Robert Lull Forward commonly known as Robert L. Forward (August 15, 1932 - September 21, 2002) was a United States physicist and science fiction writer.
He earned his doctorate from the University of Maryland in 1965, for the development of a bar antenna for the detection of gravitational radiation. He then went to work at Hughes Aircraft's research labs, where he continued his research on gravity measurement and received 18 patents. He took early retirement in 1987, to focus on his fiction writing and consulting for such clients as NASA and the U.S. Air Force.
Much of his research focused on the leading edges of speculative physics, but was always grounded in what he believed humans could accomplish. He worked on such projects as space tethers and space fountains, solar sails (including Starwisp), antimatter propulsion, and other spacecraft propulsion technologies, and did further research on more esoteric possibilities such as time travel and negative matter. In addition to over 200 papers and articles, he published 11 novels. He described his first novel, Dragon's Egg, as "A textbook on neutron star physics disguised as a novel." His novel Rocheworld describes a double-planet system with a single ocean.
His treatment of hard-science topics in fictional form is highly reminiscent of the work of Hal Clement.
Dr. Forward and his wife, Martha Dodson Forward, co-authored two of the Rocheworld novels.
Dr. Forward's son, also named Robert, has led a successful career as a storyboard artist and writer in television animation, including in He-Man and the Masters of the Universe and more famously, Beast Wars. He is also the author of one novel, The Owl.
Dr. Forward's oldest daughter, Mary Lois Mattlin, is a teacher and homemaker.
Julie Fuller, Dr. Forward's second daughter, co-authored two of the Rocheworld novels with her father.
Dr. Forward's youngest, Eve Forward, has written two novels: Villains By Necessity and Animist.
1932 births | 2002 deaths | American science fiction writers | Contributors to general relativity | University of Maryland, College Park alumni | Transformers people
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