I've just learned of WhiteWind and am exploring it as a complement to Blue Sky. It appears that a bsky profile carries over, so that's convenient. Since this allows a bit more room than bsky, here's a short bio:
Thomas Earle Moore, space weatherman
3rd Rock Research, 8 Shell St., Scarborough, ME 04074.
m: 443-254-4712, email: thomem@iiirdrock.net
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Thomas-Moore-11
Current Position: 2020-present, NASA emeritus, now consultant and author of peer-reviewed research, mainly on agu.com, and news/opinion articles, mainly on medium.com
Education: 1970: B.S. in Physics, 1971: M.A.T., University of New Hampshire. 1978: Ph.D. in Astrogeophysics, University of Colorado, Boulder. 2009: “R&D Management” at The Wharton School of Business, U. Penn., Philadelphia.
Bio: Studied the plasma environment at geosynchronous orbit, making the first multi-spacecraft observations to reveal moving space weather fronts. Observed plasma and energetic particles above auroral displays from sounding rocket platforms. At Marshall Space Flight Center from 1983, worked on the Retarding Ion Mass Spectrometer of the Dynamics Explorer-1 Satellite. Supplied plasma spectrometers for sounding rocket payloads. Led the Thermal Ion Dynamics Experiment and Plasma Source Instrument for the ISTP POLAR spacecraft. At Goddard Space Flight Center from 1997, led the IMAGE Mission as mission scientist, and as lead investiagator for the Low Energy Neutral Atom imager on IMAGE. Member of the Solar Probe science definition team, the Sun Earth Connections Advisory Subcommittee, was co-chair of the first NASA “Heliophysics” Roadmap Committee, study scientist for the Magnetotail Constellation Mission, and Co-convener for the 2015 Conference on Measurement Techniques in Solar and Space Physics. Co-investigator on the Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) mission, and the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission (MMS), as lead of Fast Plasma Instrument (FPI), and as Senior Project Scientist. Fellow of the American Geophysical Union.