial aerospace industry. His goal is building commercial space projects in- cluding an unmanned transportation cargo service to and from the moons surface with Lunar Transportation Systems, Inc. Since 1979, Tom has helped to form 22 differ- ent entrepreneurial aerospace startup companies with four successful commercial space startup companies raising a total of $1.2 billion in private equity financing. Startup Company Examples include: SPACEHAB, Inc., a pressurized payload module in the space shuttle offering Manned Tended Mid-deck lockers to NASA and the public at a reduction of the cost by a factor of ten compared to a previous Spacelab Module. Kistler Aerospace Corporation offered a two-stage reusable launch vehicle (RLV) to low Earth orbit at a potential cost saving, roughly $516m over a 12-launch sequence compared to a Delta II. Lunar Transportation Systems, Inc., an unmanned logistics service anticipat- ing commercial cargo to the moons surface at commercial rates with scalable hardware. LTS proposes privately financed services for commercial lunar development. The goal is a sustainable commercial transportation system for the moon to permit NASA to explore Mars.

Rick Tumlinson Named by Space News as one of the world’s top “Visionaries” and one of the hundred most influential people in the space movement, Rick is a Texan and was a protege of Gerard K. O’Neill at the Space Studies Institute, founder of the Space Frontier Foundation (whose first $50 came from the Heinleins), a founding trustee of the X Prize and a lead witness 6 times at House and Senate hearings on the future of NASA, the U.S. space program and space tourism. Rick helped create or find funding for many NewSpace firms and projects and ran the $25 million Foundation for the International Non-governmental Development of Space (FINDS). He co-founded LunaCorp, which produced the first commercial to be shot in space, signed up as the first commercial space flight participant and led the team which leased the Russian Mir space station for a year (the world’s first commercial space facility.) He helped kick-start the Lunar Prospector project which discovered water on the Moon, was a member of the Air Force’s DC-X single stage rocket team, produced the first paid political announcement for space, was the Sci Fi channel’s founding space expert, and did the core media used to fund the International Space University, the X-33 and other projects. Rick was one of only 20 outsiders invited by the White House to witness President Bush’s announcement of his space exploration initiative to return to the Moon and go to Mars.

40 Speaker Biographical Information John Vornle Mr. Vornle is a Director of Long Term Capital Corporation (since 1992), Grupo NM, S.A. (since 1995), and Strategic Monitored Services, Inc. (since 1996). He is the former Chief Underwriter for Continental Insurance’s financial guarantee program.Mr. Vornle managed several different insurance products and new product development at Conti- nental Insurance (1985 - 1992), and was a director of several insurance companies and insurance and investment related organizations. He was previously a commercial banker at European American Bank. He received his Bachelor of Arts from Colgate University and a Master of Business Administration degree from New York University’s Graduate School of Business.Mr. Vornle is fluent in French and German.

David Webb For the past 25-years David Webb has been a consultant in the development of aerospace policies and related technical fields to government agencies, major corporations, univer- sities and non-profit organizations nationally and internationally. He was elected Chair- man of the Non-Governmental Organizations in Consultative Status with the Second United Nations Conference on the Exploration and Peaceful Uses of Outer Space, held in Vienna Austria. There he organized a 12-day program with 120 speakers from around the world covering a broad range of topics incorporating all aspects of space exploration and development. He was appointed by President Reagan as one of 15-members of the National Commission on Space, mandated by Congress to prepare a bold and visionary fifty-year space agenda for the United States. He has been invited to testify before Congressional Committees on a number of occasions and maintains contacts with the White House Office of Science and Technology, Congressional Committees on Science, Technology and Space, NASA, DOD, USAF, FAA, JPL, Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore Laboratories.

Bob Werb Bob Werb was an active partner in Rivercrest Realty Investors from 1976 until 2001. Rivercrest Realty Investors is a privately held, real estate firm that owns and manages a portfolio of garden apartments, shopping centers and office buildings with properties in New York, New Jersey, Maryland, North Carolina and Florida. Since 2001 he has assumed a more passive role in Rivercrest and has been spending more time working on a variety of projects including the Space Frontier Foundation. Bob is one of the three founders of the Space Frontier Foundation.

Dennis Wingo Dennis Wingo is the author of the recently published book, “Moonrush: Improving Life on Earth with the Moon’s Resources.” He is also the CTO of Orbital Recovery Corporation and president of Skycorp, Inc. He is a 22-year veteran of the computer, academic, and space communities and was an integral force in the use of commercial systems for use in space and flew the first MacIntosh on the Space Shuttle as experiment controller. Orbital Recovery Corporation is developing a way to extend the life of satellites by up to ten years or more and SkyCorp Inc. has developed a patented approach to the development of highly capable spacecraft manufactured on orbit on the Space Shuttle or International Space Station. SkyCorp has also qualified payloads for flight to the station via the Russian vehicle, one of which was used in the filming of a commercial last year for the American retailer Radio Shack. Mr. Wingo received his degree in Engineering Physics at the University of Alabama in Huntsville where he won honors for his academic publications and for his unique approach to small satellite development.

41 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Pete Worden Dr. Simon P. (“Pete”) Worden (Brig. Gen., USAF, Ret.) (born 1949, in Michigan) is Director of NASA’s Ames Research Center (ARC) at Moffett Field, Calif. Before joining NASA, he held several positions in the United States Air Force and was research professor of astronomy at the University of Arizona, Tucson. He is a recognized expert on space issues both civil and military. Dr. Worden has authored or co-authored more than 150 scientific papers in astrophysics, space sciences, and strategic studies. He served as a scientific co-investigator for two NASA space science missions, and received the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal for the 1994 Clementine mission. He has been named the 2009 Federal Laboratory Consortium Laboratory Director of the Year.

Edward Wright Edward Wright is Teachers in Space project manager, chairman of the United States Rocket Academy, and a long-time Advocate of the Space Frontier Foundation.

Steve Dr. Zornetzer is Director of Information Sciences and Technology at NASA’s Ames Re- Zornetzer search Center. He is an internationally recognized leader in revolutionary, information technology-based approaches to aerospace and space exploration missions. The breadth of his expertise ranges from basic research in cognitive, perceptual, and neural sciences to integrative biology, biological information processing, molecular biology, genetic en- gineering, and biomedical science. He plans, directs, and coordinates the technology, science, development, and operational activities for research and advanced technology development in information technology. Dr. Zornetzer also serves as principal ad- visor and consultant to senior management officials at Ames Research Center, other NASA Centers, and other Government agencies in matters concerning supercomputing, optical systems, networks, and intelligent systems. Before joining NASA in 1997, he headed the Personnel Optimization and Biomolecular Science and Technology Depart- ment, formerly the Life Sciences Directorate, for the Office of Naval Research (ONR). Dr. Zornetzer was widely recognized for his leadership and vision at ONR and received a Presidential Meritorious Rank in 1991 and again in 2001.

42 Ames Area Maps Volunteers

James Antifaev Saturday Day Manager Marcus Bautista General Volunteer Matt Bentley General Volunteer Darrell Cain Registration Desk Manager David Caiz General Volunteer John Card Silent Auction George Chang Monday Day Manager Assistant Marimikel Charrier Public Relations Brad Cheetham Sunday Day Manager Ben Corbin Monday Day Manager Megan Crawford General Volunteer John Fawkes Marketing Manager Alice Feind Marketing Manager Erin Forsyth Silent Auction Keri Hancock General Volunteer Triana Henz General Volunteer Zouhair Mahboubi General Volunteer Ryan McLinko Conference Organizer Joshua Nelson Volunteer Coordinator Young Shin Park General Volunteer Ashley Potts General Volunteer Johanna Przybylowski Awards Manager, Banquet Manager James Pura Conference Organizer Brian Serra General Volunteer Michael Silva Assistant Banquet Manager Joshua Sosa Webmaster Amanda Stiles Sunday Day Manager Assistant Kendra Toole Saturday Day Manager Assistant My-linh Truong Catering Manager Dmitriy Tseliakhovich General Volunteer James Tumber General Volunteer Patrick Walsh General Volunteer Jake Welch Exhibits Manager Brian Young Program Book Manager

43 ZOOK ROAD

395 330 388 * * NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? * * 492 409 359 *

* 491 490 * 489 388

* 488

* 487 *

486 * 300 * * 376

485 * 492 * 409 359 July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA * * 491 * 490 * 489 * * 488

* 485 487

486 * * 300 * 485 376 * * * * * * *

* 485 *

191 * * * * * * *

1 2 3 * * * * ZOOK ROAD *

VICTORY ROAD N-267 N-217 N-217A

N-249

ZOOK ROAD

* De FRANCE AVE. FRANCE De * * * D N-249A D * National Aeronautics and * *

The* Golf Course Space Administration * *

* LINDBERGH AVENUE LINDBERGH * *

N-254 at* Moffett Field Ames Research Center *

254 * * *

PARKING 254 Moffett Field, California 94035-1000 * * PARKING 178 * * * * * * *

178* * * * * VTOL 28

* 28 * * 189 N-255A 189 * * * * 188 27 * *

LOMAX LANE * * 188 27 * * * *

187 * N-258 * 187 * * * * *

* 511

T28- * 511

177 * PARSONS AVENUE

177 * PERIMETER SECURITY ROAD * N-255 N P D * * H J * * * 253 253 GA B E T127-D N-250B * ALLEN ROAD * 69 69

POLLACK ROAD 524 524 N-262 N-127 684 684 234234

T3-B ZOOK ROAD T–1 De FRANCE AVE. FRANCE De N-260 N-250A N-245 The Golf Course PIONEER AVENUE PARKING Bar & Grill PARKING N-269 C WRIGHT AVENUE C at Moffett Field Directions to Ames Research Center N-271 PARKING N-257 Club HousePARKING T38-A N-250 H LANE T20-G PARSONS AVENUE HUNSAKER ROAD WALCOTT AVENUE 140 N-252

T35-A N-265 N-144 140

N-238 *

N-229B 139 PG&E T35-B * * 139 T20-F GATE 80 BETA LANE * BLDG 138 T35-C 573 328 N-256 MACON ROAD138 N-234A 320 Oakland N-242 T20-C * N-236 328 137 351 350 * MACON ROAD * 361 N-261 N-229 N-229A 351346350 GATE 137 *

361 880 142 GATE 362 * San N-244 346 * N-231 * * 396 142 362 N-225A * * * N-230 N-234 396 * N-225B NORTH N

* Francisco 499 BOYD ROAD N-248E 540 * GATE N-248D * 499 PARKING N-240 541 N-248C 539 * MARK AVE

SUBSTATION WEST N-227B 540 GATE N-227A HALL ROAD * PARKING N-248 539 541 545

N-263 N-227 * * N-240A 47 545 280 * N-226 N-248BN-248A 55 * N-221B * N-225 D 47 GATE 580 PARKING OAK C N-259 55 * * B TAXIWAY FIRE 46 536 NASA * 79 GATE T6- P A R K NI G 342 PARKING 148 N-227C * N-227D STATION 46 Ames Research * 79 93 342

* 148 WARNER ROAD

* San N-251 Center 580 * 93 372 F LANE 141 * 101 Francisco Bay 580 N-246 N-216B N-211 * 367 N-221C N-216 (Mark Ave. Gate) * * N-247 N-212 372 141 B N-253C N-218A B * N-218B N-214 367 175 T22-A N-216A N-243A * 440 COOPER LOOP * MON 79 136 Ames Gate 949 175 GAMMA LANE GAMMA 135 N-221 C LANE 440 N-218 N-215 N-213 136

17 360 De FRANCE AVE. FRANCE De

T26-B 365 GATE T26-A KING ROAD 135 N-210 403 DURAND RD N-243 59 61

N-222 N-239A Cafeteria PIPE 1

186 SFO 172 PARKING

360

N-219 MARK AVE 365 GATE

N-235 386 58 367 60 403 N-221A 59 61

N-239 197 PIPE

N-223 193 186

172 PARKING

Gift Shop 301C MACON

386 58 367 N-220 92 SEVERYNS AVE 60

A SAYRE AVENUE 194 7 513

N-207 197 193

N-20 198 N-206 N-208 301C MACON KING ROAD N-273 2 301B 49

KING ROAD 194

N-206A 12 513

198 N-202A 301 N-204A 13 301B

R.T. JONES RD. N-209 N-237 29 49 300 B

18 E N-253A 45 301 T27-B a

N-205 NACC 1 ROAD l N-202 BUSHNELL STREET Hangar y N-203 1 C s N-204

N-233A FREEMAN LN. 498 259 300 h 31 CUMMINS AVE a

NASA Ames 260 34 941 m o r N-241 261 942 i e Research Center N-233 Bldg 3 199 498 T27-An 84 569 14 259 F 67 Conference 262 o 170 r 880 260 PARKING ROAD e Center R ew N-201 (Arnold Ave. Gate) 19 Post 261 ay 552 N-200 248 e

199 551 a Office 64 262 549 19 458 170 PARKING Half Moon l

17 McCORD AVE. 85 E 567 L DUGAN AVE. Conference 552 C 248 R Bay A Ames Childcare CI 15 A 551 SH Center 549PARKING BU 25 10 126 458 82 NASA Ames Center N-253 NORTH AKRON RD. Parking 101 N-272 76 T36 6 280 Research 510 VE. To Golf Course Pacific PARKING Palo Alto A 504 20 509 Center

NASA Research SOUTH AKRON RD. 530 479 566 16 Ocean 23 CODY ROAD 557 477 Park Main Gate 88 To Moffet Field Golf Course 237 ARNOLD Lodge PARKING Flight 504 CLARK ROAD PARKING 24 107 532 Parking 104 McDonalds 503 Operations 479 Mt. View 36 W E 26 SC 477 Visitors’ Exploration OA 109 T RO 529 106 NASA AD 556 Sunnyvale 476 pool 596 525 Center 525 PARKING Moffett 555 8 Exchange PARKING NEX 2 39 Exchange476 85 T 943 554554 158 1 SJC

XI Lodge PARKING 101 DAILEY RD. DAILEY Golden 106 E PARKING D EDQUIBA RD L Bldg. 19 Bay RD. GORSKY 682 IE

Credit RD. KAISER

F 149 RD. BETTIO San

681

T 583A Union

T 150 223 PARKING Jose E PARKING F 151 PARKING San Francisco F Gift Shop 682 O Visitor Control MACON RD. M 244 520 681

152 583B 421 for NASA Ames 512 * 329 680 * * 400 * 547 * Take Moffett Field Exit 398 from Highway 101, turn right at the light.

101 * PARKING San Jose Research Center GIRARD RD. PARKING

153 *

683 From Highway 85, take the Moffett Blvd. exit, turn right at the light, 154 Chase 267 383 680

245 Macon MOFFETT BLVD. MOFFETT 155 543 Park 293 292 and follow it over the Highway 101 overpass. South Gate PARKING 156 337 50 MACON ROAD 355

Main Gate To Golf 683 266 111 Course Note: State-Issued Drivers License required for entry into 146 258 77 82 404 343 NASA Research Park. 251 MACON RD. N 544 MACON ROAD 463 NASA Badge or Ames Visitor’s Pass required for entry NASA Exchange Lodge PARKING

To Hwy. 85 Hwy. To beyond Arnold or Mark Avenues gates, Gate 17, Bldgs. 583A & 583B Ellis St. Exit National Aeronautics and 454 MACON RD South Main Gate, and Macon Gate. Space Administration To Golf Course 101 Ames Research Center San Francisco To Hwy. 237 Moffett Field, California 94035-1000 MACON ROAD rev. Oct. 2006 1 10 San Jose 1 2 3 San Francisco

101 San 44 Jose ZOOK ROAD

395 330 388 * * * * 492 409 359 *

* 491 490 * 489 388

* 488

* 487 *

486 * 300 * * Ames Area Maps 376

485 * 492 * 409 359 *

* 491 * 490 * 489 * * 488

* 485 487

486 * * 300 * 485 376 * * * * * * *

* 485 *

191 * * * * * * *

1 2 3 * * * * ZOOK ROAD *

VICTORY ROAD N-267 N-217 N-217A

N-249

ZOOK ROAD

* De FRANCE AVE. FRANCE De * * * D N-249A D * National Aeronautics and * *

The* Golf Course Space Administration * *

* LINDBERGH AVENUE LINDBERGH * *

N-254 at* Moffett Field Ames Research Center *

254 * * *

PARKING 254 Moffett Field, California 94035-1000 * * PARKING 178 * * * * * * *

178* * * * * VTOL 28

* 28 * * 189 N-255A 189 * * * * 188 27 * *

LOMAX LANE * * 188 27 * * * *

187 * N-258 * 187 * * * * *

* 511

T28- * 511

177 * PARSONS AVENUE

177 * PERIMETER SECURITY ROAD * N-255 N P D * * H J * * * 253 253 GA B E T127-D N-250B * ALLEN ROAD * 69 69

POLLACK ROAD 524 524 N-262 N-127 684 684 234234

T3-B ZOOK ROAD T–1 De FRANCE AVE. FRANCE De N-260 N-250A N-245 The Golf Course PIONEER AVENUE PARKING Bar & Grill PARKING N-269 C WRIGHT AVENUE C at Moffett Field Directions to Ames Research Center N-271 PARKING N-257 Club HousePARKING T38-A N-250 H LANE T20-G PARSONS AVENUE HUNSAKER ROAD WALCOTT AVENUE 140 N-252

T35-A N-265 N-144 140

N-238 *

N-229B 139 PG&E T35-B * * 139 T20-F GATE 80 BETA LANE * BLDG 138 T35-C 573 328 N-256 MACON ROAD138 N-234A 320 Oakland N-242 T20-C * N-236 328 137 351 350 * MACON ROAD * 361 N-261 N-229 N-229A 351346350 GATE 137 *

361 880 142 GATE 362 * San N-244 346 * N-231 * * 396 142 362 N-225A * * * N-230 N-234 396 * N-225B NORTH N

* Francisco 499 BOYD ROAD N-248E 540 * GATE N-248D * 499 PARKING N-240 541 N-248C 539 * MARK AVE

SUBSTATION WEST N-227B 540 GATE N-227A HALL ROAD * PARKING N-248 539 541 545

N-263 N-227 * * N-240A 47 545 280 * N-226 N-248BN-248A 55 * N-221B * N-225 D 47 GATE 580 PARKING OAK C N-259 55 * * B TAXIWAY FIRE 46 536 NASA * 79 GATE T6- P A R K NI G 342 PARKING 148 N-227C * N-227D STATION 46 Ames Research * 79 93 342

* 148 WARNER ROAD

* San N-251 Center 580 * 93 372 F LANE 141 * 101 Francisco Bay 580 N-246 N-216B N-211 * 367 N-221C N-216 (Mark Ave. Gate) * * N-247 N-212 372 141 B N-253C N-218A B * N-218B N-214 367 175 T22-A N-216A N-243A * 440 COOPER LOOP * MON 79 136 Ames Gate 949 175 GAMMA LANE GAMMA 135 N-221 C LANE 440 N-218 N-215 N-213 136

17 360 De FRANCE AVE. FRANCE De

T26-B 365 GATE T26-A KING ROAD 135 N-210 403 DURAND RD N-243 59 61

N-222 N-239A Cafeteria PIPE 1

186 SFO 172 PARKING

360

N-219 MARK AVE 365 GATE

N-235 386 58 367 60 403 N-221A 59 61

N-239 197 PIPE

N-223 193 186

172 PARKING

Gift Shop 301C MACON

386 58 367 N-220 92 SEVERYNS AVE 60

A SAYRE AVENUE 194 7 513

N-207 197 193

N-20 198 N-206 N-208 301C MACON KING ROAD N-273 2 301B 49

KING ROAD 194

N-206A 12 513

198 N-202A 301 N-204A 13 301B

R.T. JONES RD. N-209 N-237 29 49 300 B

18 E N-253A 45 301 T27-B a

N-205 NACC 1 ROAD l N-202 BUSHNELL STREET Hangar y N-203 1 C s N-204

N-233A FREEMAN LN. 498 259 300 h 31 CUMMINS AVE a

NASA Ames 260 34 941 m o r N-241 261 942 i e Research Center N-233 Bldg 3 199 498 T27-An 84 569 14 259 F 67 Conference 262 o 170 r 880 260 PARKING ROAD e Center R ew N-201 (Arnold Ave. Gate) 19 Post 261 ay 552 N-200 248 e

199 551 a Office 64 262 549 19 458 170 PARKING Half Moon l

17 McCORD AVE. 85 E 567 L DUGAN AVE. Conference 552 C 248 R Bay A Ames Childcare CI 15 A 551 SH Center 549PARKING BU 25 10 126 458 82 NASA Ames Center N-253 NORTH AKRON RD. Parking 101 N-272 76 T36 6 280 Research 510 VE. To Golf Course Pacific PARKING Palo Alto A 504 20 509 Center

NASA Research SOUTH AKRON RD. 530 479 566 16 Ocean 23 CODY ROAD 557 477 Park Main Gate 88 To Moffet Field Golf Course 237 ARNOLD Lodge PARKING Flight 504 CLARK ROAD PARKING 24 107 532 Parking 104 McDonalds 503 Operations 479 Mt. View 36 W E 26 SC 477 Visitors’ Exploration OA 109 T RO 529 106 NASA AD 556 Sunnyvale 476 pool 596 525 Center 525 PARKING Moffett 555 8 Exchange PARKING NEX 2 39 Exchange476 85 T 943 554554 158 1 SJC

XI Lodge PARKING 101 DAILEY RD. DAILEY Golden 106 E PARKING D EDQUIBA RD L Bldg. 19 Bay RD. GORSKY 682 IE

Credit RD. KAISER

F 149 RD. BETTIO San

681

T 583A Union

T 150 223 PARKING Jose E PARKING F 151 PARKING San Francisco F Gift Shop 682 O Visitor Control MACON RD. M 244 520 681

152 583B 421 for NASA Ames 512 * 329 680 * * 400 * 547 * Take Moffett Field Exit 398 from Highway 101, turn right at the light.

101 * PARKING San Jose Research Center GIRARD RD. PARKING

153 *

683 From Highway 85, take the Moffett Blvd. exit, turn right at the light, 154 Chase 267 383 680

245 Macon MOFFETT BLVD. MOFFETT 155 543 Park 293 292 and follow it over the Highway 101 overpass. South Gate PARKING 156 337 50 MACON ROAD 355

Main Gate To Golf 683 266 111 Course Note: State-Issued Drivers License required for entry into 146 258 77 82 404 343 NASA Research Park. 251 MACON RD. N 544 MACON ROAD 463 NASA Badge or Ames Visitor’s Pass required for entry NASA Exchange Lodge PARKING

To Hwy. 85 Hwy. To beyond Arnold or Mark Avenues gates, Gate 17, Bldgs. 583A & 583B Ellis St. Exit National Aeronautics and 454 MACON RD South Main Gate, and Macon Gate. Space Administration To Golf Course 101 Ames Research Center San Francisco To Hwy. 237 Moffett Field, California 94035-1000 MACON ROAD rev. Oct. 2006 1 10 San Jose 1 2 3 San Francisco

101 San Jose 45 NewSpace 2009: Flags and Footprints – or the New Frontier? July 18–20, 2009 Mountain View, CA Conference Organizers

William William Watson is presently Executive Director of the Space Frontier Foundation (SFF). Watson He endeavors to create new business relationships for the Foundation and to commu- nicate their vision. Will Chaired NewSpace 2008 and NewSpace 2007 in DC and was part of the SFF’s management team during NewSpace 2006 in Vegas. Before the Foun- dation, Will worked for the Tauri Group as an analyst on the Space Foundation’s The Space Report and on spaceport related business development. Mr. Watson’s profes- sional involvement with the NewSpace industry started with his graduate placement at the Transformational Space Corporation, LLC (t/Space). Will received his Master’s in Space Management (MSM) from the International Space University (ISU) in Stras- bourg, France. The MSM graduate program focuses on aerospace business, marketing and law. Prior to ISU, Mr. Watson received a BA in Russian Literature & History from Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey. He has studied in Moscow at Lomonosov University and as part of the Institute for Biomedical Problems’ Summer space program.

James Pura James has severed as Editor of the Space Frontier Foundation’s monthly newslet- ter, NewSpace News, since November of 2007. He is currently a senior Mechani- cal/Aerospace student at University of California, San Diego. He also is President of the UCSD chapter of Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS), a member of AIAA and the National Space Society.

Ryan McLinko Ryan McLinko, one of the lead conference organizers, is a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the degree of Aerospace Engineering. Starting in the fall, he will begin pursuing a Masters degree in the same field also at MIT. At each of the summers during his tenure at MIT, he has interned with various organizations and companies: the Mars Gravity Biosatellite Project, InfoScitex Corporation, United Launch Alliance, and SpaceX. This experience is to be utilized in plans to assist the newspace launch vehicle companies, such as SpaceX and Orbital, in reducing the cost of putting people and payload into orbit. His primary area of interest is in structural design and analysis as well as systems integration, particularly of components onto a structure. On the side, he is heavily involved in various organizations and projects. Organizations of primary involvement include the Space Frontier Foundation, the Students for the Exploration and Development of Space, and the American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics. As part of the SFF, he is both this years conference co-chair as well as an advocate. As part of SEDS, he has maintained the position of Vice Chair for the past few years. As part of the AIAA, he has led the MIT chapter for the past couple of years as President. Most of his time, however, is spent in various engineering side projects, such as the MIT Satellite Team, Mars Gravity Biosatellite Project, MIT Rocket Team, MIT Power Beaming Team, UAV Team, and Space Architects Group.

46