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Alyssa A Goodman

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Nationality
  
American

Fields
  
Astronomy

Role
  
Professor


Name
  
Alyssa Goodman

Alyssa A. Goodman Visualizing the Universe An interview with Prof Alyssa Goodman


Born
  
Alyssa Ann Goodman July 1, 1962 (age 61) New York City, New York, United States (
1962-07-01
)

Alma mater
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Harvard University

Thesis
  
Interstellar Magnetic Fields: An Observational Perspective (1989)

Residence
  
Lexington, Massachusetts, United States

Notable awards
  
Newton Lacy Pierce Prize in Astronomy

Education
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of California, Berkeley, Harvard University

Profiles


Other academic advisors
  
Charles R. Alcock

Doctoral advisor
  
Irwin I. Shapiro

Alyssa Goodman | The Prediction Project || Radcliffe Institute


Alyssa Ann Goodman (born July 1, 1962 in New York City) is the Robert Wheeler Willson Professor of Applied Astronomy at Harvard University, Research Associate of the Smithsonian Institution, and the founding director of the Harvard Initiative in Innovative Computing.

Contents

Alyssa A. Goodman Making the Magic Happen Stories Harvard Alumni

Career

Alyssa A. Goodman The Prediction Project A Lecture by Alyssa A Goodman HarvardX

Goodman's research is conducted at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts where she studies the dense gas between stars. In particular, her research interest is on how interstellar gas arranges itself into new stars.

Alyssa A. Goodman Down to Earth but Eyeing the Stars Data Patterns More Alyssa

Goodman is also a principal investigator of the COMPLETE Survey of Star-Forming Regions, which maps out three large star-forming regions in the galaxy in their entirety. Goodman’s personal research presently focuses primarily on new ways to visualize and analyze the tremendous data volumes created by large and/or diverse astronomical surveys. She has worked closely with Curtis Wong and Jonathan Fay on the Microsoft WorldWide Telescope project at Microsoft Research and the American Astronomical Society to create, open-source, and enhance the use of the WorldWide Telescope, a computer program offering a virtual online universe to researchers and educators. Goodman was named “Scientist of the Year” by the Harvard Foundation in 2015.

Alyssa A. Goodman Alyssa Goodman News and Media Page

She has served on several data-related institutional and government advisory committees, including the National Academy’s Board on Research Data and Information, and the NSF-sponsored Council on Big Data, Ethics, and Society. From 2008 to 2009, Goodman was a "Scholar-in-Residence" at WGBH, while on sabbatical.

Education

A native of New York, Goodman attended Herricks High School in New Hyde Park, New York. She later received her B.S. in Physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1984. She then continued her education at Harvard University receiving a Ph.D also in Physics in 1989.

Honors

  • Newton Lacy Pierce Prize in Astronomy from the American Astronomical Society (1997)
  • References

    Alyssa A. Goodman Wikipedia