Rod Pyle is an author, journalist, television producer and editor in chief of Ad Astra magazine for the National Space Society. He has written 18 books on space history, exploration and development, including 'Space 2.0,' 'First on the Moon' and 'Innovation the NASA Way.' He has written for NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Caltech, WIRED, Popular Science, Space.com, Live Science, the World Economic Forum and the Library of Congress. Rod co-authored the 'Apollo Leadership Experience' for NASA's Johnson Space Center and has produced, directed and written for The History Channel, Discovery Networks and Disney.
Rod Pyle is a space historian and author who has created and offered executive leadership and innovation training at NASA's Johnson Space Center. Rod has received endorsements and recognition from the outgoing Deputy Director of NASA, Johnson Space Center's Chief Knowledge Officer for his work.
The first half of our day will focus on finding a site to deploy the Haystack Observatory's experiment, called EDGES . In broad terms, the team is doing field work with MIT's Dr. Alan E.E. Rogers, seeking to validate earlier results of an experiment that measured the ionization of hydrogen in the early. They hope to accomplish this by using passive radio astronomy to listen to some of the earliest radio frequency signals in the universe — emissions from primordial hydrogen.
From left to right: Jason Soo Hoo, Rigel Cappalo, Pascal Lee, and John Barratt at the EDGES antenna site.
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