Saturday, June 4, 2011

Anna Brunner

I grew up in Massachusetts, and next fall I will be a senior at MIT. Geology is my area of study, and I’m particularly interested in the application of geology concepts to other planets, which is why I like working for NASA. In January I got my first taste of field work and geological mapping, and I quite enjoyed it. After MIT, I plan on going to grad school, but I have no idea where I want to go.

This summer I will be working for Dr. Amy McAdam in the Planetary Environments lab, continuing the research project I worked on last summer with her. I’ll be using evolved gas analysis, x-ray diffraction, and gas chromatography as methods of determining the organic content and mineralogy of Mars analog rocks. These analysis techniques are ones that the Mars Science Lab can perform, so basically I will be generating MSL-like data and then trying to figure out what we can learn from that data and what sorts of useful tests we can do once the MSL lands.

I am a rather nerdy girl. I delight in playing board games and video games, reading (and sometimes writing) science fiction, and attending anime/sci fi conventions. I’m also really into Dr Who and Harry Potter. I enjoy both watching and participating in theater productions. My involvement with theater is mostly backstage (costuming, set building, making props, stage managing…), but I’ve done a teensy bit of acting and stage combat.

Me and some of the mad engineers of my dorm, building a wooden roller coaster in the courtyard.
I’m excited to meet you all, and I'm sure this summer will be excellent!

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Joshua Mann

Favorite Quote: “Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss, you’ll land among the stars” by Les Brown
                Greetings LPSA members! It has been a pleasure getting to know you all through your blogs, and I am cannot wait to meet you all in person. I have a feeling this is going to be a great summer not just because of the research, but also because of the bonds we will make with one another.
                My story begins with my birth in Detroit, Michigan. While it is my birthplace, and most of my family currently lives in Detroit, I consider myself from Northern Virginia. I moved to Northern Virginia when I was only three years old with my parents and was raised there. Growing up my parents always told me that I could do anything that I set my mind to, and I believe that it was because of their encouragement that I grew into a person that focuses not on the challenge, rather on why I am interested in taking on the challenge in the first place. I could definitely relate to Mindy in deciding to follow her heart because I believe that passion is what fuels success. When I was in the fourth grade I attended a musical assembly in my elementary school where different types of instruments were played before me. I listened to the violin, viola, trumpet, trombone, clarinet, and alto saxophone during the course of the assembly. As soon as heard the saxophone I knew that it was the instrument for me. If may have been the hardest to learn and master, but I still play it from time to time today. Oh and Jake, try to pick up the guitar or the piano, we might be able to play a little this summer.
                In the eleventh grade I knew that I wanted to pursue a career in physics because it was the one science that really resonated with me and whose application I could see taking place all around me. It was not my easiest subject, but it was without a doubt the one I was most passionate about, and to this day I am proud to be an Applied Physics and Aerospace Engineering Major attending Morehouse College. As I am sure many of you have experienced, if you go to a public event and tell someone you are studying astrophysics, aerospace engineering, or space science they will look at you as though you are a genius or as though you are crazy. However, at the end of the day it all boils down to the truth that there is something about these fields that keeps us up at night that is what makes them our reality and our destiny.
                This summer I will be working with Neil Taylor and Mr. Fred Minetto on the SPARCLE project. In the past I have conducted research on the structure and composition of star systems. In this project investigated the properties of the different planets in the Solar System. At the conclusion of the research I presented, along with my group members, a model of a solar system we made up to demonstrate how different planetary characteristics, such as albedo, play a role in determining the average temperatures of each planet. Also, during my first semester of college I conducted research with a professor at Clark Atlanta University named Dr. Ronald Mickens. The research was math based and it focused on a preliminary investigation of the Leah sine and Leah cosine functions. Basically these functions are solutions to a second order differential equation and to find their properties, one being periodicity, the functions were graphed on the x-y phase plane. Although the research did not directly pertain to my career interest I enjoyed the experience.
I truly can’t wait to meet all of you and to hear more about each of your stories. Cheers to a spectacular summer that awaits us!

David Kutai Weiss

Hey everyone, I just got back last night from my 3 week-long field studies course; camping and mapping the geology of the west, which explains the delay in posting my biography!  Anyway, I currently live in Potomac, Maryland and I am a geology major and rising senior at the College of Charleston, South Carolina. I enjoy all outdoor sports (Rock climbing, white water rafting, sea kayaking, fishing, caving, etc), and martial arts...Can't wait to meet you all in a few days. 
My spring break backpacking trip took me to Pisgah National Forest, NC for a week where I camped one night next to the pluton you see in the background.  The shiny streaks are water flowing down depressions formed by joints/fractures.