I
got my Ph.D in astronomy from Harvard University back in 1982, and since
then I have been employed at the Space Sciences Division of the Naval
Research Laboratory, BDM International, the Applied Research Corporation,
and most recently Hughes STX all located in the Greater Washington,
D.C. area. My dream, as for many young astronomers, was to get a tenured
position in astronomy at some college or university, but that option
never materialized for me. I have since turned my creative energies
in public education towards writing over 15 articles in magazines such
as ASTRONOMY and SKY AND TELESCOPE, and authoring several books. I have
written 4 complete book manuscripts during the last 6 years, but so
far have not been able to get a single publisher to publish them.
At the still-alive-and-kicking age of 44, I continue to be optimistic
about both my professional research career and my educational work,
despite the constant chipping away at the funding by Congress for
basic research in this country. For more on this, see my GUIDE BOOK
on astronomy, and the appropriate essays on research life.
Recently I was interviewed for an electronic magazine and here are the
questions I was asked and my replies:
So, why is
your job so interesting?
Because I study the universe! I get up each morning, and come home
for dinner, but for 40 hours every week I get to think about and study
some small corner of the universe. And in my mind, I am transported
a million light years outside my body.
Were
you always interested in this line of work?
Yes, except for
some bouts with dinosaurs and chemistry before the age of 10. Since
then, everything I have taken up as a hobby has been in support of
astronomy as my passion. Science fiction reading, electronics, writing,
photography. About the last one, I still have a habit of setting my
camera focus at infinity when taking family photos. Even as a Boy
Scout, it was only the means for me as an urbanite to escape into
the country to see the night sky in all its glory.
Who
or what is your inspiration?
My inspiration
is the entire physical universe, and the wonderment of how well the
forces and matter all stir together in just the right balances to
make stars, planets and life possible. And that it all follows simple,
comprehensible patterns and laws which you can uncover and understand
IF you simply bother to take the time to study them. Non-scientists
do not do this, and that is why the physical world often seems so
ad hoc and mysterious to them. So far as human inspiration is concerned,
I do not have a single person or scientist that I consciously try
to emulate as a heroic figure. The mistake we make in this society
is to insist that children HAVE to have hero figures to look up to,
rather than follow their own hearts and minds.
How
do you see the 90s work ethic crunching your lifestyle?
My work is more
intense. With enormous amounts of information being dumped online
into public archives every month, you sometimes "seize up"
as 10 different ideas go through your head about what to investigate
next. But you only have 5 working days to prioritize and extract meaning
from it all. Most of the new astronomical data you hear about is stuff
I never get the chance to look at professionally. Too much to do,
too little time .
What is the
next mountain you hope to climb?
Olympus Mons
on Mars.
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How
is your job changing?
What will it be like 10 years from now?
I now get to
spend more time in public education. Since getting out of graduate
school 15 years ago, and never getting an offer to teach as a "day
job," all of my education works has been in writing popular articles
and doing adult education courses. Now, I have finally found a way
to make education a big part of my day job as a 'contractor'. 10 years
from now, I expect I will be doing about the same as what I am doing
now, but worrying less about loosing my job in a year. As a contract
astronomer for 15 years, this temporary way of living has become so
entrenched in how I do science and how I think about my career, that
it has been impossible to think of long term research projects, or
plan my professional life over more than 2-3 years. I think this is
slowly changing.
How
has the Internet affected your profession?
I have been on
the Internet for over 10 years. Most of this time was using email
and FTP, but the single biggest change has been in the explosion of
professional resources now available such as data archives. Now that
NASA is committed to putting real data online immediately after the
satellite/spacecraft get it, every astronomer has nearly instant access
to new data. This has increased the pace of research enormously, and
for many of us, we no longer need to worry about not getting observing
proposals accepted to get our own data. We can often use what is already
online to do some of our research. As for education, it is now a whole
new ball game since we have decided that the Internet is now the new
godsend for educating our children. I hope this new experiment works,
because we are sure investing lots of money into it so that every
poor urban school has a spiffy, expensive, high-tech link to the web.
What's
your favorite web site and why?
I view the entire
WWW as a single web site, but the Babylon V Lurkers Area is my favorite
'room'. I love the series, the actors and actresses, and the story
line...one of the finest pieces of science fiction I have 'read' in
a very long time.
If
your job were a song, what would it be?
Well...each decade
seems to have its own in my book. In the 1960's it was Spanky and
Our Gang's "I'd Like to get to know you" when I was a kid
trying to fit in. In the 1970's it was Cool and the Gang's "Summer
Madness" or the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band's "Reminiscing"
while I was in college and graduate school. There are lots of others.
The 1980's is a big jumble of favorites, but I have not paid any attention
to Rock and Roll since 1988 or so.
What's
your professional culture like?
Work habits?
Pretty bleak
and gloomy by most people's assessment. It is a solitary job. You
work mostly alone in an office with a computer terminal. You have
occasional hallway chats with people on the same floor, and once a
week you MIGHT all get together for a 'bag lunch' to hear someone
give a 30-minute talk about some topic. A few times a year you go
to national meetings or to observatories. Meetings can be fun because
you get to meet old friends from grad school, or new collaborators.
Observatory trips are terribly exciting and usually the high point
of your year as you make the actual discoveries you will then investigate
back at the office for the next year or more. We all dress very casual;
jeans, sneakers, shorts, and other fashion elements depending on your
age and status. I know of no astronomers except those over 60, that
wear suits and ties. We set our own office hours, we come in and leave
when we please, but usually work more than 40 hours a week even with
this schedule, except if we have families. I never work a minute longer
than 40 hours because my family life is more important to me than
my professional life.
The "culture" itself...well...there are 6,500 astronomers
in this country. They come from the cohort of the brightest students
you ever met in your math and science classes in high school and college.
Still, with few exceptions, astronomers are far from being nerds.
They are highly talented, many are amateur musicians, but there are
so few of us that we have almost no sense of being a part of a larger
group like lawyers or engineers. This makes for professional isolation
and the profound feeling of being an autonomous individual, going
it alone, but having one [heck] of a fun time with your studies.
Why
do you do what you do, and how do you see it affecting the greater
world?
I am compelled
to do what I do...teaching and research...by a profound sense of wonderment
about the physical world. It is a childlike wonderment that I have
managed to shield in this area from the cynicism of adolescence and
adulthood that is so rampant in today's society. We are all children
at heart, and for scientists and astronomers, we get to hang onto
the pure wonderment and enthusiasm of childhood a lot longer than
in many other professions. It is the battery that drives us to ask
'silly questions' and to make momentous discoveries from time to time,
because as adults we also know how to go about finding answers to
the questions that are still posed by the child within us. What I
do affects the world by letting meaning and light shine a little more
brightly and deeper into the recesses of our ignorance. Humans have
many prejudices, and most do not have the time or inclination to understand
how the physical world operates. My profession is that collective
aspect of society that is assigned to search for answers to questions
that most people do not have the time or capacity to answer. In finding
answers and uncovering new questions, I help to make our world a more
comfortable and less mysterious and frightening place to live and
raise a family.
The preceding
biography originally appears on Sten Odenwald's web site, http://www2.ari.net/home/odenwald/vita.html.
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