Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Meg Urry

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Institutions
  
Yale University

Institution
  
Yale University

Fields
  
Astrophysics


Name
  
Meg Urry

Doctoral advisor
  
Art Davidsen

Academic advisor
  
Art Davidsen

Meg Urry Renaissance People with Meg Urry Part 1 YouTube


Alma mater
  
Tufts University, Johns Hopkins University

Renaissance people with meg urry part 1


Claudia Megan "Meg" Urry is an American astrophysicist, who was from 2015–2016 the President of the American Astronomical Society, formerly on the Hubble space telescope faculty and was chair of the Department of Physics at Yale University 2007–2013. She is notable not only for her contributions to astronomy and astrophysics, including work on black holes and multiwavelength surveys, but also for her work addressing sexism and gender equity in astronomy, and science and academia more generally.

Contents

Meg Urry Meg Urry Wikipedia

Meg urry 2017 05 17


Early life and education

Meg Urry Black Holes and leveling the playing field

After growing up in Indiana and Massachusetts, Urry attended college at Tufts University, double-majoring in mathematics and physics, and graduating in 1977.

Meg Urry Arts and Sciences Magazine

Urry earned an M.S. (1979) and a Ph.D. (1984) in physics from Johns Hopkins, where her advisor was Art Davidsen. For her dissertation, she studied blazars at Goddard Space Flight Center with Richard Mushotzky. She then conducted a postdoctorate at M.I.T.'s Center for Space Research, working with Claude Canizares. Urry joined Yale's faculty in 2001, at that time as the only woman in the department, and became Chair in 2007.

Career

Meg Urry Meg Urry MegUrry Twitter

Urry has been active in addressing gender inequities in astronomy and science more generally, giving more than 60 talks on the topic, including at the annual Conferences for Undergraduate Women in Physics (CUWiP). With Laura Danly, Urry co-organized the first meeting of Women in Astronomy.

Urry studies supermassive black holes, known as Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), and the relationship of normal galaxies to AGNs.

Awards and honors

  • 1976, 1977, N. Hobbs Knight Award for Physics from Tufts University
  • 1976, Phi Beta Kappa
  • 1990, Annie J. Cannon Award in Astronomy
  • 1999, American Physical Society Fellow
  • 2006, American Women in Science Fellow
  • 2007, Connecticut Academy of Science & Engineering
  • 2008, American Academy of Arts and Sciences
  • 2012, George Van Biesbroeck Prize
  • 2016, National Academy of Sciences
  • References

    Meg Urry Wikipedia