Back to All Events

NASA’s Mars Exploration Program: Past, Present & Future (A Free, Virtual Lecture)

  • Hamptons Observatory (online) P.O. Box 3095 East Hampton, NY 11937 US (map)
The image is of NASA’s Mars missions, clockwise from top left: Perseverance Rover and Ingenuity Mars Helicopter; InSight Lander; Odyssey Orbiter; MAVEN Orbiter; Curiosity Rover; and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. (Credit: NASA/JPL)

The image is of NASA’s Mars missions, clockwise from top left: Perseverance Rover and Ingenuity Mars Helicopter; InSight Lander; Odyssey Orbiter; MAVEN Orbiter; Curiosity Rover; and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. (Credit: NASA/JPL)

REGISTRATION REQUIRED FOR THIS FREE VIRTUAL EVENT:

Hamptons Observatory (HO), a 501(c)(3) NYS nonprofit that relies on public support has served the South Fork since 2005. Hamptons Observatory offers all of its programs free-of-charge so that everyone can enjoy the wonders of their Universe. Please consider making a tax-deductible donation to help support our work. Thanks!

Tiffany Morgan Deputy Director Mars Exploration Program

Virtual Astronomy Lecture:

“NASA’s Mars Exploration Program: Past, Present & Future” (A Free, Virtual Lecture)

SPEAKER: Tiffany Morgan, Deputy Director, NASA’s Mars Exploration Program

CO-HOST: Stony Brook University Department of Geosciences

Registration is required: https://bit.ly/MarsExplorationTalk

Hamptons Observatory and co-host, Stony Brook University Department of Geosciences, are honored to present a free, virtual lecture by Tiffany Morgan, Deputy Director of NASA’s Mars Exploration Program.

Over the past two decades, NASA and the Mars Exploration Program (MEP) have been making progressive steps to better understand Mars and to search for past and present life through a series of orbiters, landers, and rovers: The Spirit and Opportunity rovers demonstrated that Mars once had a warmer, watery past; the Odyssey orbiter revealed large subsurface water ice at the poles; the Curiosity rover has demonstrated that Mars was once a habitable environment; and the MAVEN orbiter has provided clues to the loss of water from the Martian atmosphere to space, just to name a few. NASA is currently embarking on an ambitious venture to transport samples collected by the Perseverance rover back to Earth for investigation; this ensures utility of the best techniques and equipment, yielding the highest precision and sensitivity of the samples to enable scientific discoveries for decades to come. Now more than ever, with NASA’s new Moon to Mars Campaign and international enthusiasm for human space exploration, we need to prepare for the presence of humans on Mars. Leveraging unprecedented levels of international and commercial interest, MEP is developing a strategy to emphasize future sustainability through partnerships and by capitalizing more frequently on launch windows. This will enable NASA to send lower-investment, high-value science missions and payloads to Mars more often, and to prepare for humans on Mars!

Tiffany Morgan serves as the Deputy Director of NASA's Mars Exploration Program (MEP) within the Science Mission Directorate's Planetary Science Division, a position she has held since August of 2021. In this role, she provides program leadership in the exploration and characterization of Mars, aiming to comprehend its current environment, climate, geological history, biological potential, and to prepare for eventual human exploration at Mars. In addition to supporting direction of MEP's current operating assets (three orbiters, two rovers, and a helicopter) and research grant program, she plans and guides new Mars initiatives such as MEP's contributions to the Mars Sample Return Campaign and the European Space Agency's Rosalind Franklin Mission. Ms. Morgan previously held leadership roles including: Project Manager for NASA's Solar Electric Propulsion Project, which is developing and qualifying high-power thrusters for the Artemis Gateway; and Chief of the Engineering & Program Integration Division for Air Force Space Command's (now Space Force) rapid prototyping and demonstrations arm. Ms. Morgan graduated from Arizona State University with a BSE in Materials Science & Engineering and a BS in Physical Geography. She also holds a Master’s of Business Administration from the University of Tennessee.

Hamptons Observatory extends its deepest thanks to Ms. Morgan for generously taking the time to share her expertise, and to co-host Stony Brook University’s Department of Geosciences and Prof. Tim Glotch for their kind collaboration

While this lecture is free, donations to support our programs are needed and deeply appreciated regardless of the amount. To make a tax-deductible donation to support our mission, please click HERE. Thanks!

REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED FOR THIS FREE, VIRTUAL EVENT:

https://bit.ly/MarsExplorationTalk

Contact us for further info, questions, or to join our mailing list.

Previous
Previous
March 20

North Greenland WindSled Expeditions (A Free, Virtual Lecture)

Next
Next
March 28

April’s Solar Eclipse: A Practical Guide (A Free, In-Person Lecture in Moriches, NY)