Seager, Ye Shall Find

SEAGER, YE SHALL FIND

While not included in Bard Of Mars, this is a limerick tribute to Professor Sara Seager of MIT, who kindly authored the foreword to the book.

LIGHT APPETITE

She also was inspiration for the haiku above and below.

GENERATION EXO

Sara Seager is a planetary scientist and astrophysicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where she is a Professor of Planetary Science, Professor of Physics, Professor of Aerospace Engineering, and holds the Class of 1941 Professor Chair. She has pioneered many research areas of characterizing exoplanets with concepts and methods that now form the foundation of the field of exoplanet atmospheres.

The Seager Equation is just one of her contributions to the field of exoplanet (orbiting stars other than our Sun) biology.

selection_028 seager

Her present research focus is on the search for life by way of exoplanet atmospheric “biosignature” gases. (elaborated in the haiku “Light Appetite,” above.

Sarah Seager

Professor Seager works on space missions for exoplanets including as the PI of the CubeSat ASTERIA, a 6U CubeSat capable of high precision pointing, with the science goal of detecting small transiting exoplanets orbiting bright, sun-like stars. The prototype is intended to be the first of a planned fleet of nanosatellites, aimed to demonstrate the graduated growth of a constellation as a new paradigm for space science missions. In addition to being the PI of ASTERIA, Prof. Seager is the Deputy Science Director of the MIT-led NASA Explorer-class mission TESS; and is a lead of the Starshade Rendezvous Mission concept (a space-based direct imaging exoplanet discovery concept under technological development) to find a true Earth analog orbiting a Sun-like star.

Before joining MIT in 2007, Professor Seager spent four years on the senior research staff at the Carnegie Institution of Washington preceded by three years at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ.

Seager has been recognized in the media by Time Magazine’s 25 Most Influential in Space in 2012, Nature’s Top Ten in 2011, Discover Magazine’s “Best 20 under 40″ in 2008, and Popular Science Magazine’s Fifth Annual Brilliant Ten in 2006. She has Asteroid 9729 named in her honor.

Among her proudest credentials is her MacArthur Genius Grant , but she has personally conveyed to me that her greatest honor was to be invited by and to become a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.

Seager launches new Genre

SEAGER, YE SHALL FIND

 

There is an explorer named Seager

who searches the skies and is eager

to unearth a new Earth,

and the value that’s worth

(like her genius) is miles from meager.

One thought on “Seager, Ye Shall Find

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