Archive for May, 2008

SAO Predoctoral Fellow!

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

This is some big news that I’ve been looking forward to posting for a while. I recently found out that I’ve been accepted into the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory’s predoctoral program at Harvard University! It’s now official - I’ll be spending the upcoming academic year in Cambridge, MA as a predoctoral student at Harvard, working on my thesis with Dr. Robert Kirshner. I’ll still be a full-time student at the Institute for Astronomy, and am currently planning on only one year of predoctoral work at Harvard so that I can finish up my Ph.D. thesis back in Hawaii.

For now, however, I’m getting ready to head back out to the Great Frozen North for a year (brrr), along with getting everything squared away for Europe. It’s shaping up to be a pretty busy summer, but I’m looking forward to the travel, and to being back on the mainland for a year of interesting research!

Summer research/travel plans

Monday, May 19th, 2008

I’m going to be traveling quite a bit this summer, so I thought I’d briefly detail where I’ll be off to and what I’ll be doing.

From June 15th - 20th I’ll be attending the 255th IAU Symposium on low-metallicity galaxies in Rapallo, Italy. I’ll be presenting a contributed talk on Thursday on “Modeling the ISM Properties of Metal-Poor Galaxies and Gamma-Ray Bursts”. It’s looking like a really fascinating meeting, so it should be a great week!

Following the meeting, on June 23rd - 25th I’ll be visiting Geneva Observatory, working on some really interesting collaborations with Drs. Andre Maeder and Georges Meynet and presenting a seminar on June 25th (again on our modeling of metal-poor galaxies and gamma-ray bursts!)

Finally, I’ll be at Oxford University from July 6th - 26th (traveling there via Garmisch, Munich, Salzburg, Berlin, and Amsterdam on an extremely overclocked 10 days of vacation). While there I’ll be working with Dr. Katherine Blundell on developing a lab exercise in spectroscopy to be used as part of the HI-STAR (Hawaii Student/Teacher Astronomy Research) program at the UH Manoa campus, a summer astronomy research experience for high school students. The program encourages students to continue their research projects as participants in the Hawaii State Science and Engineering Fair (HSSEF). As someone who participated in science fair projects straight through middle school and high school, I’m pretty excited to get involved in this kind of program!

It’s going to be a pretty wild summer! And I’ll have more news up soon regarding my plans for the upcoming academic year!