Brown to Host NASA Planetary Chief

GoLocalProv Lifestyle Team

Brown to Host NASA Planetary Chief

Dr. James Green
Dr. James Green, director of NASA’s Planetary Science Division will present a lecture titled “NASA’s Solar System Exploration Paradigm: The First 50 Years and a Look at the Next 50” on Thursday, February 5 at Brown University. Green will discuss the future of NASA’s solar system exploration as well as a bit of Rhode Island aeronautics history.

NASA’s usual approach to exploring the solar system has involved “flyby, orbit, land, rove, and sample return.” Green will discuss the past, present, and future scientific exploration of the solar system. The lecture is part of a series honoring Thomas A. Mutch, a geology professor at Brown, NASA administrator, and planetary science pioneer. Mutch died in 1980 while climbing in the Himalayas.

On Friday, February 6, Green will present the story of James Allen, an aeronaut and a Barrington, R.I., native. During the Civil War, Allen served as chief aeronaut for the Union Army Balloon Corps. The corps made more than 3,000 balloon flights during the war for reconnaissance, map-making, and artillery spotting. Allen continued flying balloons after the war and would become the most famous aeronaut of the latter 1800s. He died in 1897 and is buried in Swan’s Point Cemetery in Providence. Green will deliver the talk in character.

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Lectures will take place at 4 p.m. Thursday in 115 Macmillan and 4 p.m. Friday in 117 MacMillan Hall (167 Thayer Street, Providence). The talks are free and open to the public.


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