Space Summit 2025 brings together researchers who have sent research payloads aboard the international space station (ISS) as well as researchers seeking to send their research into microgravity on-board the ISS.
Additionally, the impact of the private space stations coming online in low earth orbit (LEO) will be assessed from the standpoint of pricing and access to researchers.
The conference is co-chaired by Dr. Mike Roberts, Chief Scientific Officer and Dr. Kristin Kopperud, Science Program Director-Biological Sciences, International Space Station National Laboratory -- the Chairpersons will set the tone of the conference plus provide actionable information to researchers seeking to expand their research into LEO.
Speakers and Delegates are composed primarily of researchers involved in various disciplines that are amenable to LEO such as Organs-on-Chips in Space, Tissue-Chips, Organoids, 3D-Printing, Flow Chemistry-Space Chemistry, amongst others.
Additionally, platform and infrastructure providers who are critical in providing the correct form factor as well as telemetry ob-board station will be present to provide practical guidance to researchers seeking LEO for their research.
Registered delegates will have full access to the co-located and concurrent conference track to mix-and-match presentations and maximize networking:
Extracellular Vesicles (EVs) and Lipid-Nanoparticles (LNPs) gaining attention and amenable to research in LEO. In fact, NCATS is putting out a RFP for EVs in Space.
There are ample opportunities for networking, partnering and business development at this conference and this ensures a very cost-effective conference trip.
The Exhibit Hall is Co-Located with the Conference Tracks for Excellent Networking with the various vendors and platform providers.
Please note:
- The Space Summit 2025 will be held May 15-16, 2025 right at the Embassy Suites Miami International Airport.
- This conference venue provides very easy access from around the world via Miami International Airport a FREE Shuttle ride away (airport code: MIA).
Agenda
- 3D-Bioprinting in Orbit
- 3D-Organoid Models for Disease in Microgravity Conditions
- Effect of Microgravity on Drug Responses
- Flow Chemistry - Chemistry in Space
- Organs-on-Chips as a Platform for Studying Effects of Microgravity on Human Physiology
- Tissue Chips in Space NIH/NCATS-ISS US National Laboratory Projects
- Research Projects in Low Earth Orbit (LEO)
- Private Space Stations offering Commercial Access to LEO for Research, Development and Manufacturing
- Platform Providers Offering Access to LEO for Scientific Research Projects
Speakers
Alain Berinstain Biographical Sketch
As Chief Strategy Officer, Dr. Berinstain is responsible for leading CSS’s overall corporate strategy, driving business growth and overseeing new space initiatives. Dr. Berinstain has been a thought leader in the space industry for over 25 years, most recently as Chief Strategy Officer at Space Tango and earlier as Vice President of Moon Express, developing their customer base and growth strategies. Prior to working in the commercial space sector in the US, Alain was at the Canadian Space Agency, acting in several executive positions, during which time he played leadership roles in international space cooperation groups. He has developed payloads and instrumentation with world-class scientists for missions on the Space Shuttle, Space Station Mir, the International Space Station, and a number of other space missions. Alain has a Bachelor’s degree in Chemistry and Biochemistry and a PhD in Physical Organic Chemistry; he also has a Masters of Space Studies from the International Space University.
Arun Sharma, Associate Professor, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Dr. Arun Sharma, PhD is a stem cell biologist focusing on cardiovascular biology and space biosciences. He is an associate professor at Cedars-Sinai and is affiliated with the Board of Governors Regenerative Medicine Institute, the Smidt Heart Institute, the Cancer Institute, and the Department of Biomedical Sciences.
Research in the Sharma laboratory focuses on the applications of human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) for modeling cardiovascular diseases outside of the body (in-vitro). The lab utilizes cutting-edge technologies including hiPSCs, genome editing, cardiac organ-on-chips, and 3D cardiac spheroids/organoids to understand the molecular mechanisms driving cardiovascular disease and heart development. For example, the Sharma laboratory employs hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes (personalized, beating heart muscle cells) to develop novel ways to alleviate the cardiovascular damage caused by cancer drugs. The lab also studies the developmental mechanisms underlying congenital heart disease, as well as examines the impact of infections on the cardiovascular system, such as in the setting of COVID-19.
Sharma also has a unique background and interest in the space biosciences and investigates means by which stem cell biology can intersect with this emerging field. In 2016, Dr. Sharma led a project that sent human stem cell-derived heart cells to the International Space Station to study the effects of microgravity on human heart function, which was the first long-duration cell culture experiment in space. He remains an internationally-recognized leader in the space biosciences field, and his laboratory studies means of harnessing microgravity to manufacture unique biomaterials.
Sharma has published articles in leading scientific journals such as Science, Nature Biotechnology, Science Translational Medicine, Circulation Research, Nature Reviews, Stem Cell Reports, and Cell Stem Cell. His research has been featured in major news outlets such as Forbes Magazine, Newsweek, Science Magazine, and the Wall Street Journal. He has received numerous awards for his work, including the Forbes 30 Under 30 in Science, STAT Wunderkinds, Sartorius & Science Award in Regenerative Medicine, the American Heart Association Career Development Award, the Compelling Results Award from NASA, and the Donna and Jesse Garber Award for Cancer Research.
Chunhui Xu, Professor, Emory University School of Medicine
Chunhui Xu, Ph.D., is a Professor in the Department of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine. Dr. Xu has extensive research experience on stem cells and heart cell development. Her research is focusing on heart cells derived from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs), which hold promise for cell therapy, disease modeling, and drug discovery. Her group has made significant contribution to the field of hPSCs. Several of their publications have been identified as a hot paper or among the most highly cited publications in the field of hPSCs. She is an inventor or co-inventor of 18 issued US patents, and her publications have been cited more than 12,000 times according to Google Scholar. Her research has been funded by NCI, NHLBI, NIAAA, NSF, CASIS, AHA, and HESI/FDA. Her spaceflight experiment was called as a significant step for next-generation space research by the International Space Station National Laboratory, and featured by CNN, NASA, and Chemical & Engineering News.
Emmanuel Urquieta, Vice Chair of Aerospace Medicine / Department of Medicine University of Central Florida College of Medicine
Emmanuel Urquieta, M.D., M.S., FAsMA, is the Vice Chair of Aerospace Medicine and Associate Professor of Medicine at the University of Central Florida – College of Medicine. In his role at UCF, he oversees the development of research, education, and partnerships in the domain of aerospace medicine. Prior to joining UCF, Dr. Urquieta served as the Chief Medical Officer at the NASA-funded Translational Research Institute for Space Health where we managed a multimillion-dollar portfolio of medical research for missions to the Moon and Mars, the commercial spaceflight program EXPAND, and analog capabilities, including partnerships with the Australian Antarctic Division. Dr. Urquieta has extensive experience providing medical care in austere and remote environments serving as a flight surgeon in Mexico City’s Police Department Helicopter Emergency Medical Services, participating in hundreds of rescue missions and aeromedical evacuations. He has volunteered in medical missions around the world. In 2017, Dr. Urquieta was selected as a crew member of the Human Exploration Research Analog (HERA) XI mission at NASA Johnson Space Center, spending 30 days in a capsule simulating a deep space long-duration mission. He is a Fellow of the Aerospace Medical Association, and an academician of the International Academy of Astronautics, and has authored and co-authored dozens of publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals. Dr. Urquieta holds a medical degree and specialty in emergency medicine from Anahuac University in Mexico City and an M.S. in aerospace medicine from Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio.
Jamie Foster, Professor, University of Florida
Dr. Foster’s role in the Astraeus Space Institute has been to build stronger connections between the Florida Space Coast, including the rapidly expanding commercial space industry, and the University of Florida. Dr. Foster is the lead contact for the Space Edge Accelerator UF Hub, a program to help new companies learn about expanding their space biomanufacturing portfolio and building connections with space implementation partners and launch providers. Dr. Foster is also the UF site lead for the Center for Science, Technology, and Research in Space (C-STARS). C-STARS is an NSF-funded program that brings academic researchers across the State of Florida together with spaceflight providers to help industries transition to the space manufacturing sector and improve the production of unique medicines, therapeutics, and materials that can benefit the people of Earth. Dr. Foster’s long-term goal for the University of Florida Astraeus Space Institute is to serve as a centralized hub for collaborations between researchers and commercial companies providing critical access, experience, and knowledge to increase research and production capabilities in the space environment.
Kenneth A. Savin, Chief Scientist - Redwire
After receiving his PhD from the University of Utah in synthetic organic chemistry, Dr Kenneth Savin did a post doc at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center before going on to work for Eli Lilly and Co. as a senior research scientist. During his 20-year career in the pharmaceutical industry, Ken led discovery chemistry research teams, discovery operations, radiochemistry, drug disposition, chemistry development and product teams as well as being an adjunct faculty member at Butler University. During the last four years of Ken’s industrial career, he led an effort that resulted in five separate flight experiments flown on the International Space Station. After retiring from Lilly, he joined the team at the Center for the Advancement of Science In Space (CASIS) (the operators of the International Space Station National Lab) working in both Business Development, as a science lead and ultimately as the Sr. Director of In Space Production Applications. During his time at CASIS, Ken worked with a team at NASA to develop the In Space Production and Applications program that is run out of NASA as an effort to develop products in space that will benefit life on the Earth. Ken joined the Redwire team in early 2022 to be the Chief Scientific Officer at Redwire. His focus at Redwire has been on the commercialization of work performed in the labs at Redwire and in developing partnerships that will lead to better products and easier access to the value that space based products can provide.
Kristin Kopperud, Science Program Director, Biological Sciences, International Space Station National Laboratory
Dr. Kristin Kopperud joined the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space, Inc. (CASIS), which manages the International Space Station (ISS) National Laboratory, as an Operations Project Manager in June 2020. She transitioned to the role of Science Program Director of Biological Sciences in the Research and Innovation department in March 2022. Her focus areas include tissue engineering, in-space production applications and biomanufacturing, and rodent research. In this role, she works with Principal Investigators to outline their science requirements during the early stages of their projects’ lifecycles. Using skills developed in her former role in the Operations department, she is able to evaluate concepts and proposals from an operational standpoint as well as a scientific one, which helps her to refine the projects’ requirements to feasibly support biology in microgravity. She also works with the Education department to use science as a means of education and outreach and presents to the public in webinars and conferences to connect to researchers in microgravity and beyond.
Dr. Kopperud received her BS in Biotechnology and Biology from the University of Kentucky. She earned her PhD in Biological Sciences from Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne, FL studying circadian rhythms in the retina of the Atlantic tarpon. While she moved to Florida to pursue a career in marine biology, she was captivated by the space culture that was inescapable on the Space Coast. During graduate school, she taught undergraduate laboratory sections of Mammalian Physiology and Biology and was recruited to serve as a Research Support Scientist for several ISS National Lab-sponsored Rodent Research missions, serving as a surrogate for the crew on the ISS. Thus began a career in the aerospace industry—and she hasn’t looked back!
Lisa M. Larkin, Professor, University of Michigan
Lisa M Larkin, PhD, is a Professor of Molecular & Integrative Physiology at the University of Michigan. She holds a joint appointment in the Biomedical Engineering Department at the University of Michigan. Dr. Larkin is the director of the Skeletal Tissue Engineering Laboratory at the University of Michigan and has 35 years of expertise on musculoskeletal physiology and small and large animal surgical procedures and more than 21 years’ experience specifically with ligament, tendon, muscle, and bone tissue engineering. Larkin has pioneered methods to co-culture scaffold-free tissue constructs to engineer functional tissues and their interfaces. Dr. Larkin has five patents and two pending patents for her work. She has co-authored 44 peer-reviewed journal papers on tissue engineering, 4 reviews and two book chapters specifically on tissue engineering, another 33 on the physiology of muscle. Dr. Larkin is a member of the following societies: The American Physiological Society, Society for Neuroscience, Tissue Engineering International and Regenerative Medicine Society, Biomedical Engineering Society, and Orthopaedic Research Society.
Mari Anne Snow, CEO and Co-Founder, Eascra Biotech
Mari Anne Snow is the CEO and co-founder of Eascra Biotech, an early-stage nanomedicine startup leveraging low Earth orbit (LEO) to accelerate the development of advanced therapeutics for the benefit of patients on Earth. Eascra is a participant in NASA's In Space Manufacturing (InSPA) Program and a recipient of the ISS National Lab® Igniting Innovation Award. The Eascra team has successfully sent samples to the ISS on Ax2, NG-20, and SpX-30, and is scheduled to continue their rapid progress with payloads on the upcoming SpX-31 and SpX-32 missions.
Maribella Domenech, Professor, Chemical Engineering, University of Puerto Rico-Mayaguez
Dr. Maribella Domenech is a distinguished Puerto Rican scientist and full-time Professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering at the University of Puerto Rico-Mayagüez (UPR-Mayagüez). She earned her B.S. in Industrial Biotechnology from UPR-Mayagüez (2006), followed by an M.S. and Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Madison (2010), and completed her postdoctoral training in Chemical Engineering at UPR-Mayagüez (2012).
For the past 12 years, Dr. Domenech has been an independent researcher and educator specializing in the development of biomaterials and cell culture platforms to model the breast tumor microenvironment and enhance the potency of therapeutic cells in manufacturing processes. She is a key member of several research leadership teams, including the NSF-Sponsored Engineering Research Center in Cell Manufacture Technologies (CMAT) and the Center for the Advancement of Wearable Technologies (CAWT).
Her work has been showcased at over 30 conferences, and she has authored more than 20 peer-reviewed journal articles along with contributing two book chapters. Dr. Domenech’s research and mentorship have been recognized with numerous awards, including the Industrial Biotechnology Alumni Role Model Award (2015–2017), the Faculty Cancer Research Award from the American Association for Cancer Research (2016), the Distinguished Engineer Faculty Award (2018), and most recently, the 2024 AACR Minority and Minority-Serving Institution Faculty Scholar in Cancer Research Award and the Research Investigator of the Year for the UPR eleven-campus system.
Notably, Dr. Domenech is the first female engineering faculty member from the UPR system to be elected as a standing member of the Cellular and Molecular Technologies Study Section at the NIH Center for Scientific Review. She is also the first scientist—and female—to send cell culture technologies to space from Puerto Rico, aboard the SpaceX-31 mission. Recently, she was recognized by Engineering Now Magazine as one of the most outstanding female engineering researchers at UPR-Mayagüez and by Ciencia Puerto Rico as one of the top 37 Puerto Rican females in STEM, earning her a place in the “Borinqueñas in STEM” exhibit at the Centro Criollo de Ciencias y Tecnología del Caribe (C3Tec).
Matthew Strickland, Medical Oncologist, Director of Translational Research, Center for Space Medicine Research, MGH /Harvard Medical School
Dr. Strickland is a medical oncologist at Massachusetts General Hospital and an Instructor in Medicine at Harvard Medical School. He completed his internal medicine training at Boston Medical Center followed by Hematology and Oncology fellowship training at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women’s hospital. He is board certified in Internal Medicine and Medical Oncology and belongs to several oncology research organizations including American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) and American Association of Cancer Research (AACR). His work has been published in multiple journals including Cancer Discovery, Nature Communications and Clinical Cancer Research. As a medical oncologist within the multidisciplinary gastrointestinal oncology group at MGH, Dr. Strickland works with other specialists such as surgeons, radiation oncologists and others to develop personalized, cutting edge therapeutic plans for patients. His research focus includes developing clinical trials to discover better therapies and improve outcomes for patients with GI cancers. As Director of Translational Research at the Center for Space Medicine Research at MGH, his group works towards leveraging the unique research environment of microgravity to discover better therapies for patients living with cancer. Originally from Alberta, Canada, he is an avid ice hockey fan, enjoys flying as a private pilot and diving as a certified SCUBA diver.
Meghan Everett, Deputy Chief Scientist, International Space Station
Dr. Meghan Everett support research across a variety of technical areas for the International Space Station. She started her NASA career in 2007 in the exercise physiology laboratory and conducted several ISS and analog research experiments focusing on human performance and optimizing crew health for ISS and exploration missions. Prior to her current position Meghan provided crew health support as the ISS Program Crew Health and Countermeasures System (CHeCS) Integrator. Meghan obtained a BS degree from Skidmore College in Exercise Physiology, and MS and PhD from University of Houston in kinesiology with a focus in molecular muscle physiology.
Michael Roberts, Chief Scientific Officer, International Space Station National Laboratory
Michael S. Roberts, PhD is the Chief Scientific Officer of the International Space Station National Laboratory, managed by the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space, Inc. (CASIS). Before joining CASIS in 2013, Michael worked as a principal investigator and research group lead in the NASA Advanced Life Support program at the Kennedy Space Center. Prior to arriving at NASA-KSC in 1999, Michael completed an undergraduate degree in biology at Maryville College, a doctorate in microbiology at Wesleyan University and post-doctoral research at the Center for Microbial Ecology at Michigan State University and the RIKEN Institute in Wako-shi, Japan.
Molly Mulligan, Director, Business Development, Redwire
Dr. Molly Mulligan is director of business development at Redwire’s In Space Manufacturing and Operations business unit. In this role, she supports business development efforts for the company’s biotechnology and materials science portfolio.
Prior to joining Redwire, Dr. Mulligan worked at Space Commerce Matters as the Director of Commercialization Strategies, where she led efforts in commercial allocation and commercialization strategies. In 2017, Dr. Mulligan returned to the United States and began working for the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS). CASIS manages the US National Lab located on the International Space Station (ISS).
In 2014, Dr. Mulligan’s expertise in the area of tissue chips led her to join SpacePharma, a start-up company in Herzliya Israel, that builds hardware for research platforms based in space.
Dr. Mulligan did her post-doctoral work in Biomedical Engineering at the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology. At the Technion, Dr. Mulligan’s work focused on tissue chips, this time looking at breathing lung models. Dr. Mulligan attended the University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass), where she earned a PhD in Mechanical Engineering in 2011, and Smith College ('05), where she double majored in Physics and Astronomy.
Natalia Tumidajski, Principal Scientist, GMP Site Head, EXOCEL BIO INC.
Natalia Tumidajski is a Principal Scientist and GMP Site Head at ExoCel Bio in Doylestown, Pennsylvania with a background in regenerative medicine, stem cell research, and exosome technology, Her work focuses on developing innovative solutions for skin health, anti-aging, hair rejuvenation, and wound healing. In her current role, Natalia leads the development and management of a state-of-the-art facility specializing in regenerative medicine. She oversees GMP and R&D laboratories, ensuring compliance with regulatory standards and driving innovative research initiatives. Her leadership extends to strategic site management, experimental design, and the development of novel products. Natalia is also an active presenter at national conferences, sharing her findings and contributing to the scientific community.
Natalia’s lab is dedicated to optimizing GMP manufacturing of exosomes, conducting in-depth characterization studies—including mRNA and growth factor expression profiling—and assessing the effects of lyophilization on extracellular vesicle stability. The team is also evaluating advanced 3D cell culture systems and exploring the effects of microgravity and hypoxia on exosome yield and potency, aiming to enhance their therapeutic potential for regenerative medicine.
Ngan Huang, Associate Professor, Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Stanford University
Ngan F. Huang is an Associate Professor in the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery at Stanford University and Research Career Scientist at the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System. Dr. Huang completed her BS in Chemical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, followed by a PhD in bioengineering from the University of California Berkeley & University of California San Francisco Joint Program in Bioengineering. Prior to joining the faculty, she was a postdoctoral scholar in the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine at Stanford University. Her laboratory investigates the interactions between stem cells and extracellular matrix microenvironment for engineering cardiovascular tissues to treat cardiovascular and musculoskeletal diseases. Recent research focuses on the role of microgravity for drug screening of engineered muscle tissue for reversing aging and atrophy. Dr. Huang has authored over 100 publications and patents, including those in Nat Med, PNAS, and Circ Res. She has received numerous honors, most recently including the Society for Biomaterials Mid-Career Award, the Alan Hirsch Mid-Career Award in Vascular Medicine from the American Heart Association, and the inaugural Elena Aikawa Trailblazer award from the International Society for Applied Cardiovascular Biology. She has been inducted as a fellow of the American Heart Association as well as the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering. She has active or completed projects funded by the National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation, American Heart Association Department of Defense, California Institute of Regenerative Medicine, and Department of Veteran Affairs.
Palaniappan Sethu, Professor of Medicine and Biomedical Engineering, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Dr. Palaniappan Sethu is a Biomedical Engineer by training with a PhD from the University of Michigan where he developed new polymer based lab-on-a-chip technologies for genomic and proteomic assays. Dr. Sethu completed his postdoctoral training at the Center for Engineering in Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School and Shriners Burns Hospital working on label-free approaches to isolate leukocyte sub-populations from whole blood. After spending the 1st 7 years of his career at the University of Louisville, he is currently a Professor of Medicine and Biomedical Engineering within the Division of Cardiovascular Disease at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. Dr. Sethu also serve as the Section Chief for Basic and Translational Sciences within the Division of Cardiovascular Diseases and as the Program Director for the Engineering Education in Medicine Program within the Department of Biomedical Engineering.
Rihana Bokhari, Scientific Research Director at the Translational Research Institute for Space Health (TRISH)
I am a space physiologist with experience in bone biology, radiation biology and additional expertise in science management, portfolio management, solicitation writing and review. I began my PhD work with a fascination for space life sciences, though it was a new area for me as I grew up far from a NASA center. I was fortunate to earn a National Space Biomedical Research Institute fellowship during my first few years of graduate work that allowed me to become up to speed with the space research world. This fellowship led me to earning a certification in Space Life Sciences and several NASA internships that have helped me to develop a well rooted understanding of Space Health as well as NASA priorities in these areas.
I am currently the Scientific Research Director for the Translational Research Institute for Space Health (TRISH). I have faculty appointments in Baylor College of Medicine’s Center for Space Medicine and the Department of Education, Innovation and Technology. My primary expertise lies in the effects of disuse and radiation on the musculoskeletal system. I lead the TRISH Science Office honing and implementing our science strategy through solicitation design, recommending proposal selection, interfacing with awarded investigators, and translating the findings from TRISH projects back to NASA. I most recently served as the Acting Chief Scientific Officer (CSO) for TRISH where I focused on continuing the develop and implement TRISH’s scientific strategy and the Deputy CSO where I supported the CSO in leading the TRISH Science Office. I have previously served as a support scientist at the NASA Research and Education Support Services, where I focused on facilitating grant review, solicitation writing, project management, and portfolio management for not only TRISH but also the NASA Space Biology Program and the NASA Human Research Program.
Tammy Chang, Professor of Surgery, University of California-San Francisco
Dr. Tammy T. Chang is Professor of Surgery at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). She holds an M.D.-Ph.D. combined degree from Harvard Medical School, and her clinical training includes General Surgery Residency and Minimally Invasive Surgery Fellowship at UCSF. Dr. Chang attends on the Acute Care Surgery service at UCSF Medical Center, and she directs a basic and translational research laboratory focused on liver tissue engineering. The unifying theme of her research program is to understand how physical conditions, including dimensionality and extracellular matrix, regulate hepatocyte function. Overarching goals of Dr. Chang’s laboratory are to develop novel tissue-based therapies to treat severe liver dysfunction and to advance bench-to-operating-room regenerative surgery approaches. Accordingly, her work has delineated the role of stiffened matrix in fibrotic liver disease, characterized the function of human stem cell-derived liver organoids, and investigated microgravity-enabled cellular self-assembly in generating larger tissue constructs. Extramural support for Dr. Chang’s research includes sources from the NIH, NSF, NASA, Open Philanthropy, and the American College of Surgeons.
Tobias Niederwieser, Assistant Research Professor, BioServe Space Technologies
Tobias Niederwieser is an Assistant Research Professor at BioServe Space Technologies within the University of Colorado Boulder where he serves as Principal Investigator on several grants for space life science experiments. Of particular focus is the in-space manufacturing of human pluripotent stem cells for regenerative therapy applications on Earth. Previously, he led the development of several novel facilities operating continuously onboard the ISS including science incubators, centrifuges, life support systems, as well as crew galley refrigerators that have enabled experiments on over 40 orbital launches. He is currently developing similar facilities for commercial and lunar space stations. Additionally, Tobias was involved in the DSRG radiation biology experiment onboard Artemis-I conducting the furthest active biology experiment with sample return ever performed.
Yupeng Chen, Associate Professor, University of Connecticut, United States of America
Dr. Yupeng Chen is an Associate Professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Connecticut. Holding both an M.Sc. and a Ph.D. in biomedical engineering and chemistry from Brown University, Dr. Chen's long-term research interest lies in the design and development of DNA-inspired Janus base nanomaterials for regenerative engineering applications. He holds 11 US patents and 14 international patents in Janus base nanotechnology, some of which have been successfully licensed to industry partners. Dr. Chen has authored one book, 11 book chapters, and 74 peer-reviewed publications, and he and his lab have delivered 127 conference presentations and invited talks. His achievements have been recognized with the Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) award from NSF, the discovery award from DOD, and the New Investigator Recognition Awards from the Orthopaedic Research Society. Elected as a senior member of the National Academy of Inventors (NAI) and a member of the Connecticut Academy of Science and Engineering (CASE) in recognition of his efforts to translate scientific breakthroughs into practical applications, Dr. Chen has secured many competitive federal research grants from agencies such as NIH, NSF, NASA, DOD, and the International Space Station (ISS) National Lab.
Location
ADDRESS
Embassy Suites by Hilton Miami International Airport
3974 NW South River Drive
Miami, FLORIDA
33142
United States