As part of Cosmic Frontiers 2025: Planets, a two-day event organized by the New Mexico Consortium, JROMC is pleased to co-host a presentation on the complexities of establishing a human presence on the Moon. This event will be held on Saturday May 3rd beginning at 10:40am at SALA Event Center in Los Alamos, NM.
Title:
Moon 2.0: Achieving a sustained human presence on the Moon with an eye towards Mars.
Speaker Biography:

Dr. Hibbitts is the deputy principal investigator (PI) of the recently launched Europa Clipper MISE infrared mapping spectrometer destined for Jupiter’s moon Europa and was deputy PI on the NASA BRRISON and BOPPS stratospheric balloon missions. He conducts his laboratory work at a facility he developed at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory that is uniquely capable of determining how materials respond when exposed to the vacuum, temperature, radiation, and micrometeoroid environments similar to surfaces of the Moon and Europa.
He earned a B.A. in Physics from Cornell University, a B.S. in Geology from the University of New Mexico, and both an M.S. and Ph.D. in Geology and Geophysics from the University of Hawaii.