Dr. Gregory Benford
Dr. Gregory Benford is author of the recently published
Anomalies, a Collection of Short Fiction.
Greg is the professor of Plasma Physics and
Astrophysics
at UCIrvine (University of California, Irvine).
He earned his Ph.D. in Physics from the University of California, San
Diego in 1967. He is a member of
Phi Beta Kappa, a
Woodrow Wilson Fellow,
and a consultant for
NASA. He is also a popular science fiction author.
Greg’s program at UCIrvine unites theoretical studies with a parallel
experimental program in radiation processes of relativistic electron
streams in plasma. Experiments use intense relativistic beams propagating
in helium plasma. Microwave and atomic spectral diagnostics measure
emission and the underlying turbulent fields. The group also studies the
practical methods of high-power microwave emission. Turbulence levels are
high, with electric field energy densities comparable with the total
thermal energy of the background plasma. Such strong fields demand new
theory and sophisticated diagnostics, with fast time resolution (less
than ten nanoseconds). This is a new regime — “superstrong”
turbulence — with statistical properties just being
explored.
His scientific papers include
Desorption-Assisted Sun Diver Missions,
Sail Deployment By Microwave Beam: Experiments
and Simulations,
Coherent Radiation from Energetic
Electron Streams via Collisionless
Bremsstrahlung in Electrical Plasma Turbulence,
Collective Emission from Rapidly Variable Quasars,
Electron Beam Radiation by Collective Compton
Boosting of
Strong Turbulence,
Natural Wormholes as Gravitational Lenses,
Detailed spectra of high-power broadband microwave radiation from
interactions of relativistic electron beams with weakly magnetized
plasmas,
and
Statistics of Strongly Turbulent Electric Fields.
He has authored nonfiction books including
Habitats in Space,
Beyond Human: The New World of Cyborgs and Androids, and
Deep Time: How Humanity Communicates Across
Millennia.
Greg tends to write hard science fiction which incorporates the
research he is doing as a practical scientist. He has worked on several
collaborations with authors including William Rotsler,
David Brin and
Gordon Eklund, but has really made a name for himself with the Galactic
Center Saga beginning with
In the Ocean of Night.
His breakthrough novel may have been the time travel classic
Timescape, coauthored with his brother’s wife Hilary Foister Benford, which
won the Nebula Award and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award. A
scientific procedural, the novel eventually loaned its title to a line of
science fiction published by Pocket Books.
Greg has also served as an editor of numerous alternate history
anthologies as well as collections of Hugo Winners. He
wrote
Foundation’s Fear, one of an authorized sequel trilogy to Isaac
Asimov’s Foundation series, the other two books being written by
David Brin and
Greg Bear. Other novels published include several
near-future science thrillers:
Cosm,
The Martian Race and
Eater. Greg has been nominated for four Hugo Awards (for
two
short stories & two novellas) and 12 Nebula Awards (in all categories).
He won the Nebula for his novel
Timescape and the novelette
If the Stars
Are Gods (with Gordon Eklund).
He is particpating with
Michael R. Rose in the innovative
Amazon Shorts program
including the articles
Motes in God’s Eye : The Deformities of American Science: One in a series
on science and modern culture
and
We Can Build You : Transplantation, Stem Cells, and the Future of Our
Bodies: First in a series of articles on the 21st Century biomedical
revolution.