If you ask Knicole Colon she will say she is from
Knicole is passionate about astronomy but admits that the way she got into it is pure cliché. When she was 8, her dad used to take her to see meteor showers, which she found to be magical and exciting. When the movie “Contact” came out some years later her fate was sealed: “That and my meteor shower experience was enough to make me see astronomy as something cool and exciting; so I decided to go and look for aliens!” She jokes.
While working on her undergraduate in physics at The College of New Jersey, she joined a summer research program on star formation at
Prof Ford was selected to join the Kepler Mission Science team, being the greatest NASA research project on exoplanets so far (Kepler mission). Working with him, Knicole started doing simulations of Kepler data, even before the mission was launched. “This work was great and I used it for my masters project, but I was working on simulations. I wanted to get my hands on some real data” She remembers.
Fulfilling her desires, the GTC, the world’s largest telescope, started operating. The
In between the masters and the GTC, she also helped with operating the Rosemary Hill Observatory, which belongs to UF. Prof Ford set it up to participate in a project observing a transiting planet with a very long transit duration. Twelve hours of observations were needed to see a full transit, so several telescopes had to be used because typically nowhere on Earth is dark for twelve hours at a time. “Prof Francisco Reyes helped us a lot, and there we were; the three of us at the telescope in the summer of 2009. We actually got some data and observed part of the transit. It was awesome.”
Learning with this basic telescope helped Knicole to get ready for her observations at the GTC. “They are totally different telescopes and systems, but you have to learn somewhere.” She explains. “Since then, people have continued to use the Rosemary Hill telescope and it’s available for all students to practice.”
Knicole continues to use the GTC to get data for her thesis and has travelled twice this year to its location in
No comments:
Post a Comment