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What I do
I received my PhD in August of 1994 in
astronomy at the
University of Virginia Astronomy Department. My research was part of a
large project
studying
Hubble Space Telescope
images of supernova SN1987A, a star that blew up in 1987. This was
the brightest supernova in 400 years, and was visible to the naked eye
(if you happened to be in the southern hemisphere, that is).
I was initially hired afterward to work on
COBE,
the COsmic Background Explorer, and then
moved on to work with
STIS,
the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph. I worked on that for five
years.
When the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) first observed the supernova in August
1990,
we were all surprised to see it encircled by an elliptical ring of gas. It
was known before that there was an oval shaped nebula surrounding the star, but
everyone thought it would be a shell, and not a torus (donut shape). When
I analyzed the images carefully, I was able to detect some of the gas further
away from the supernova that was known to exist from earlier, ground-based
images. But we were all surprised once again when the newly fixed HST
was trained on the star, and the outer nebulosity was shown to be very
discrete rings! Pictures of all this can be found
here, and many more can be found in the pages listed
below.
There are many good places on the Web to find supernova information and
pictures. Here are a few: