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W. M. Goss has published over 500 papers in refereed journals and was the Director of the Very Large Array and the Very Long Baseline Array of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in New Mexico. He has written three books on the history of radio astronomy: Under the Radar, The First Woman in Radio Astronomy, Ruby Payne-Scott, (by Goss and McGee, Springer, 2009, in the series Astrophysics and Space Science Library), followed by Making Waves, The Story of Ruby Payne-Scott, Australian Pioneer Radio Astronomer (Goss, Springer, 2013, for a more popular audience in The Astronomers University Series). In 2017, a new book in this later series was published (book launch was 9 February 2018 at Sydney University) by Frater, Goss and Wendt, Four Pillars of Radio Astronomy: Mills, Christiansen, Wild, Bracewell. Goss has worked throughout his career on the physics of the interstellar medium, the radio continuum of the galactic centre and pulsar astrometry. Goss was the recipient of the Australian Academy of Science Pawsey Medal in 1976.
Claire Hooker holds a PhD in the history of science and medicine, work that underpins her teaching and research in the variegated field of the Health and Medical Humanities. She has taken an historical-oriented approach to studies of how different stakeholders respond to health risks, particularly in response to infectious disease. She has published 3 books and over 50 peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters on topics as diverse as non-representational theories of empathy and of infection control, the importance of taking a multi-cultural approach to the medical humanities, and the use of video-reflexive ethnography to improve hospital practice. Claire Hooker has sustained interest in the history of radio astronomy since completing her PhD courtesy of a continued connection with W.M. Goss.
Ronald D. Ekers is one of the more prominent astronomers in Australia. He was the first Director of the completed US VeryLarge Array, then the Foundation Director of CSIRO’s Australia Telescope National Facility. He is a past President of the International Astronomical Union (2003-2006), a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science, the Royal Dutch Academy of Science, the Royal Society of London (FRS) and the US National Academy of Science. Ekers is the author of over 280 refereed publications and editor of SETI 2020. Ekers research interests in astronomy are broad; including extragalactic astronomy and cosmology, galactic nuclei (the centres of galaxies), ultra-high energy particle physics and innovative applications of radio astronomical techniques.