NASA Announces 2009 Astronomy and Astrophysics Fellows

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Feb. 25, 2009

J.D. Harrington 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-5241 
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 09-040

NASA ANNOUNCES 2009 ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS FELLOWS

WASHINGTON -- NASA has selected fellows in three areas of astronomy 
and astrophysics for its Einstein, Hubble, and Sagan Fellowships. The 
recipients of this year's post-doctoral fellowships will conduct 
independent research at institutions around the country. 

"The new fellows are among the best and brightest young astronomers in 
the world," said Jon Morse, director of the Astrophysics Division in 
NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. "They already have 
contributed significantly to studies of how the universe works, the 
origin of our cosmos and whether we are alone in the cosmos. The 
fellowships will serve as a springboard for scientific leadership in 
the years to come, and as an inspiration for the next generation of 
students and early career researchers." 

Each fellowship provides support to the awardees for three years. The 
fellows may pursue their research at any host university or research 
center of their choosing in the United States. The new fellows will 
begin their programs in the fall of 2009. 

"I cannot tell you how much I am looking forward to spending the next 
few years conducting research in the U.S., thanks to the 
fellowships," said Karin Oberg, a graduate student in Leiden, The 
Netherlands. Oberg will study the evolution of water and ices during 
star formation when she starts her fellowship at the Smithsonian 
Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, Mass. 

A diverse group of 32 young scientists will work on a wide variety of 
projects, such as understanding supernova hydrodynamics, radio 
transients, neutron stars, galaxy clusters and the intercluster 
medium, supermassive black holes, their mergers and the associated 
gravitational waves, dark energy, dark matter and the reionization 
process. Other research topics include searching for transits among 
hot Neptunes and super-Earths, microlensing planets through modeling 
algorithms, conducting high-contrast imaging surveys to detect 
planetary-mass companions, interferometrically imaging of the inner 
regions of protoplanetary disks, and modeling of super-Earth 
planetary atmospheres. 

The 10 fellows in the Einstein program conduct research broadly 
related to the mission of NASA's Physics of the Cosmos Program. Its 
science goals include understanding the origin and destiny of the 
universe, the nature of gravity, phenomena near black holes, and 
extreme states of matter. The Chandra X-ray Center in Cambridge, 
Mass., administers the Einstein Fellowships for NASA. 

The 17 awardees of the Hubble Fellowship pursue research associated 
with NASA's Cosmic Origins Program. The missions in this program 
examine the origins of galaxies, stars, and planetary systems, and 
the evolution of these structures with cosmic time. The Space 
Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Md., administers the Hubble 
Fellowships for NASA. 

The Sagan Fellowship, created in September 2008, supports five 
scientists whose research is aligned with NASA's Exoplanet 
Exploration Program. The primary goal of this program is to discover 
and characterize planetary systems and Earth-like planets around 
other stars. The NASA Exoplanet Science Institute, which is operated 
at the California Institute of Technology in coordination with NASA's 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., administers the Sagan 
Fellowship Program. 

A full list of the 2009 fellows and other information about these 
programs is available at: 



http://cxc.harvard.edu/fellows 











http://www.stsci.edu/institute/org/spd/hubble-fellowship/ 











http://nexsci.caltech.edu/sagan/fellowship.shtml 


For more information about NASA's Astrophysics Division, visit: 



http://nasascience.nasa.gov/astrophysics 

	
-end-



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