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Martin Elvis

Senior Astrophysicist at SAO and Astrophysicist at Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

I am an astronomer at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory who has obsessed for years over how supermassive black holes come to be seen as quasars, sources so bright that we see them out to the greatest distances and earliest times in the universe. For my PhD I discovered that quasars emit X-rays. At SAO, using a fleet of space and ground based telescopes I mapped out the spectrum of quasars from X-rays to ultraviolet and infrared wavelengths, and suggested what their inner structures is. Concerned about the growing expense of space telescopes, I have turned to researching the astronomy needed to enable asteroid mining, hoping to cut those costs by putting capitalism to work in space. I have since published widely on issues related to asteroid mining and the space economy,law and ethics, and was honored to have Asteroid 9283 Martinelvis named after me. I am inordinately pleased to be the first professional astronomer to visit the Harvard Business School on business.

Visit website: http://hea-www.harvard.edu/~elvis/

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See also: Academia Harvard University - Private Ivy League research university in Massachusetts

Details last updated 06-Feb-2020

Martin Elvis News

Will we ever colonise an asteroid?

Will we ever colonise an asteroid?

BBC - 13-Jun-2018

An expert explains the challenges of sustaining life in an asteroid and ideas to overcome them