ILLUSION SCIENCE CAFE'
Who: Speaker Richard Easton
What: Illusion Science Café
When: Monday March 25, 6pm
Where: 8812 Orbit Lane Lanham MD
Richard Easton has degrees from Brown University and The University of Chicago and works as an actuary for an insurance company in Chicago. He has written and spoken widely on the origins of GPS. He has contributed articles to the Space Review, Quest: The History of Spaceflight Quarterly, Spaceflight: A British Interplanetary Society publication and The Institute of Navigation Newsletter. He has given a plenary address to The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics’s Guidance, Navigation and Control Conference, and has spoken at The Navy Day in Washington, D.C. and the “After Longitude – Modern Navigation in Context” conference at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, England.
The talk covers the invention of GPS and in particular discusses the relationship between space tracking and space based navigational systems
What: Illusion Science Café
When: Monday March 25, 6pm
Where: 8812 Orbit Lane Lanham MD
Richard Easton has degrees from Brown University and The University of Chicago and works as an actuary for an insurance company in Chicago. He has written and spoken widely on the origins of GPS. He has contributed articles to the Space Review, Quest: The History of Spaceflight Quarterly, Spaceflight: A British Interplanetary Society publication and The Institute of Navigation Newsletter. He has given a plenary address to The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics’s Guidance, Navigation and Control Conference, and has spoken at The Navy Day in Washington, D.C. and the “After Longitude – Modern Navigation in Context” conference at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, England.
The talk covers the invention of GPS and in particular discusses the relationship between space tracking and space based navigational systems