Thursday, November 23, 2017

Mae Jemison

When I took AP U.S. History in high school, we did a project called "Historical Character Day" after completing the lengthy coursework and dreaded AP exam. We could chose to be any significant person in American history and had to pretend to be that person, introducing ourselves to the entire class and then interacting with other important, well-known people of history. So, as you might have already guessed, I chose to be Mae Jemison. 
portrait of Mae Jemison
The following is the information I collected as I prepared for Historical Character Day so that I would be able to fully know my person inside and out:


Name:  Mae Jemison
Born:  October 17, 1956
Contribution to History: the first black female astronaut


Significance to America:
  • First African American woman admitted to the space program and in space
    • Science Mission Specialist
  • Advocate for women’s and civil rights
  • Area Peace Corps medical officer for Sierra Leone & Liberia
  • Awards:
    • 1988 - Essence Science and Technology Award
    • 1992 - Ebony Black Achievement Award
    • 1993 - Montgomery Fellowship from Dartmouth College
    • 1990 - Gamma Sigma Gamma Woman of the Year
    • 1992 - public school in Detroit named after her
    • 2004 - International Space Hall of Fame
    • 1993 - National Women’s Hall of Fame
  • Organizations:
    • American Medical Association
    • American Chemical Society
    • American Association for the Advancement of Science
    • World Sickle Cell Foundation
    • American Express Geography Competition
    • Center for Prevention of Childhood Malnutrition
  • Established Jemison Group, a company for research, development, and marketing of advanced technologies
  • Established The Earth We Share, a science camp to encourage (especially girls) to learn about science & global issues
Fun Facts:
  • She can speak Russian, Japanese, and Swahili
  • She started college at Stanford University at 16 years old and then went on to med school at Cornell
  • She worked in Cambodian refugee camps
  • Her space shuttle, Endeavour, was the only one named by children
  • Was featuered in LEGO's "Women of NASA" set [read my post about it here]
  • Made an appearance in Star Trek: The Next Generation
  • Is an advocate for peace and equality
  • Favorite Hobby: theater/dance
  • Favorite Music: modern jazz, African dance, West Side Story
  • Favorite Book: A Wrinkle in Time & The Arm of the Starfish [because they each feature female scientists heroines]
  • Favorite Subject in School: science and technology, but also loved art just as much
  • Other Interests:
    • cooking
    • watching movies
    • weight lifting
    • gardening
    • traveling
    • photography
    • skiing
    • volleyball

As part of the project, I had to describe the type of person I'd see myself (Mae Jemison) getting along with the best:
Someone who supports human rights and has a heart for all people no matter their race, gender, social standing, etc. Someone who is interested in science and technology, but also has an appreciation for the arts. Someone who loves learning and new experiences and is always up for an adventure and likes nature and serving others. Someone who will support me on all my endeavors (no pun intended).

Image result for mae jemisonWe also had to bring in a food that the person liked/would have eaten in that time. I spent a long time looking for different 'space food' recipes and came across a video of Chris Hadfield making a sandwich out of a tortilla with peanut butter and honey. They use tortillas in space instead of bread because it doesn't make crumbs and it is more compact, thus avoiding bread crumbs from floating around in zero gravity. So I brought in these 'Space Shuttle Sandwiches' or what I liked to call PB&Jems.


On Historic Character Day, I wore a NASA tee shirt and I even spoke a little bit of Swahili ... or what I was able to learn from Google Translate ;)
Unaweza Daima Ngoma Kama Wewe Ni Daktari Lakini Huwezi Daktari Kama Wewe Ni Damfe  -- “You can always dance if you’re a doctor, but you can’t doctor if you’re a dancer”

Some of the amazing people I (as Mae Jemison) had the opportunity to interact with included: Thomas Edison, Grace Hopper, Elizabeth Blackwell, Louis Armstrong, Sally Ride, Maya Angelou, Eleanor Roosevelt, JFK, and Amelia Earhart ... all of whom were fellow scientists, aviators/astronauts, feminists, and African Americans from various time periods.

Finally, here are a few other quotes from Mae Jemison that I came across in my research that I enjoyed:
“Some of the most fun people I know are scientists” 

“I stayed in the astronaut program until 1993. People ask me why I left. I thought I had a lot of things to contribute that would be difficult to do if I stayed. I thought I could have a stronger voice as an advocate for space exploration. So I ended up starting my own technology consulting company”

“What we find is that if you have a goal that is very, very far out, and you approach it in little steps, you start to get there faster. Your mind opens you to the possibility."
                                                      ♡ 

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Image of the Sun (pt. 2)


This was my second of three times looking at the image of the Sun as it appears on a folder through the quadrant. Here's a quick look at the differences between my two observations:

                       Part 1                                       Part 2
                    October 2                               November 8
                  4:20 pm EDT                             3:45 pm EST
                  23° altitude                               9° altitude

The shape on both days was approximately the same, but again, not spherical like you would imagine the Sun's reflection being. The change in altitude would also need to take into account the fact that we changed from Daylight Savings to Standard Time, meaning that when I looked that the Sun's image for the second time, it was equivalent to 4:45 when I had done part 1, so the Sun would have been lower in the sky anyways; but there is also the factor that the Sun is getting lower in the sky as we move toward winter. So there are two factors that made the altitudes so different from one another.


read my Image of the Sun (pt. 1) post here: https://northstargazer.blogspot.com/2017/10/image-of-sun-pt-1.html



Friday, November 10, 2017

‘Women of NASA’ LEGO collection finally released



LEGO took a huge step away from your typical Star Wars, Batman, and Harry Potter sets, turning the spotlight to Women of NASA. On Wednesday, November 1st, the ‘Women of NASA’ LEGO Ideas set was officially released for purchase, consisting of four pioneering women in the space program. The idea was proposed by science editor and writer Maia Weinstock, who helped design the collection. These were “some of the most influential women who ever worked for NASA” (Nerdist).

Here's a look at what each women did, their legacies now able to be passed down to encourage and inspire young girls:  (info came from the building instructions booklet that comes with the set)

Sally Ride- was selected out of 8,000 applicants for NASA's astronaut training and became the first American woman in space in 1983. She founded Sally Ride Science and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Mae Jemison- was selected out of 2,000 applicants for NASA's astronaut training and became the first woman of color in space in 1992. Her work in the Peace Corps, at NASA, and in the creation of technology companies (among many other accomplishments) have led her to receive countless awards and honors such as the Women's and the International Space Hall of Fame.
(make sure to watch out for an upcoming feature on Mae Jemison)

Margaret Hamilton- an MIT computer scientist and NASA's head developer of flight software for Apollo 11, the mission whose crew were the first to walk on the Moon. She founded Hamilton Technologies and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom and NASA's Exceptional Space Act Award.

Nancy Grace Roman- this activist for women in science started an astronomy club in 1936 at age eleven, was educated in the field, and became NASA's first female executive as the first ever Chief of Astronomy. As "Mother of Hubble", she is honored in various ways through NASA and she was awarded with the NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal.

A fifth woman, Katherine Johnson, whose story is the focus of the film Hidden Figures, was unfortunately not approved to be included. The two other major parts of this set are the Hubble Space Telescope (developed by Nancy Grace Roman) and the Space Shuttle Challenger (Sally Ride). Children who play with this LEGO series will see that women have gained acceptance in STEM fields and will begin to view these women as role models and examples for what they can and will accomplish.



follow the Women of NASA Lego on Twitter @LegoNASAWomen


Works Cited
Pattillo , Mia. “New Lego Set Celebrates Women in NASA.” The Brown Daily Herald, Brown 
       Daily Herald, 31 Oct. 2017, 
Walsh, Michael. “LEGO Will Honor Women of NASA in Newest Set.” Nerdist, Chris Hardwick,
       28 Feb. 2017

Friday, November 3, 2017

Waxing Gibbous

 

I stepped outside on Halloween to see just what you'd expect on this holiday: a spooky Halloween Moon. Unfortunately, it wasn't a Full Moon, it was a Waxing Gibbous. But the way the clouds were situated around it, with bright light shining through only made me think of ghouls and goblins galore.

I did some quick measurements: it was 30° above the horizon at 170° S. I noticed that it seemed a bit smaller than normal, and I wondered why it had finally come back up from beneath the horizon as it had been in previous nights.

Thursday, November 2, 2017

This Day in Space History: November 2

1885

Astronomer Harlow Shapley was born. During his life, Shapley studied stars and galaxies, proving through measurements of star dimensions that the Sun wasn't, in fact, positioned at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy, but 30,000 light years away from its center. At the center of the galaxy were star clusters positioned spherically in Sagittarius. Shapley’s discoveries helped scientists formulate the first realistic estimate of the size of our galaxy which was 10x larger than previously thought. As a research professor at Harvard and the director of the College’s observatory, Shapley observed metagalaxies, proposing his “liquid water belt” or habitable zone theory.

1978

The crew of the USSR's Soyuz 29 mission returns back to Earth aboard Soyuz 31. The mission was launched June 16, 1978 and docked to Salyut 6. The craft returned to Earth September 3rd, but the crew stayed an additional two months. Soyuz 31 was launched August 26th and docked the next day, eventually bringing home Kovalyonok and Ivanchenkov of the former mission in November.

2000

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/international-space-station-is-15-years-old-first-commander-remembers/
The first ISS crew, launched on October 31st, arrived at 5:23 am EST. The crew of Expedition 1, which would last four and a half months, consisted of Commander Bill Shepard and Russian cosmonauts, Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei Krikalev. The current ISS Expedition is 53



For a complete list of today’s Space History, see  http://www.astronautix.com/n/november02.html

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

Happy Halloween

Search up "astronaut costume" on Pinterest and you'll find adorable kids smiling and posing as Neil Armstrong, and DIY projects that require high dedication to complete by October 31st. But this year, the three NASA astronauts (not the ones who rang your doorbell last night) and the other three members of the ISS crew dressed up for the spooky occasion.

They showed the world on Twitter how they celebrate in zero gravity with this photo and video: https://twitter.com/Space_Station/status/925438767162384384
My personal favorite is the Minion shirt donned by Space Station Commander, Randy Bresnik. Which costume do you like best? Let me know in the comments!

⛤⋆⛤⋆⛤

On October 26, NASA released their "Spooky Space 'Sounds'" playlist of noises such as the sci-fi Whistler Waves and Saturn's unworldly Radio Emissions, even the faint church bells of Liquid Helium. These tracks sound just like those in sci-fi films -- I wonder if the producers had access to some of these sounds in the creation of such films or if they just guessed right?! Next Halloween I won't be playing those CDs of your typical spooky Halloween sound effects, I'll be playing NASA's space sounds -- just as spooky, maybe even more so, because they tell a real story: that of the universe.
Listen to the sounds and read more from NASA here: https://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/features/halloween_sounds.html