Many of us thrill to the breathtaking views of outer space permitted by telescopes and spacecraft. But dark matterthe force causing stars to move faster than their mass would allowposes a pesky problem: you cant see it. So Carly Snell, aided by the chair of BUs astronomy department, Tereasa Brainerd, is spending the summer writing computer code to analyze telescopic survey data of the heavens. One goal is to see if the orbits of actual galaxies match those in simulations of dark matter.
Snell doesnt go to BU; the physics major will be a senior this fall at North Dakota State University, and my department there does not have astronomy, she says. The National Science Foundations Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) program provides aspiring astronomers like Snell the opportunity to pursue this research.
This summerBUs third participating in REUhas brought Snell and five other undergraduates from different universities to campus to help professors researching topics in astronomy and space physics. The latter get research help; the students have the opportunity to wet our feet a little bit in research that a lot of people wouldnt necessarily get at their home university, Snell says. (BUs own students get similar mentoring through the Universitys Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program.)
The REU program in the astronomical sciences includes 28 universities, observatories, museums, and other institutions, including BU. Here, the students enrolled in this summers program hail from the Universities of Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, North Dakota State, Rochester, and Wisconsin. They spend 10 weeks on campus, studying topics from the earth to the galaxies, says Merav Opher, a College of Arts & Sciences associate professor of astronomy and director of BUs REU program.
Each student is matched with a specific research project so that they can work closely with specific researchers. Students receive a stipend as well as financial support for food, lodging, and airfare.
REU teaches both science and career development; here, Mark Kornbleuth (CAS13,16, GRS20), a research fellow in the astronomy department, offers resume-writing tips to students Carly Snell, left, and Genevieve Schroder.
Mark Hubbert, a rising senior at the University of Maryland, is helping Ophers effort to confirm her new model of the shape of the suns magnetic field, the heliosphere. The model is pretty rock-solid from a theoretical perspective, he says, but hasnt really been substantiated from an observational perspective. So hes using various software programs to compare the models predictions with observed properties.
Dr. Opher is a huge name in the field of heliophysics, Hubbert says of his interest in coming to BU. The resourceshuman and equipmenthere are great, and I know that whatever I put my hands on has the potential to be a new and innovative discovery.
He says that another benefit of the REU program is its mentoring style, which makes the students in the program feel like their work is important and appreciated. This, unfortunately, is not something that every program puts focus on when bringing in summer interns. Working at NASAs Goddard Space Center last summer, he says, the sheer magnitude of the operation made it very easy . . . to get lost in the fray. Here, I knew that the environment would be more intimate.
In addition to their individual research, the students gather Wednesdays for discussions, either about specific topics in astronomy or graduate study and career opportunities in the discipline, says Marc Kornbleuth (CAS13,16, GRS20), a research fellow with Opher who runs the weekly discussions.
REU is a great exposure for the [astronomy] department, says Opher. These students come out from here; theyll tell their advisers [at their universities] how great a program it was. As an example, Kornbleuth cites one REU participant from two years ago who is returning to campus this fall for graduate study.
The good news for students thinking of applying to the program is that you dont necessarily have to be an astronomy or physics prodigy to participate. Opher recalls one student she unsuccessfully tried to recruit who had a really strong background in arts but was interested in exploring astronomy. And I thought this would be a very interesting combination.
The rest is here:
NSF Program Brings Budding Astronomers to BU - BU Today
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