Les Johnson is a physicist and author. He is the author of
Mission to Methone;
Rescue Mode, coauthored with Ben Bova;
Saving Proxima (forthcoming) coauthored with Travis S. Taylor; and coeditor of the science/science fiction anthologies
Going Interstellar and
Stellaris: People of the Stars. He was technical consultant for the movies
Europa Report and
Lost in Space and has appeared in numerous documentaries on the Discovery and Science channels. Les was also the featured Interstellar Explorer in National Geographic Magazine and interviewed for Science Friday. By day, he serves as Solar Sail Principal Investigator of NASA's first interplanetary solar sail missions and leads research on various other advanced space propulsion technologies at the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
Robert E. Hampson, Ph.D., turns science fiction into science in his day job, and puts the science into science fiction in
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Les Johnson is a physicist and author. He is the author of
Mission to Methone;
Rescue Mode, coauthored with Ben Bova;
Saving Proxima (forthcoming) coauthored with Travis S. Taylor; and coeditor of the science/science fiction anthologies
Going Interstellar and
Stellaris: People of the Stars. He was technical consultant for the movies
Europa Report and
Lost in Space and has appeared in numerous documentaries on the Discovery and Science channels. Les was also the featured Interstellar Explorer in National Geographic Magazine and interviewed for Science Friday. By day, he serves as Solar Sail Principal Investigator of NASA's first interplanetary solar sail missions and leads research on various other advanced space propulsion technologies at the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
Robert E. Hampson, Ph.D., turns science fiction into science in his day job, and puts the science into science fiction in his spare time. He has consulted for more than a dozen SF writers, assisting in the (fictional) creation of future medicine, brain computer interfaces, unusual diseases, alien intelligence, novel brain diseases (and the medical nanites to cure them), exotic toxins, and brain effects of a zombie virus. His science writing ranges from fictional depiction of real science and the mysteries of the brain to surviving the apocalypse or living in space. His recent forays into short fiction have appeared in the US Army Small Wars Journal (TRADOC Mad Science Writing Contest), Science Fiction by Scientists (Springer), Black Tide Rising anthologies (Baen), and Four Horsemen Universe (Chris Kennedy Publishing). Some of his prior fiction and nonfiction appeared under the pseudonym Tedd Roberts. Dr. Hampson is a professor of physiology/pharmacology and neurology with more than thirty-five years' experience in animal neuroscience and human neurology. His professional work includes more than 100 peer-reviewed research articles ranging from the pharmacology of memory to the effects of radiation on the brain--and most recently, the first report of a neural prosthetic to restore human memory using the brain's own neural codes. He is a member of the SIGMA Forum and the Science and Entertainment Exchange--a service of the National Academy of Sciences. He is married with two grown sons and lives outside Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
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