
In this episode, we talked to team members from the International Space University's Space Studies Program about their project Eternal Echo, an assignment to design a durable and decipherable message for an intelligent species elsewhere in the cosmos. The project is an updated version of the Golden Record, a gold-plated copper disk of sounds and images created by Carl Sagan, Frank Drake, Ann Druyan, Timothy Ferris, Jon Lomberg and Linda Salzman and affixed to both Voyager spacecrafts launched in 1977.
We talked to team members Eanna Doyle, Guillaume Dieppedalle, and Paul Stewart about the task of Messaging Extra Terrestrial Life (METI), the future of humanity, and the need for open access science to improve life on Earth now.
Sep 13, 2022
59 min

In this episode, Space Forward talks to Peter Platzer about the foundation and journey of Spire Global. Not-just-a-satellite company, Spire has a textbook-like business model that allows for extraordinary asset utilization and several risk-adjusted revenue streams, positioning them as a leading data analytics and weather prediction company.
Spire notably owns the entire value chain ― from building and operating their multipurpose nano-satellite constellation, to providing object tracking and weather prediction services around the globe, 24/7. Tune in now to hear about the ups-and-downs of starting a commercial satellite company, Peter’s purposeful business philosophies, and humanity’s adventure into space to solve problems here on Earth.
Peter Platzer is the CEO of Spire Global. A former Boston Consulting and Deutsche Bank quant trader who studied physics in Vienna, Peter holds an MBA from Harvard Business School and is a fellow International Space University Alumni.
Space Forward deconstructs the efforts of humankind’s expansion into space, focusing on the hard problems inherent to facilitating our interplanetary future. Through insightful conversations with forward-thinking visionaries, this podcast explores the actionable steps required to make our space future a reality, breaking down complex ideas into first principle concepts.
CONTENT
00:01:22 Intro
00:02:10 Call to adventure | Lead, inspire and create the business of space for the benefit of all
00:03:46 Refusal of the call | Harvard Business School & Wallstreet
00:04:02 Supernatural aid | Peter Diamandis & The Singularity University
00:04:48 Crossing the first threshold | International Space University & meet the founder crew
00:06:38 Metamorphosis | Moore’s Law & the foundation of Spire Global
00:09:45 Road of trials | Weather prediction & finding product-market fit
00:12:04 Meeting with the goddess | Raising money & trusted mentors
00:17:46 Rejections
00:18:15 Confront what slows one down | do something one can only do from space
00:20:30 Captain Ahab & not waiting for Godot
00:22:37 Apotheosis | Breakthrough
00:28:30 The ultimate boon | Building satellites
00:30:00 The hard thing about hard things | The struggle on hiring
00:33:35 Magic flight | Losing satellites in the mail
00:33:40 Crossing the return threshold | Lessons learned
00:36:27 Master of two worlds | Findings
00:38:37 Freedom to Live | Big data and analytics
Jul 28, 2022
50 min

This episode is the second part of our talk with Harvard Professor Avi Loeb. We discuss ― Life In The Cosmos ― an academic textbook he co-authored with Manasvi Lingam which provides an analysis of the latest scientific methodologies for detecting life beyond our planet. It’s an updated version of an original book written in 1966 by astrophysicists Carl Sagan and Iosif Shklovsky. We dive into the Kardashev Scale, a theoretical model for classifying stages the development of intelligent alien civilizations based on energy consumption, and the potential of applying a modified version, based on a more indirect but proportional scale of wasted heat or entropy production, toward today’s search for extraterrestrial intelligences (ETIs).
Learn more about Avi’s work with Breakthrough Starshot, a proposed flyby mission to our neighboring solar system Alpha Centauri, and how his recently funded Galileo Project will help to demystify Unexplained Aerial Phenomena. Join us as we survey the latest endeavors to detect alien technosignatures, and explore whether monkeys may one day compose Shakespeare’s Hamlet on a typewriter.
Professor Avi Loeb is the Director of the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. He received his PhD in plasma physics from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and worked as a theoretical astrophysicist at Princeton Institute for Advanced Study. Loeb is a New York Times bestselling author, chairs the Breakthrough Starshot Initiative, and founded the current Galileo Project advancing the search for extraterrestrial life.
CONTENT
00:00:35 Intro
00:02:21 Kardashev scale
00:07:01 Building Noah’s Ark in Space
00:12:35 Breakthrough Starshot
00:16:36 How to Decelerate as you get to Proxima B
00:22:05 A Masterpiece: Monkeys Typing Hamlet
00:22:39 Technosignatures: detecting Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
00:26:44 The Galileo Project
Jan 5, 2022
36 min

In Episode 10, we talk to astrophysicist Avi Loeb about what he thinks we might find in the observable universe. Will it be biosignatures that will reveal extraterrestrial life? Or technosignatures, evidence of a past or present alien technology? Join us as he discusses his latest book “Life in Cosmos: From Biosignatures to Technosignatures”, the possibilities of self-replicating, artificial intelligent von Neumann probes, and the absurdness - or not - of eating aliens!
Professor Avi Loeb is the Director of the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. He received his PhD in plasma physics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and worked as a theoretical astrophysicist at Princeton Institute of Advanced Study. Loeb is a New York Times bestselling author, chairs the Breakthrough Starshot Initiative, and founded the current Galileo Project advancing the search for extraterrestrial life.
CONTENT
00:01:36 Intro
00:05:14 Life in cosmos | Text book
00:07:11 Technosignatures | Oumuamua
00:11:51 Von Neumann Probe | Golden Record 2.0
00:14:05 Alien A.I.
00:15:58 Eating aliens
00:19:54 Smart kids on the block
00:25:21 Self-reflection
Nov 26, 2021
31 min

In this episode we discuss Earth's first on-orbit satellite inspection service, Australian startup HEO Robotics, on a quest to "Make Space (Assets) Transparent". We dive into how they pivoted from Asteroid Mining to Space Situational Awareness, the methods they used to find Product-Market Fit, and future possibilities to scale their business to the Moon, asteroids, and beyond!
Joining us for this conversation, we have an enthusiastic leader in space technology research, development, and innovation, Dr. William Crowe, Founder and CEO of HEO Robotics. William holds a Bachelor's of Aerospace, Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering and PhD in Space Flight Dynamics from the University of New South Wales Sydney.
CONTENT
00:01:44 Intro
00:02:35 May the force be with you / Star Wars Planetary Exploration
00:03:03 Low cost Asteroid Mining
00:04:59 The right time of funding / Competition out of business
00:06:04 Pivoting from Asteroid Mining to Space Situational Awareness / Finding Product/Market Fit
00:08:16 Observing Oumuamua?
00:11:11 Operational vs technical constraints
00:13:12 Flybys / Slingshots / Change of Economics of Launch
00:15:18 Shift from Academia to Start-up
00:17:42 Accelerators/Incubators / Lean Start-up & Academic becoming Founder
00:20:05 Sizing the problem / Investigating the problem / Trends that helped to raise the company
00:22:47 How to expand the value chain / Extending the business / Use Cases
00:28:25 The technology of swarm constellations / Starlink
00:33:05 Experimentation Framework & Prototyping
00:38:08 Licensing
00:39:08 LEO, HEO or Lunar Orbit?
00:40:08 The solutions customers want
00:42:34 SpaceX & Blue Origin
00:44:05 Australian Space Agency & Space Market
00:47:25 Why Space
Jun 14, 2021
49 min

In this episode we will explore the bleeding edge of satellite and satellite constellation miniaturization. These awe inspiring craft commonly known as Chipsats, Wafersats, Sprites, Monarchs, Kicksats, Starchips, or even just “Smart Dust” are facilitating the rapid miniaturization of space craft following an exponential trajectory stipulated by Moore's Law, no doubt enabling new incredible possibilities and discoveries just around the corner.
We talk about the unique physics and associated challenges that these low-mass vehicles face in space, how incredible engineering is overcoming them, and how the Breakthrough Starshot project will tackle the very difficult problem of sending a spacecraft interstellar to Proxima b.
Our guest today is Professor Zachary Manchester, who studied physics and aerospace engineering at Cornell University earning his BS and PHD respectively. Zac undertook his Postdoc at Harvard and became Assistant Professor at Stanford University, and later at Carnegie Mellon University where he now heads the Robotic Exploration Lab. He received critical acclaim for his Kickstarter.com crowdfunded Kicksat project - deploying an armada of chipsats in LEO and has published together with Mason Peck and Avi Loeb and is member of the Breakthrough Starshot Research team, who are working on an interstellar spacecraft mission to Proxima-b.
CONTENT
00:02:36 Intro
00:05:51 Inspiring Moments | Working with Professor Mason Peck
00:06:47 What are Femtosats, Attosats, Zeptosats, Yoctosats, Chipsats?
00:11:29 Regulatory Constraints | Collision Risks
00:15:12 Cubesat & Chipsat costs
00:20:00 Most valuable uses cases and applications
00:25:50 Chipsat Communication
00:28:28 Length Scaling
00:32:16 Thermal Equilibration
00:34:12 Attitude Determination and Orbit Control
00:43:36 Bio-inspired Constellation Management
00:53:15 Limits of Miniaturization | Smart Dust
00:56:00 Breakthrough Initiative | Starshot
00:59:45 Starshot Payload
01:07:39 Is Earth going to look like a Death Star?
01:08:59 Nuclear Propulsion
01:15:00 Most advanced Breakthrough Propulsion
01:16:18 The Origins of the Chipsat Idea | Kickstarter Campaign
01:30:42 Next Research Projects
01:35:09 Hard Problems to solve
01:38:58 Science Fiction becomes Science Fact
01:40:20 Why space and why space now?
Jun 4, 2021
1 hr 41 min

In this episode we talk about MIT's Lunar Knowledge Graph called Lunar Open Architecture and MIT’s intriguing research on a crowd-sourced, sharing-economy-like, tokenized satellite constellation. A sat-constellation-as-public-utility.
The MIT’s Media Lab Space Exploration Initiative has the goal “to invent, create, and deploy ideas that seem exotic and impossible today, but could be commonplace in ten years.”
Our guest today is the research lead of MIT’s Lunar Open Architecture project, Mehak Sarang. Mehak is a trained physicist and a Research Associate both at Harvard Business School and MIT Media Lab Space Exploration Initiative, and an active member of the Open Lunar Foundation, Moon Dialogs, and the SGAC EAGLE Team.
CONTENT
00:02:14 Intro
00:07:44 MIT Media Lab Space Exploration Initiative
00:12:50 Lunar Open Architecture
00:19:47 Knowledge Graph / GraphQL / Automated Reasoning
00:26:04 Stakeholder Interests of NASA, SpaceX, and others
00:32:32 Database Open Access
00:35:35 How to contribute?
00:37:03 Sharing Economy in Space | Blocksat
00:44:39 Satellite constellation for the people by the people
00:53:53 Time to market
00:56:17 What is needed to start up Blocksat?
01:00:13 Federated Satellite Applications
01:03:26 What’s next at MIT Space Exploration Initiative
01:05:33 Next Harvard Business Review Case Study on ISS
01:11:49 Why space, why space now?
May 24, 2021
1 hr 15 min

In this episode, we talk about the rise of Space Marketplaces and how the Satsearch Product Knowledge Graph helps solve problems for marketplace users. We ask, what kind of Acquisition Loops work in the space sector, how does their Experiment Framework look like, and should space marketplaces scale vertically or horizontally? We talk about unit economics, defensibility, and how Satsearch bootstrapped its way forward with the support of the ESA Business Incubation Center.
Our guest is Narayan Prasad, co-founder, and COO of Satsearch, a global marketplace for the space industry, incubated by the European Space Agency. Narayan is a multiple degrees academic in space-related sciences, a vivid member of the Indian space community - an Indian in Germany living space entrepreneur.
CONTENT
00:01:25 Intro
00:09:18 Bootstrapping
00:12:47 Getting the Supply-side
00:16:09 Investment Thesis | Problem to solve
00:24:53 Experimentation Framework
00:27:34 Cold Start Problem | Two-sided Network Effects
00:34:12 Entry Barriers & Pricing
00:35:54 Marketplace Liquidity
00:38:17 Helping suppliers to find Product-Market-Fit
00:39:19 Acquisition Loops | Buying Traffic
00:47:02 ESA BIC Support
00:49:17 The Rise of Marketplaces
00:51:51 Small Niche Market becomes big
00:57:44 Clean Space Initiatives
01:01:42 Vertical vs Horizontal Integration
01:04:46 Product Knowledge Graph
01:08:10 Defensibility | Moats
01:12:35 Most Striking Learnings
01:17:32 India Space Program
01:22:21 Unfair Advantages
01:25:46 Why Space and Why Now?
May 4, 2021
1 hr 30 min

In this episode, we’ll be diving right into the dynamics of the space sector, space commerce, space business, space industry, space market, and the fundamental forces driving their development.
It’s a great pleasure to welcome Matthew Weinzierl, an associate Professor in the Business, Government, and the International Economy Unit at Harvard Business School. Matthew has worked for McKinsey & Company, and the US government as an economist on The White House Council of Economic Advisors. While much of Professor Weinzierl’s early research focused on the optimal design of economic policy, in particular taxation, he has recently launched an array of projects focused on the commercialization of the space sector and its economic implications.
Matthew, together with his Harvard Business School team, have published multiple case studies just this past year: on Space X and Economies of Scale along with Made in Space and the business of In-Space Manufacturing, all of this along with an article emphatically proclaiming: “The Commercial Space Age is Here” in the Harvard Business Review.
CONTENT
00:00:00 Intro
00:02:50 Harvard Business School Case Studies Part 1
00:04:30 Niels Bohr & and defining the space market, space commerce, space business
00:05:59 Two different economies: Space for Earth, Space for Space
00:09:57 Deconstructing the space sector & Self Organization of markets
00:12:24 Rockets don’t scale | Space Elevator
00:15:18 Scaling and populating space
00:17:35 Who is paying for it and why?
00:21:18 Analogies to historical IT and Telecommunications market development
00:23:44 Industrial Economics in space
00:30:31 Spire Global | Going from globalisation to solar-system-ization
00:32:31 Blockchain, NFT, Smart Contracts for products from space
00:34:37 Is there a need for an international Space Trade Institution?
00:36:04 HBS Case Study Part 2 | Made in Space
00:38:24 Space Killer Apps Part 1
00:39:25 Closed Loops, 3D-Printers, and The Star Trek Replicator
00:41:34 Is there a business case for Resource Extraction in space
00:44:19 Space Killer Apps Part 2
00:45:48 Up-and-comers in the space sector
00:47:10 Space Economics in the context of rational human behavior
00:50:00 Strongest disagreement between the space economists
00:51:36 Why space at all?
Apr 15, 2021
54 min

In this episode we seek to understand the decision-making environment in which Space Business Angels operate and the mindset they follow when making investment decisions, exploring best practices, and getting an industry outlook from those with skin in the game. We talk about risk mitigation, selling shovels instead of digging gold, drivers of scale, investing horizontally vs vertically, why Luxembourg produces above the average space companies, and the role of EBAN Space.
Our guest today is Fabrice Testa, Chairman of EBAN SPACE, the space branch of Europe's leading early stage investors network, and Co-Founder of both the Luxembourg Space Tech Angels and Maana Electric. An Aerospace Engineer by training, Fabrice is a space business angel, serial entrepreneur, co-founder and Chief Financial Officer of Maana Electric which aims to be the utility company of the solar system, starting with solar panels on the Moon. He has supported start-ups in growing and scaling their ideas as a mentor, coach, and in several other key capacities.
CONTENT
00:01:59 Intro
00:07:57 Logistic growth curve and similarities to the IT industry in the late 1970s/80s/90s
00:12:18 Categorisation of the space market
00:19:39 What are the early segments of the market that need to grow
00:25:16 Drivers of scale / Total Addressable Market
00:30:16 Advices to founders
00:34:03 MBAs vs Engineers / Immediate Value to the customer
00:39:09 VCs and their investment periods
00:45:02 Skin in the game
00:47:31 CAPM / Risk assessment
00:52:39 Outliers / Risk of failure
00:56:40 The different risk variables of Business Angels and Venture Capital
01:00:48 Is it better to be a Business Angel or a VC?
01:03:16 Vertical vs horizontal space industry portfolio
01:07:50 Increasing chances to find outliers
01:11:46 Empty company containers full of money (SPAC)
01:18:28 Where is the next Rocket Valley / Satellite Valley?
01:21:45 What is Luxembourg doing right?
01:24:12 The role of EBAN Space / Next Steps
01:30:53 Humans want to explore
Apr 1, 2021
1 hr 36 min
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