Lawrence Krauss is Foundation Professor, Director, Origins Initiative, and Co-Director, Cosmology Initiative of the School of Earth and Space Exploration, Beyond Center, and Department of Physics, Arizona State University.
Dr. Krauss was born in New York City and shortly afterward moved to Toronto, spending his childhood in Canada. He received undergraduate degrees in Mathematics and Physics from Carleton University in 1977, and his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1982. He became an assistant professor at Yale University in 1985. He was named the Ambrose Swasey Professor of Physics, Professor of Astronomy, and was Chairman of the Department of Physics at Case Western Reserve University from 1993 to 2005.
His research has been based on an attempt to explore how phenomena at various extremes of scale can be used to probe fundamental physics. Dr. Krauss has become increasingly interested in utilizing the Universe as a laboratory to study fundamental physics. He has been active in the emerging field of particle astrophysics, in which both the cosmological implications of ideas concerning fundamental interactions, and astrophysical and cosmological constraints on particle physics are explored.
Among the areas in which Krauss’ research has focused are: neutrino physics and astrophysics, big bang nucleosynthesis, gravitational lensing, dark matter theory and detection, particle physics phenomenology beyond the Standard Model, axions and the strong CP problem, symmetry breaking in the Standard Model and the cosmology and physics of the electroweak phase transition, ultra-sensitive laboratory probes of new physics at high energy scales, stellar evolution, general relativity and gravitation, early universe physics, gravitational waves, and the physics of black holes and quantum gravity. Krauss is a critic of string theory.
Among Dr. Krauss’ honors are the highest awards of all three major U.S. Physics Societies: the American Physical Society, the American Association of Physics Teachers, and the American Institute of Physics. Krauss received the Gravity Research Foundation First prize award in 1984, the Presidential Investigator Award in 1986, the American Association for the Advancement of Science’s Award for the Public Understanding of Science and Technology in 2000, the Julius Edgar Lilienfeld Prize and Andrew Gemant Award in 2001, the American Institute of Physics Science Writing Award in 2002, the Oersted Medal in 2003, and the American Physical Society Joseph P. Burton Forum Award in 2005.
Dr. Krauss believes that science is in part a vital cultural activity and so regularly appears in national media for public outreach in science and has written many editorials for The New York Times. In 2009–10 he wrote a monthly column for Scientific American. He has been particularly active in issues of science and society, leading the effort by scientists to defend the teaching of science in public schools and is is co-chair of the Board of Sponsors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, and on the Board of Directors of the Federation of American Scientists.
Dr. Krauss has written non-academic books, among them:
Fade to Black: The Night Sky of the Future
Science Talk: Stars of Cosmology
Part 1
Part 2
60-Second Science Podcast: Future Cosmologists Doomed to Err
Please visit Dr. Krauss’ website for a complete list of publications and activities.
Gary Lagerloef is an Oceanographer and the Principal Investigator (PI) for the NASA Aquarius mission to study the interactions between the Earth’s water cycle, ocean circulation, and climate. As such, he provides the overall leadership for the development of the mission and its scientific success. He is President of Earth & Space Research, a small scientific institution in Seattle founded in 1995.
Lagerloef’s scientific interests include ocean circulation and climate dynamics with special emphasis in developing new applications for satellite remote sensing. He has served on numerous science teams and working groups over the past 20 years, which include the Salinity Sea Ice Working Group (Chair), Satellite Altimeter Requirements for Climate Research Working Group (Co-chair), NRC Committee on Earth Gravity Measurements from Space, the AMS Committee on Sea Air Interaction and on NASA Science Working Teams for Topex/Poseidon/Jason missions, Ocean Surface Topography, Ocean Vector Winds, and the Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission. He has been a Guest Editor for the Journal of Geophysical Research—Oceans and is a member of several professional associations, learned, and technical societies. He is the author of more than 60 publications and presentations.
Prior to co-founding Earth and Space Research, he worked with Science Applications International Corporation, and was the NASA Physical Oceanography Program Manager from 1988–1990. He has served in the NOAA Commissioned Officer Corps (1976–1984) and in the U.S. Coast Guard (1971–1975).
Lagerloef received his Ph.D. degree in physical oceanography from the University of Washington, Seattle, in 1984, an M.S. in Oceanography from University of Connecticut in 1976, and B.S. in Oceanography from Florida Institute of Technology in 1971. His hobbies are sailing, skiing and hiking. He lives on Bainbridge Island, WA with his wife, Marcia.
Dr. Victor A. Ramos is a well known geologist in South America, who has devoted more than 40 years in the understanding of the geologic evolution of the Andes. He graduated from the Universidad de Buenos Aires, and has done postgraduate studies in Europe and USA. His many contributions to the tectonic evolution of South America include some important hypothesis on the origin of exotic Patagonia and on the formation of the Andean Mountains. He has worked all along the Andes, from Tierra del Fuego Island to Colombia. His contributions were acknowledged by several institutions and he has been appointed as Member of the United States National Academy of Sciences, among others. He is Emeritus Professor of the Universidad of Buenos Aires, where he is presently teaching.
Dr. Michael Shermer is the Founding Publisher of Skeptic magazine (www.skeptic.com), the Executive Director of the Skeptics Society, a monthly columnist for Scientific American, the host of the Skeptics Distinguished Science Lecture Series at Caltech, and Adjunct Professor at Claremont Graduate University and Chapman University.
Dr. Shermer’s latest book is The Mind of the Market, on evolutionary economics. His last book was Why Darwin Matters: Evolution and the Case Against Intelligent Design, and he is the author of Science Friction: Where the Known Meets the Unknown, about how the mind works and how thinking goes wrong. His book The Science of Good and Evil: Why People Cheat, Gossip, Share Care, and Follow the Golden Rule, is on the evolutionary origins of morality and how to be good without God. He wrote a biography, In Darwin’s Shadow, about the life and science of the co-discoverer of natural selection, Alfred Russel Wallace. He also wrote The Borderlands of Science, about the fuzzy land between science and pseudoscience, and Denying History, on Holocaust denial and other forms of pseudohistory. His book How We Believe: Science, Skepticism, and the Search for God, presents his theory on the origins of religion and why people believe in God. He is also the author of Why People Believe Weird Things on pseudoscience, superstitions, and other confusions of our time.
Dr. Shermer received his B.A. in psychology from Pepperdine University, M.A. in experimental psychology from California State University, Fullerton, and his Ph.D. in the history of science from Claremont Graduate University (1991). He was a college professor for 20 years (1979–1998), teaching psychology, evolution, and the history of science at Occidental College (1989–1998), California State University Los Angeles, and Glendale College. Since his creation of the Skeptics Society, Skeptic magazine, and the Skeptics Distinguished Science Lecture Series at Caltech, he has appeared on such shows as The Colbert Report, 20/20, Dateline, Charlie Rose, Larry King Live, Tom Snyder, Donahue, Oprah, Lezza, Unsolved Mysteries (but, proudly, never Jerry Springer!), and other shows as a skeptic of weird and extraordinary claims, as well as interviews in countless documentaries aired on PBS, A&E, Discovery, The History Channel, The Science Channel, and The Learning Channel. Shermer was the co-host and co-producer of the 13-hour Family Channel television series, Exploring the Unknown.
Dateline NBC Special: Did You See That?
Dateline NBC Special: What Were You Thinking?
Dr. Seth Shostak is the Senior Astronomer at the SETI Institute, in Mountain View, California. He has an undergraduate degree in physics from Princeton University, and a doctorate in astronomy from the California Institute of Technology. For much of his career, Seth conducted radio astronomy research on galaxies, and has published approximately sixty papers in professional journals. During more than a decade, he worked at the Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, in Groningen, The Netherlands, using the Westerbork Radio Synthesis Telescope. He also founded and ran a company producing computer animation for TV.
Seth has written more than four hundred popular magazine and Web articles on various topics in astronomy, technology, film and television. He lectures on astronomy and other subjects at various academic venues, and gives approximately 60 talks annually at both educational and corporate institutions. Seth has been a Distinquished Speaker for the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. He is also Chair of the International Academy of Astronautics’ SETI Permanent Committee.
Frequently interviewed for radio and TV, Seth has recently been seen and/or heard on Discovery Channel, Learning Channel, History Channel, the BBC, Nightline, The O’Reilly Factor, Good Morning America, Larry King Live, Coast to Coast AM, NPR, CNN News, and National Geographic Television. He is the host of a one-hour weekly radio program on astrobiology entitled Big Picture Science.
Seth has edited and contributed to nearly a dozen books. His first popular tome, Sharing the Universe: Perspectives on Extraterrestrial Life (Berkeley Hills Books) appeared in March, 1998, followed by Cosmic Company in 2002 (Cambridge Univ. Press). He has also co-authored an astrobiology text, Life in the Universe (Addison-Wesley), and his latest is book is Confessions of an Alien Hunter (National Geographic). In 2004, he won the Klumpke-Roberts Prize for the popularization of astronomy.
Dr. Christopher M. Sorensen is the Cortelyou-Rust University Distinguished Professor and a University Distinguished Teaching Scholar at Kansas State University in the Departments of Physics and Chemistry (adjunct).
Dr. Sorensen divides his professional time between teaching and scholarly research. His research concerns particulate systems, soft matter physics, and light scattering. He is the author of over 260 papers and holds six patents. He has given over 100 invited lectures in the US and abroad. He serves on the editorial advisory boards of Aerosol Science and Technology and the Journal of Nanoparticle Research. In 2003 he won the David Sinclair Award of the American Association for Aerosol Research for his work on aerosol fractal aggregates and light scattering, and he is a Fellow and past president of that organization.
For his teaching efforts Dr. Sorensen has won numerous awards at all levels. He is a teaching innovator having developed methods to put hands-on instruction into traditional classroom settings, integration of readings from the great scientists into non-major physics courses, and outreach activities for teen women and under-advantaged youths. In 2007 he was named the Carnegie Foundation and Council for the Advancement and Support of Education United States Professor of the Year for doctoral and research universities.
Dr. Sorensen was born and raised in Omaha, Nebraska and graduated from the University of Nebraska in 1969 where he was a Woodrow Wilson Fellow. He was then promptly drafted into the US army, served in Vietnam, and just as promptly found himself back in the world as a student at the University of Colorado where he earned a Ph.D. in physics. In 2008 he was named a Norlin Distinguished Graduate of that university. He lives in Manhattan, KS with his wife, Georgia, and they have a daughter Hali who is a student at KSU. In his spare time he enjoys competitive indoor rowing, bicycling, rugby, poetry, and the night sky.
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