Meeting Information

Where:
The Fairfax Embassy Row Hotel
2100 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20008
Tel: (202) 835-2100
Web: Fairfax at Embassy Row
Note: Hotel has now SOLD OUT of regular sleeping rooms at the Group Rate but deluxe sleeping rooms may be reserved at the reduced group rate of $259

When:
Thursday, March 4, 2010 - Saturday, March 6, 2010

Agenda
Agenda PDF Version (draft-1/12/10)

Download

     
Agenda Word Version (draft-1/12/10) Download
Registration

Payment Types Accepted: Check, Visa, MasterCard, AmEx, and Discover
 
The meeting registration fee is: $395.00
 
Deadline to register is: February 15, 2010
 
Payment is due by no later than February 26, 2010
 
Late registration fee (after February 15, 2010): $495.00
 
NO refunds for cancellations or changes after February 15, 2010
 
Proceed to Registration Form
 

Driving Directions

From East
Take Route 50 East towards Washington D.C. Continue on Route 50 which will turn into New York Avenue. Continue on New York Avenue which will turn into Massachusetts Avenue. Proceed on to Thomas Circle. Stay in the middle lane and return to Massachusetts Avenue. Continue on circle to Dupont Circle. Continue on circle to Massachusetts Avenue. Continue on a quarter mile. The hotel will be on the left.

From North
Take Interstate 95 South to Capital Beltway. Exit Interstate 495 West to Silver Spring. Exit 33 Connecticut Avenue South, Route 185. Continue on Connecticut Avenue for 8 miles, turn right on R Street. Turn left on 21st Street. The hotel is on the right.

From South
take I-395 North to US 1, to the 14th Street Bridge. Continue on the 14th Street to Thomas Circle. Stay in the middle lane and veer off to Massachusetts Avenue. Proceed .25 miles to Dupont Circle. Continue on the circle to Massachusetts Avenue. The hotel is on the left.

From Baltimore Washington International Airport (BWI)
Take I-195 West. At exit 2B, take ramp right for SR-295 South / Baltimore Washington Pkwy South toward Washington. Take ramp right for US-50 West / New York Ave toward Washington. Bear right onto L St NW. Bear right onto Massachusetts Ave NW. At roundabout, take 3rd exit. Turn right onto Dupont Circle NW. Turn right onto Massachusetts Ave NW. Turn left onto 21st St NW (hotel is on the right).

From DCA - Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport
Exit the airport to Interstate 395 North/Route 1 North. Cross the 14th Street Bridge and stay in left lane. Proceed 14 blocks and turn left onto K Street. Proceed 6 blocks to 20th Street and turn right. Proceed 5 blocks to Massachusetts Avenue and turn left. The hotel will be 1.5 blocks ahead on the left.

From Dulles Airport
Take Interstate 267 To Interstate 66 East. Cross the Theodore Roosevelt Bridge and stay left, taking E Street through the tunnel. After exiting the tunnel, take the first left onto 20th Street. Proceed 10 blocks and turn left on Massachusetts Avenue. The hotel will be 1.5 blocks ahead on the left.

Metro Directions from Reagan National Airport

Board:
Take the Yellow Line in the direction of Mount Vernon Square.

Arrive:
Gallery Place China Town METRO Station - Exit Yellow Line Train.

Board:
Take the Red Line in the direction of Grosvenor.

Arrive:
Dupont Circle METRO Station.

Depart METRO Station:
Using Connecticut Ave. & Q Street exit.

Walk approx. 1 block West on Q St NW, Turn left on 21st Street, NW. When 21st Street crosses Massachusetts Avenue, hotel will be on your right.

Nearby Restaurants

Restaurant Website Cuisine Price
Bistrot du Coin Visit French Bistro
$$
Circa Visit American, Bistro, Pizza $$
Darlington House Visit Italian $$$$
Hank's Oyster Bar Visit American, Seafood $$$
Komi Visit American, Greek $$$$
Levante's Visit Mediterranean $$
Mandu Visit Korean $$
Mourayo Visit Greek $$
Obelisk Visit Italian $$$$
Thaiphoon Visit Thai $$
The Front Page Visit Steak House $$
The Palm Visit American, Steak House $$$$
Vidalia Visit New American, Southern, Soul $$$$

Current Weather Conditions

Washington, D.C., weather forecast


The NASA Space Grant community is very pleased to announce that Dr. Vera C. Rubin has been selected to be the recipient of the 2010 National Space Grant Distinguished Service Award.

Dr. Rubin will be accepting the award in person. The award ceremony will take place in the Ballroom at The Fairfax Embassy Row Hotel in Washington, DC on the evening of Thursday, March 4, 2010. The opening reception will begin at 6:30 PM, followed by dinner at 7:45 PM. The award ceremony will commence at 9:00 PM.

This event is open to the general public. To purchase individual tickets, or to sponsor a corporate table, please contact Eric Day at (202) 885-2755.

About the Distinguished Service award
The National Space Grant Distinguished Service Award was established to recognize individuals whose life and career have had a long lasting impact in a science, engineering or education field that is related to aeronautic, aviation, or space endeavors.

The inaugural award was presented in 2003 to former Senator and Secretary of the Treasury Lloyd M. Bentsen for his visionary work in creating the National Space Grant College and Fellowship Act.

About Dr. Vera Rubin
Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Dr. Rubin was educated at Vassar, at Cornell, and at Georgetown University, Washington DC, where she obtained her PhD in 1954. Since 1965 she has worked at the Carnegie Institution, Washington DC, while also being an adjunct staff member of the Mount Wilson and Las Campanas observatories.

Dr. Rubin's main work has long been concerned with galactic rotation measurements and it has led to one of the more persistent problems of modern astronomy. She has concentrated on spiral galaxies and has measured the rotational velocities of the arms of the galaxy as their distance from the center increases. The velocities of the spiral arms are measured by determining their doppler shifts. That is light emitted from a body moving away from an observer will show a red shift, and a blue shift when emitted from a body moving toward the observer. The degree of spectral shift is proportional to the velocity of the source.

The initial assumption, based upon Kepler's laws, was that rotational velocity would decrease with distance. Thus the theoretical expectation was that: v2 = GM/r2 where G is the gravitational constant, M the attracting mass, and r the orbital radius. It is clear from the equation that as r increases, v will decrease. Dr. Rubin, however, found that the rotational velocity of spiral galaxies either remains constant with increasing distance from the center or rises slightly. The only possible conclusion, assuming the laws of motion, was that the figure for M was too low. But as all visible matter had been taken into account in assessing the mass of the galaxy, the missing mass must be present in the form of ‘dark matter’. Rubin found similar results as she extended her survey. It seemed to her in 1983 that as much as 90% of the universe is not radiating sufficiently strongly on any wavelength detectable on Earth.

Dr. Rubin's work has presented modern astronomy with two major problems. Firstly to calculate the amount of dark matter in the universe and describe its distribution, and secondly to identify particles that make up the dark matter.

Earlier in her career, in collaboration with Kent Ford, Dr. Rubin made the extraordinary discovery that the Milky Way had a peculiar velocity of 500 kilometers per second quite independently of the expansion of the universe. When their results were published in 1975 they were met with considerable skepticism and it was assumed they had miscalculated the distances of the measured galaxies. However, later work by John Huchra and others in 1982 seems to have confirmed their measurements.

More About Dr. Rubin's Distinguished Career
In 1965, she became the first woman ever permitted to observe at the Palomar Observatory.

In 1993, she was awarded the National Medal of Science by President Bill Clinton.

In 1996 she became the first woman to be awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (London) since Caroline Herschel in 1828.

She is a Senior Fellow of Astronomy in the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism at Carnegie Institution of Washington, DC.

She is the author of "Bright Galaxies, Dark Matters"

She earned her Ph. D. from Georgetown University in 1954 with the dissertation "Fluctuations in the Space Distribution of the Galaxies."

Personal Life
With husband mathematician/physicist Dr. Robert Rubin, she has three sons; David, Allen, and Carl, and a daughter Judy. David and Allen are geophysicists, Carl is a mathematician, and Judy is an astronomer.


Past Recipients of the Distinguished Service Award

(L- R) Lloyd Bentsen, James Van Allen, Peter Diamantis, John Glenn, John Young,
and Leon Lederman.

About the Mega Planet Award
Learn about Master Glass Artist, Josh Simpson, in the PBS video below:

 

Distinguished Service Award Event Musicians - The Strolling Strings
"The Strolling Strings literally surround an event with music, creating an entertaining atmosphere that compliments the festive occasion".

To learn more about the Strolling Strings, please visit their website.



Distinguished Service Award Event Photographer

We are very pleased to announce that Mr. Michael Sibbernsen, of the Nebraska Space Grant Consortium, will be photographing the event for us again this year.