Emily Lakdawalla

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Emily Lakdawalla
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Emily Lakdawalla at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in 2013.
Born (1975-02-08) February 8, 1975 (age 49)
Institutions The Planetary Society
Alma mater Brown University
Notable awards Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Journalism Award (2011) from Division for Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society
Spouse Darius Lakdawalla
Children 2 daughters
Website
www.planetary.org/blogs/
Notes

Emily Stewart Lakdawalla (born February 8, 1975) is Senior Editor of The Planetary Society, science writer and blogger, and has worked as an environmental consultant. She has performed research work in geology, Mars topography, and science communication and education. Lakdawalla is a science popularizer on various social media platforms, interacting with space professionals and enthusiasts on Facebook, Google+ and Twitter, and has appeared on NPR, BBC, and other media outlets discussing planetary science and space exploration.

Education

Lakdawalla earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in geology from Amherst College and Master of Science degree in planetary geology from Brown University.[1]

Career

After completing her studies at Amherst, Lakdawalla spent two years teaching fifth and sixth grade science at Lake Forest Country Day School in Lake Forest, Illinois.[1] In 1997, inspired by a space simulation project using images returning from the Galileo mission of two of Jupiter's moons, Io and Europa, Lakdawalla decided to undertake independent research in structural geology.[2]

Research

At Amherst, Lakdawalla worked to study deformed metasedimentary rocks of northeastern Washington. Working at Brown concurrently, she performed analyses of radar images received from Magellan, while also processing topographic data taken of the Baltis Vallis region on Venus, in order to model its geological history.[1]

Lakdawalla has published research on the topography of a putative stratovolcano on Mars, recorded by the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter.[1] She has also worked with an international team to analyze returned Mars rover data,[3] and to evaluate Devon Island as a test site for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) developed for use on Mars.[4][5]

Lakdawalla's work with Pamela Gay, et al., on the immersion of audiences in interactive educational astronomy content,[6] has been cited by further research into social media content classification and delivery of content types through social media.[7]

Lakdawalla has also engaged in advocacy for citizen science research projects, especially those involving space exploration, such as CosmoQuest[8] and Zooniverse.[9]

The Planetary Society

Lakdawalla joined The Planetary Society in 2001 as a deputy project manager of the Society's Red Rover Goes to Mars project,[2] an educational and public outreach program on the Mars Exploration Rover mission funded by The Lego Group. In 2002, in support of training exercises for Mars rover operations, she administered an international competition, which selected secondary school students for training and travel to Pasadena, California for participation in these exercises. This competition and selection was performed again for actual Mars Exploration Rover mission operations; this time in early 2005.[1]

During a research operation on Devon Island (located in the Canadian high Arctic), which was funded by The Planetary Society, where a team worked to test the location as a potential analogue for unmanned aerial vehicles to be deployed on Mars,[4] Lakdawalla began writing for the Society's online publications.[1] For several years, she wrote web news articles, as well as making contributions to the society's print publications, including The Planetary Report.[1]

File:Emily Lakdawalla with Space Shuttle Endeavour.jpg
Lakdawalla at the NASA Dryden Spaceflight Center, where the Shuttle stopped briefly on its final flight to Los Angeles.

Writing

Lakdawalla is a contributing editor to Sky & Telescope magazine, for which she has written articles about Mars, the Moon, outer planets, spacecraft imaging, and Kuiper belt objects. She is currently writing her first book, about the Curiosity rover mission, to be published in 2015.[10]

Starting in September 2013, Lakdawalla has penned the monthly "In the Press" column for Nature Geoscience.[11]

Media appearances

Lakdawalla is a regular contributor to the weekly Planetary Radio podcast.[12]

Following Bill Nye's installation as The Planetary Society's Executive Director, Lakdawalla has appeared on television, in webcasts, on Google+ Hangouts, and on Snapshots from Space, viewable from The Planetary Society's YouTube channel.[1][13]

Lakdawalla has been a host for CosmoQuest's Science Hour, interviewing guests, including Bill Nye,[14] about the future of planetary exploration.

In an interview with Brad Allen, Lakdawalla discussed the path that led to a career in science communication, the state of human space exploration and current space exploration missions, such as the Mars Science Laboratory.[15]

In a December 2013 interview with Universe Today, Lakdawalla discussed candidate locations for life in the Solar System based on geological activity and presence of water.[16] In addition to Europa, Lakdawalla cited Enceladus (a moon of Saturn), due to its active salty geysers:

Those geysers are salty – it's a salt water ocean, so we basically have a world that is conveniently venting its ocean out into space. You don't even have to land – you can just fly right through that plume and check to see what kinds of cool chemistry is happening there. So yeah, I think Enceladus would be a really cool place to explore for life.[16]

Lakdawalla has been interviewed on topics such as China's Jade Rabbit moon rover on NPR's All Things Considered.[17]

She has also appeared on BBC America and BBC World News.[2][10]

Awards and honors

In 2011, Lakdawalla received the Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Sciences Journalism Award from the Division for Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society[18][19] for her reporting on the Phoebe ring of Saturn.[20]

On July 12, 2014 Asteroid 274860 Emilylakdawalla (2009 RE26), discovered September 13, 2009, was named in honor of Lakdawalla, "who, by sharing her passion for space exploration, inspires engagement by citizen-scientists everywhere."[21]

Personal life

Lakdawalla resides in Los Angeles with her husband, Darius Lakdawalla, and two daughters.[1]

Bibliography

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See also

References

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External links

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  • Emily Lakdawalla on TwitterLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
Media
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