Download bio

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Spaceplane wikipedia , lookup

Single-stage-to-orbit wikipedia , lookup

Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle wikipedia , lookup

Reusable launch system wikipedia , lookup

Saturn (rocket family) wikipedia , lookup

Anti-satellite weapon wikipedia , lookup

Non-rocket spacelaunch wikipedia , lookup

StarTram wikipedia , lookup

CanSat wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Who is Keith Lofstrom?
http://www.keithl.com/
Keith is a 56 year old mixed-signal integrated circuit designer in
Beaverton, Oregon. Keith is CEO of SiidTech, which licenses
silicon identification technology to semiconductor manufacturers.
Keith is also an integrated circuit design consultant. Keith
designed crossbar routing chips for Icube Design Systems, which were used by
Cisco and others to route much of the internet in the mid 1990s. Keith helped
write the IEEE 1149.4 mixed signal scan test standard, and received an award for
a related presentation at the International Test Conference.
Keith has designed thin-film light valves for computer projectors. He deploys
low power computer systems with high performance per watt. He is inspired by
the nearby Solar World silicon solar cell factory (largest in North America), and
nearby Intel's “DC bus data center” initiatives, aiming to increase data center
efficiency. He is concerned that large data center projects in Oregon use prime
greenfield industrial land and large amounts of power, while failing to alleviate
high local unemployment. These interests and concerns led to server sky.
Keith is webmaster for Orcnet, the Oregon IEEE Consultant's Network. Keith is
active in open source and the Portland Linux Unix Group. Keith's server hosts the
dirvish disk-to-disk backup program, based on rsync and written in Perl.
Inspired by Arthur C. Clarke's novel Fountains of Paradise (but not his
engineering or materials science), Keith invented the Launch Loop in 1981. This
speculative space launch system can be built with existing technologies and
launch thousands of tons into orbit per day at costs below $5/kg. No market yet
exists for that much launch capability. The Launch Loop (http://launchloop.com)
is attracting renewed attention from a new generation of space enthusiasts.
Space launch is risky and expensive, and the risks and costs must be reduced
before large-scale passenger operations or complex construction projects become
practical. Keith believes that the expansion into the universe will be funded by
broadly- and strongly-felt near-term economic needs, driving the demand for
millions of tons of automated cargo into orbit per year. Self-deployed arrays of
tiny, interchangeable, mass-produced satellites is one way to accomplish large
scale missions without orbital construction, eventually leading to the market
demand that will pay for high volume, low cost launch systems. When these
systems are well tested and inexpensive, we can start launching people with them.
Partial Publication and Presentation list
Lofstrom, K. (1975). Sinusoidal Supply Josephson Junction Logic. MSEE
Thesis, University of California at Berkeley.
Lofstrom, K. & Van Duzer, T. (1997, January). Josephson logic circuit with a
sinusoidal current supply. IEEE Transactions on Magnetics, 13 (1), 597600.
Lofstrom, K. (1981, November). The Launch Loop: A Low Cost Earth-toHigh-Orbit Launch System. Readers Forum, American Astronautical
Society News Letter, 20(6).
Lofstrom, K. (1982, August). The Launch Loop. L5 News 7(8), 8-10.
Lofstrom, K. (1983, December). Launch Loop. Analog Magazine, 103(13), 6780.
Lofstrom, K. (1985, July). Launch Loop. AIAA-85-1368, 21st Joint
Propulsion Conference, Monterey, CA.
Lofstrom, K. (1990, November). A World Much Like Our Own. Liberty
Magazine, page 10.
Lofstrom, K. (1996). A Demonstration IC for the P1149.4 Mixed Signal Test
Standard. Proceedings of the IEEE International Test Conference, 92-98.
Lofstrom, K. (1996). Early Capture for Boundary Scan Timing Measurements.
Proceedings of the IEEE International Test Conference, 417-422.
Lofstrom, K. (1997). Mixed Signal Test Scan - Past, Present, and Future. 10th
Annual IEEE International ASIC Conference, September 7-10, Portland,
OR.
Lofstrom, K. (1999). Peripheral Cell Design. In A. Ossieran(Ed.), Analog and
Mixed-Signal Boundary-Scan, a guide to the IEEE 1149.4 Test Standard,
Kluwer Press.
Lofstrom, K., Daasch, W. & Taylor, D. (2000). IC Identification Circuit using
Device Mismatch. IEEE Cat. No. OOCH37056. IEEE International
Solid-State Circuits Conference Digest of Technical Papers, 43, 372-373
.
Lofstrom, K., Castaneda, D., Graff, B. & Cabbibo, A. (2004, June). ICID Tracing Individual Die from Wafer Test through End-Of-Life. 10th
International Mixed Signal Test Workshop, Portland, Oregon.
Lofstrom, K. (2005, January-March). Dirvish Disk to Disk Backup System.
Sysadmin Magazine.
Lofstrom, K. (2009,August). Launch Loop. Space Elevator Conference,
Redmond WA.
Lofstrom, K. (2009, August). Server Sky. Space Elevator Conference, Redmond
WA.
Lofstrom, K. (2009, October). Server Sky. AMSAT Symposium, Baltimore MD.