16 episodes

Space Forward examines our future in space, discerning science fiction from science fact. Through insightful conversations with forward-thinking visionaries, we deconstruct the challenges and opportunities for space exploration, breaking down complex concepts into first principles.

Space Forward Podcast Space Forward

    • Science
    • 5.0 • 4 Ratings

Space Forward examines our future in space, discerning science fiction from science fact. Through insightful conversations with forward-thinking visionaries, we deconstruct the challenges and opportunities for space exploration, breaking down complex concepts into first principles.

    Adopting Strategic Foresight to Shape Our Space Future with Kara Cunzeman

    Adopting Strategic Foresight to Shape Our Space Future with Kara Cunzeman

    Join us for a space forward-thinking conversation with Kara Cunzeman, systems director of Strategic Foresight at the Aerospace Corporation’s Center for Space Policy and Strategy.

    Kara talks to us about Strategic Foresight, a holistic approach toward facing future uncertainties. Strategic Foresight isn’t mind reading, but rather mind mapping. It’s a tool that helps us address tough questions like - How do we navigate difficult issues in space policy to arrive at a preferred future - or - How do we envision the long-term view, going beyond the status quo to meet future challenges and opportunities?

    Buckle up as we blast off into some future space scenarios with Kara Cunzeman.

    Exploring Lunar Governance with Antonino Salmeri

    Exploring Lunar Governance with Antonino Salmeri

    Who owns what on the moon? Legally, nobody according to the United Nation’s Outer Space Treaty. With an array of space agencies and private companies destined to launch a multitude of lunar missions in the coming decades, the principles of the 1967 treaty will be put to the test. How will we mediate the multiple stakeholders set to explore the moon? 
    For answers, we turn to space lawyer Antonino Salmeri, who specializes in the governance of space resources and lunar activities. Salmeri is a policy analyst at the Open Lunar Foundation and Co-Chair of the UN’s Space Generation Advisory Council.  He holds four advanced degrees in law — a Ph.D. in Space Law from the University of Luxembourg, an Advanced LL.M. in Air and Space Law from the University of Leiden, a second-level LL.M. in EU Law and Policy from the LUISS University of Rome, and a Master Degree in Law from the University of Catania.

    From flag planting to moon police, tune in to discover how we are shaping legal frameworks for exploring the moon.

    • 1 hr 3 min
    Delving into the Thermodynamics of Alien Technologies with Jason Wright

    Delving into the Thermodynamics of Alien Technologies with Jason Wright

    Blast off with Jason Wright, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State and director of the Penn State Extraterrestrial Intelligence Center. We delve into the latest scientific methods in the search for technosignatures or evidence of extraterrestrial technologies. Coined by the astronomer Jill Tarter, a co-founder of the SETI Institute, technosignatures encompass communicative signals such as radio waves and laser emissions from other stars across and beyond the electromagnetic spectrum, artifacts like artificial satellites or space megastructures in and beyond our solar system, and other detectable signs of technological life beyond the Earth, like evidence of artificially induced environmental changes on another planet.

    Listen in as we discuss the relevance of the Drake Equation and the Kardashev Scale in today’s search for ETIs, the significance of discerning Earth’s technosignatures, and the latest predictions of identifying an extraterrestrial technosignature within our lifetime!

    • 1 hr 13 min
    Unleashing Self-Replicating Robots for an Industrial Lunar Ecology with Alex Ellery

    Unleashing Self-Replicating Robots for an Industrial Lunar Ecology with Alex Ellery

    Will extraterrestrial, self-replicating robotic systems pave the way for building a sustainable industrial lunar ecology?

    Self-replicating robots are machines that can replicate themselves using materials found in their environment. The concept of self-replicating systems has been around for decades, ever since the mathematician John Von Neumann proposed theoretical models in the 1950s. Since then, research toward building self-replicating machines has evolved with advancements in robotic systems, 3D printing, and space exploration. 

    Now that NASA and other space agencies are focused on returning humans to the lunar surface, researchers like Professor Alex Ellery are developing new robotic systems capable of operating in extreme conditions like the moon. But Ellery is advocating for self-replicating machines, not as an egotistical, science fiction fantasy, but as a means to create a sustainable industrial lunar ecology, whereby precious resources like ice and regolith are recycled and reused.

    Tune in now to Episode 15 and find out why Professor Ellery stopped believing in ETs and started believing in self-replicating robots!

    • 58 min
    Advancing Geoinformatics with Thomas Blaschke

    Advancing Geoinformatics with Thomas Blaschke

    From predicting destructive landslides and urban traffic jams, to tracking illegal deforestation and human rights abuses, Dr. Thomas Blaschke’s research work analyzing Big Earth Data helps address real world solutions. Tune in now for Episode 14: Advancing Geoinformatics to discover our emerging Digital Earth, and the future possibility of developing a new field of academic inquiry, Astroinformatics!

    Episode 13 ︱Encoding a New Golden Record with International Space University’s Eternal Echo Team

    Episode 13 ︱Encoding a New Golden Record with International Space University’s Eternal Echo Team

    How to design a durable and decipherable message for an intelligent species
    elsewhere in the cosmos? We talk to team members from the International
    Space University's Space Studies Program about their project Eternal Echo,
    an assignment to create an updated version of the Golden Record, a
    gold-plated copper disk of sounds and images affixed to both Voyager
    spacecraft launched in 1977. Team members explain their methodologies and
    ponder the implications of Messaging Extra Terrestrial Life (METI), the
    future of humanity, and the need for open-access science to improve life on
    Earth now. 

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
4 Ratings

4 Ratings

Trynalikeit ,

Great show!

Love the guests and the hosts!
Super interesting for anyone interested in space exploration and policy.

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