TSU Mini-Moon Seminar Series No.31

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Speakers

Dr. Carl Schmidt

Dr. Carl A. Schmidt
BU Center for Space Physics

-Education
Ph.D., Astronomy, Boston University 2013
Thesis: Mercury’s Sodium Exosphere (M. Mendillo Advisor)
M.A., Astronomy, Boston University 2008
B.A., Physics, University of Colorado 2005

-Appointments
Research Assistant Professor, Boston University 2021 – Present
Research Scientist, Boston University 2017 – 2021
Research Associate, CNRS/LATMOS Paris (F. Leblanc Supervisor) 2015 – 2017
Research Associate, Univ. of Virginia (R. E. Johnson Supervisor) 2013 – 2015
Graduate Research Assistant, Boston Univ. (M. Mendillo Supervisor) 2006 – 2013
Undergraduate Research Assistant, Univ. Colorado (F. Hearty Supervisor) 2002 – 2005
Research Areas: Planetary exospheres, plasma interactions with surfaces and atmospheres,
Monte-Carlo modelling, telescope-based observation and instrumentation

-Teaching Experience
Instructor, Boston Univ. 2022 (Fall term) & 2023 (Spring term)
 AS865 & AS866 Graduate Research Seminar I & II Weekly seminar o ering astronomy
graduate students the skills and practice needed for oral presentations on current
research topics and to receive peer and expert feedback, 2 credits

https://carlschmidt.science/Moon/Moon.html

Dr. David Blewett

David T. Blewett joined the Planetary Exploration Group at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in 2007. Prior to that he was a Principal Scientist at NovaSol, a small employee-owned high-tech company in Honolulu, Hawaii of which he was a co-founder. NovaSol specialized in electro-optical systems, including free-space optical communications, hyperspectral imaging sensors, and real-time data processing systems. His planetary research emphasizes remote sensing, geological analysis, and spectral algorithm development using data from planetary spacecraft including Mariner 10, Clementine, Galileo, Lunar Prospector, NEAR, LRO, MESSENGER and Dawn. He has been a Principal Investigator in NASA Planetary research programs since 2002, was named a MESSENGER Participating Scientist in 2007, and a Dawn at Vesta Participating Scientist in 2010. Dr. Blewett has focused on geological and compositional analysis of UV-NIR spectra and multispectral images, including study of space weathering on the Moon, Mercury, Vesta, and Eros. He was lead geologic mapper on a Vesta quadrangle. He served for three years as Co-Chair of the MESSENGER Geology Discipline Group and as a member of the PI’s Science Steering Committee. Dr. Blewett fielded all the questions from the public that were submitted via the MESSENGER Q&A website. In 2015 and 2016 he had two-month Visiting International Scholar fellowships from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, hosted by the Key Laboratory for Lunar and Deep Space Exploration in Beijing. During the fellowships, he lectured on his planetary research and collaborated on analysis of data from the Chang’E lunar missions. He was an Antarctic Search for Meteorites field party member during the 1988-89 austral summer. He is the namesake of asteroid 8997 Davidblewett.

The Lunar Sodium Exosphere

Dr. Carl Schmidt

Lunar Vertex: Exploration of the Reiner Gamma Magnetic Anomaly and Swirl

Dr. David Blewett

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