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Faith Vilas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American astronomer
This article includes a list ofgeneral references, butit lacks sufficient correspondinginline citations. Please help toimprove this article byintroducing more precise citations.(December 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Faith Vilas
Born1952 Edit this on Wikidata
Alma mater
OccupationScientist Edit this on Wikidata
Awards
Websitewww.psi.edu/about/staffpage/fvilas Edit this on Wikidata
Position heldscientist (1999–2011),director (2005–2010),chair (1996–1997) Edit this on Wikidata

Faith Vilas is an American planetary scientist and Director of theMMT Observatory in Arizona.

Education

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Vilas earned her BA in astronomy in 1973 atWellesley College and her MS in Earth and Planetary Sciences in 1975 atMIT. She completed her Doctoral degree in Planetary Sciences in 1984 at theUniversity of Arizona.

Career

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Vilas was a scientist atNASA Johnson Space Center from 1985 through 2005 where she worked on quantifying orbital debris from spacecraft in low Earth orbit, geosynchronous orbit, or geotransfer orbit. Her observations helped to prove the existence of Neptune's rings five years before they were confirmed by a 1989Voyager mission.[1] She designed thecoronagraph used to produce the first-ever image of a circumstellar disk around another star (Beta Pictoris) in 1984.[2] Since her MS degree, Vilas has worked on the planetMercury,[3] serving an editor for a 1989 collection of reviews published by the University of Arizona Press.[4] Vilas has been a pioneer in the identification of hydrated minerals through use of an absorption band near 700 nm. This absorption has been incorporated into the most recent asteroid taxonomies, and is one of the key measurements likely to be used for prospecting by future asteroid mining companies.[5][6]

While at JSC, she participated in the 1987-88Antarctic Search for Meteorites season in Antarctica, helping collect nearly 700 meteorites from the Beardmore/Walcott Neve and Allan Hills/Elephant Moraine icefields.[7] She also served as the Program Scientist for the Discovery, Dawn, and NEAR data analysis programs at NASA Headquarters from 2001 to 2002, ensuring the integrity of the Discovery program selection process during a time of national duress following the chaos of the 9/11 attack.[8]

Vilas then became the director of theMultiple Mirror Telescope Observatory from 2005 to 2010, where she managed telescope and instrumentation operations, conducted short-term and long-term observatory planning, and supervised the scientific and technical staff.[9] She joined the staff of thePlanetary Science Institute in 2011.[10] At PSI, she was Participating Scientist on NASA'sMESSENGER mission to Mercury and the Atsa Suborbital Observatory Project Scientist. She is a Participating Scientist on NASA'sLunar Reconnaissance Orbiter LAMP team, and on the Joint Science Team for the JapaneseHayabusa-2 mission to asteroid 162173 Ryugu. She served as Program Director for planets and exoplanets at theNational Science Foundation from 2015 to 2018.[11] She has returned to PSI. In 2019, she became a science editor for the American Astronomical Society (AAS) journals, and later that year was named the inaugural editor of The Planetary Science Journal, a new open access journal in the Division for Planetary Sciences (DPS) at AAS.[12]

Honors and recognition

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Personal life

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Vilas is a trained pilot, from a family of pilots. Her grandfather was the first person to fly across Lake Michigan, and in celebration of that feat's 100th anniversary she recreated his flight.[16]Vilas is married to Larry W. Smith, a safety and reliability engineer.

References

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  1. ^Vilas, Faith (August 25, 2005)."Faith Vilas, director, MMT Observatory, Mount Hopkins, Arizona".Nature.436 (7054): 1204.doi:10.1038/nj7054-1204a.ISSN 0028-0836.PMID 16144051.S2CID 145722761.
  2. ^"Captcha".www.osapublishing.org. RetrievedOctober 13, 2018.
  3. ^"Gravity Assist Podcast: Mercury, with Faith Vilas".Space.com. RetrievedOctober 13, 2018.
  4. ^"Mercury – UAPress".uapress.arizona.edu. July 12, 2017. RetrievedOctober 13, 2018.
  5. ^Graps, Amara L.; Blondel, Philippe; Bonin, Grant; Britt, Daniel; Centuori, Simone; Delbo, Marco; Drube, Line; Duffard, Rene; Elvis, Martin (December 2, 2016). "ASIME 2016 White Paper: In-Space Utilisation of Asteroids: "Answers to Questions from the Asteroid Miners"".arXiv:1612.00709 [astro-ph.EP].
  6. ^"How Many Ch-Class NEOs Do We Expect?"(PDF).
  7. ^"Antarctic Meteorite Newsletter, Vol 11, No. 1"(PDF).
  8. ^"Faith Vilas Receives Harold Masursky Award for Meritorious Service to Planetary Science".Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute. RetrievedOctober 13, 2018.Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in thepublic domain.
  9. ^"Faith Vilas: Take that opportunity!". November 24, 2010.
  10. ^"Professional History".Planetary Science Institute. RetrievedJuly 8, 2024.
  11. ^"The Planetary Science Journal".
  12. ^Fienberg, Rick; Naidu, Shantanu (November 14, 2019)."Faith Vilas Named Editor of the Planetary Science Journal".American AStronomical Society.
  13. ^"2018 Prize Recipients | Division for Planetary Sciences".dps.aas.org. May 13, 2018. RetrievedOctober 13, 2018.
  14. ^"AAS Fellows". AAS. RetrievedSeptember 30, 2020.
  15. ^Watson, Cathy; Ceule, Kendra (February 11, 2015)."JSC scientists have their names in the stars"(PDF). RetrievedOctober 22, 2018.
  16. ^"Granddaughter recreates historic flight across Lake Michigan".ABC7 Chicago. RetrievedOctober 13, 2018.

External links

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