Luis Zea

Dr. Luis Zea is the Chief Scientist at Starlab Space and an adjunct professor in the Smead Aerospace Engineering Sciences Department at the University of Colorado Boulder. He holds a Ph.D. in aerospace engineering sciences with a specialization in bioastronautics from the University of Colorado Boulder. His career spans academia, industry, and entrepreneurship, with experience in both business development and scientific research. As an aerospace engineer and gravitational biology scientist, Dr. Zea has worked on 26 spaceflight experiments, from the Space Shuttle to the International Space Station. He has served as a principal investigator for multiple NASA-funded projects, including experiments conducted in low Earth orbit and aboard Artemis I’s mission around the Moon. Dr. Zea is a co-editor of Springer Nature’s Handbook of Space Pharmaceuticals and served as co-director of Guatemala’s first satellite. His honors include an honorary doctorate, the Karman Fellowship, and the Thora Halstead Award from the American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR). He is also a member of ASGSR’s governing board and serves on the organizing committee for the Central American Space Congress. Dr. Zea has advised NASA and the United States National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, contributing to the 2023-2032 Decadal Survey on Biological and Physical Sciences in Space as well as NASA’s science strategy for human exploration of Mars. With expertise in space science, engineering, business development, and lean startups, Dr. Zea is dedicated to advancing Starlab Space’s mission—ushering in a new era where microgravity fuels innovation and unlocks transformative benefits for industries and humanity alike.

Thursday
May 08
Space Therapies: Accelerating Biotech Solutions for Health Beyond Earth
2:30 PM

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3:15 PM

Space is among the harshest and least hospitable environments for humans. Every human biological system is affected by the space environment. The biological stress has a deleterious impact on health and physical capabilities, and the extreme conditions and isolation take a significant toll on mental performance and behavior. By 2040, hundreds of people will be in space at any given time, and more than 80% of those are predicted to be private citizens; for the reliability, safety, health, and enjoyment of those private participants, new solutions and therapeutics are needed to maintain health and wellbeing.

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Copyright SynBioBeta 2025

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Copyright SynBioBeta 2025