There Will Be Darkness Again Mac

American astrophysicist

Katie Mack

Katie Mack-IMG 8876.jpeg

Mack giving her talk on the End of the Universe at CERN on 25 February 2019

Born

Katherine J. Mack


(1981-05-01) i May 1981 (age 40)
Alma mater Princeton University (PhD)
California Institute of Engineering science (BS)
Scientific career
Fields Cosmology
Theoretical astrophysics[one]
Institutions North Carolina Land University
University of Cambridge
Thesis Tests of Early Universe Physics from Observational Astronomy(2009)
Doctoral advisor Paul Steinhardt[2]
Website world wide web.astrokatie.com Edit this at Wikidata

Katherine J. Mack (born 1 May 1981)[3] is a theoretical cosmologist and Assistant Professor at North Carolina State Academy. Her academic enquiry investigates nighttime matter, vacuum disuse and the epoch of reionisation.[4] [1] [5] Mack is too a pop science communicator who participates in social media and regularly writes for Scientific American, Slate, Sky & Telescope, Time and Cosmos.[6] [vii]

Early life and education [edit]

External video
video icon A Tour of the Universe: Women in Physics Lecture
video icon Shells of Cosmic Time

Mack became interested in scientific discipline every bit a kid and built solar-powered cars out of Lego.[viii] Her mother is a fan of scientific discipline fiction, and encouraged Mack to spotter Star Expedition and Star Wars.[9] Her grandpa was a student at Caltech and worked on the Apollo xi mission.[x] She became more interested in spacetime and the big bang after attending talks by scientists such as Stephen Hawking.[8]

Mack attended California Institute of Technology, and appeared every bit an extra in the opening credits of the 2001 American comedy pic Legally Blonde when they filmed on campus.[11] She received her undergraduate degree in physics in 2003.[12] [13] Mack obtained her PhD in astrophysics from Princeton University in 2009.[14] Her thesis on the early on universe was supervised by Paul Steinhardt.[2] [xv]

Research and career [edit]

Later on earning her doctorate, Mack joined the Academy of Cambridge as a Scientific discipline and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) postdoctoral inquiry fellow at the Kavli Institute for Cosmology.[13] Subsequently in 2012, Mack was a Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DECRA) Fellow at the University of Melbourne.[16] Mack was involved with the construction of the dark thing detector SABRE.[17]

In January 2018, Mack became an Assistant Professor and a member of university'due south Leadership in Public Science Cluster in the Section of Physics at North Carolina State University.[xviii] [xix] She is scheduled to bring together the Perimeter Found for Theoretical Physics in June 2022, equally the inaugural Hawking Chair in Cosmology and Science Advice.[twenty]

Mack works at the intersection between key physics and astrophysics. Her research considers dark matter,[21] vacuum disuse,[22] the formation of galaxies, observable tracers of cosmic development and the Epoch of Reionisation.[23] Mack has described dark affair as one of science's "well-nigh pressing enigmas".[24] [25] She has worked on nighttime thing self-annihilation[26] Mack has investigated whether the accretion of dark matter could result in the growth of primordial black holes (PBHs).[27] She has worked on the touch on of PBHs on the catholic microwave background.[28] She has become increasingly interested, besides, in the end of the universe.[29]

Public engagement and advocacy [edit]

Mack maintains a strong science outreach presence on both social and traditional media.[thirty] [31] She has been described past Motherboard and Creative Cultivate every bit a "social media celebrity".[8] [17] Mack is a popular science writer, and has contributed to The Guardian, Scientific American, Slate, The Conversation, Sky & Telescope, Gizmodo, Time and Creation, as well as providing expert data to the BBC.[32] [33] [34] [35] [36] [37] Mack's Twitter account has over 300,000 followers; her response to a climate change denier on that platform gained mainstream coverage,[38] [39] every bit did her "Chirp for LIGO" upon the start detection of gravitational waves.[40] [41] She was the 2017 Australian Establish of Physics Women in Physics lecturer, in which capacity she spent three weeks delivering talks at schools and universities across Australia.[42] [43]

In 2018, Mack was chosen to be one of the judges for Nature magazine's newly founded Nature Research Awards for Inspiring Science and Innovating Science.[44] In February 2019 Mack appeared in an episode of The Jodcast, talking well-nigh her work and science communication.[45] Mack was a member of the jury for the Alfred P. Sloan Prize in the 2019 Sundance Moving-picture show Festival.[46] In 2019, she was referenced on the Hozier track 'No Program' from his anthology Wasteland, Baby!: "Every bit Mack explained, in that location will exist darkness over again".[47]

She is a fellow member of the Sloan Science & Film community, where she works on science fiction.[48] [49]

Her offset volume, The Stop of Everything (Astrophysically Speaking), was published by Simon & Schuster in Baronial 2020, the firm having won the rights to Mack'due south first volume in an eight-way behest boxing.[fifty] [51] It considers the five scenarios for the end of universe (both theoretically and practically),[50] and has received positive reviews both for its science outreach accuracy and its wit.[52] [53] [54] The book [55] is besides a New York Times Notable Book and features on the best books of the year lists of The Washington Post, The Economist, New Scientist, Publishers Weekly, and The Guardian.[56]

In 2021, Mack discussed her work with Brady Haran in a podcast on Haran's Numberphile2 channel·[57]

Personal life [edit]

Mack is interested in the intersection of art, poesy and science.[58] She is bisexual.[59]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Katie Mack publications indexed by Google Scholar Edit this at Wikidata
  2. ^ a b Mack, Katherine J. (2009). Tests of Early Universe Physics from Observational Astronomy. proquest.com (PhD thesis). Princeton Academy. OCLC 437814758.
  3. ^ "Mack, Katie, 1981-". id.loc.gov . Retrieved July seven, 2021.
  4. ^ Katie Mack'due south ORCID 0000-0001-8927-1795
  5. ^ Mack, Katie. "A Tour of the Universe (and selected catholic mysteries)". slideshare.net . Retrieved 2017-07-01 .
  6. ^ Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  7. ^ Katie Mack on Twitter Edit this at Wikidata
  8. ^ a b c "Create & Cultivate 100: Stem & Finance: Katie Mack". Create + Cultivate . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  9. ^ Cox, Ana Marie (2018-10-23). "Space the Nation: Katie Mack, the mansplainer slayer, on getting science right". SYFY WIRE . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  10. ^ Stasio, Dana Terry, Frank. "A Scientist Who Found Her Faith In Physics: Meet Katie Mack, AKA AstroKatie". www.wunc.org . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  11. ^ "Katie Mack". Twitter . Retrieved 2020-08-04 .
  12. ^ "On Astrophysics, Stardust, and Our (Teeny Tiny) Place in the Universe". Techer . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  13. ^ a b "Katherine (Katie) Mack | Department of Physics | NC Country University". 2018-05-24. Retrieved 2018-11-19 .
  14. ^ "Katie Mack *09: Taming of the Troll". Princeton Alumni Weekly. 2016-09-26. Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  15. ^ "Katherine Mack". www.planetary.org . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  16. ^ "Katie Mack's Webpage". www.ph.unimelb.edu.au . Retrieved 2018-11-19 .
  17. ^ a b Scoles, Sarah (2017-04-10). "I Went to the 'Contact' Radio Telescope with the Astrophysicist Behind Twitter's All-Time Sickest Burn". Motherboard . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  18. ^ "Katie Mack | Chancellor'southward Kinesthesia Excellence Program | NC State University". 2018-01-08. Retrieved 2018-eleven-19 .
  19. ^ "Katherine Mack: Assistant Professor". NCSU Physics . Retrieved 2018-01-01 .
  20. ^ Brown, Mike (2021-12-07). "Katie Mack to join Perimeter as Hawking Chair in Cosmology and Scientific discipline Communication | PI News". perimeterinstitute.ca . Retrieved 2021-12-07 . {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  21. ^ Mack, Katie (2014-02-25). "I'one thousand Looking for Evidence That Dark Matter Messed With Stars and Galaxies". Slate Magazine . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  22. ^ "Vacuum decay: the ultimate catastrophe". Cosmos Magazine . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  23. ^ Astrokatie (2012-08-31). "The Universe, in Theory: The Long Dark Tea-Fourth dimension of the Cosmos". The Universe, in Theory . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  24. ^ "U of T Department of Astronomy & Astrophysics | Dark Thing, First Lite". Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  25. ^ Slezak, Michael. "Bright light may not exist nighttime affair's smoking gun afterward all". New Scientist . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  26. ^ Mack, Katherine J. (2014-02-20). "Known unknowns of dark affair annihilation over cosmic fourth dimension". Monthly Notices of the Majestic Astronomical Society. 439 (three): 2728–2735. arXiv:1309.7783. Bibcode:2014MNRAS.439.2728M. doi:10.1093/mnras/stu129. ISSN 1365-2966. S2CID 118667373.
  27. ^ Mack, Katherine J.; Ostriker, Jeremiah P.; Ricotti, Massimo (2007-08-xx). "Growth of Structure Seeded past Primordial Black Holes". The Astrophysical Periodical. 665 (2): 1277–1287. arXiv:astro-ph/0608642. Bibcode:2007ApJ...665.1277M. doi:10.1086/518998. ISSN 0004-637X. S2CID 15798444.
  28. ^ Ricotti, Massimo; Ostriker, Jeremiah P.; Mack, Katherine J. (2008). "Upshot of Primordial Black Holes on the Cosmic Microwave Groundwork and Cosmological Parameter Estimates". The Astrophysical Journal. 680 (2): 829–845. arXiv:0709.0524. Bibcode:2008ApJ...680..829R. doi:10.1086/587831. ISSN 0004-637X. S2CID 11814173.
  29. ^ "Death of a Universe | Higher of Sciences | Georgia Constitute of Technology | Atlanta, GA". cos.gatech.edu . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  30. ^ "Electric Lady Influencer of the Week: Katie Mack". Electrical Lady. 2017-04-28. Archived from the original on 2017-08-01. Retrieved 2017-07-01 .
  31. ^ Mack, Katie (2017-06-12). "Blackness Holes, Catholic Collisions and the Rippling of Spacetime". The Atlantic.
  32. ^ "Death of a Universe | La mort d'un Univers (25 February 2019) · Indico". Indico . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  33. ^ "Stories past Katie Mack". Scientific American . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  34. ^ "Katie Mack | The Guardian". the Guardian . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  35. ^ "Katie Mack". Cosmos Magazine . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  36. ^ Mack, Katherine J. "From black holes to dark matter, an astrophysicist explains". The Conversation . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  37. ^ Halton, Mary (2018-03-28). "Ghost galaxy prompts cosmic mystery". Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  38. ^ "Astrophysicist Katie Mack lays the smackdown on mansplainer with droll Twitter burn down". NYT. 2016-08-16. Retrieved 2017-07-01 .
  39. ^ Mezzofiore, Gianluca. "Astrophysicist had the perfect response to climate change denier". Mashable . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  40. ^ Castelvecchi, Davide; Witze, Alexandra (11 February 2016). "Einstein's gravitational waves found at last". Nature News. doi:ten.1038/nature.2016.19361. S2CID 182916902. Retrieved xi February 2016.
  41. ^ Roston, Michael (eleven February 2016). "Scientists Chirp Excitedly for LIGO, Gravitational Waves and Einstein". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 13 February 2016.
  42. ^ "Katie Mack is the 2017 Women in Physics Lecturer". 2017-04-04.
  43. ^ Knox Grammar School (2017-08-09), 'A Tour of the Universe' - Dr Katie Mack, 'Women in Physics' lecture , retrieved 2019-03-26
  44. ^ "Judges and Ambassadors". Nature.com.
  45. ^ "February 2019: Try turning it off and on again!". The Jodcast. 11 February 2019.
  46. ^ "Sundance Moving picture Festival: Juries, Awards Nighttime Host Announced - Th, Jan 17th, 2019". Sundance Film Festival. 2019-01-17. Retrieved 2019-03-25 .
  47. ^ Bruton, Louise. "Hozier: 'If I wanted to make a f**king pop song, I would'". The Irish Times . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  48. ^ "People - Sloan Science & Picture". scienceandfilm.org . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  49. ^ "Sloan Science & Moving picture". scienceandfilm.org . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  50. ^ a b "Book Deals: Week of Jan 29, 2018". www.publishersweekly.com . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  51. ^ "Book". Katie Mack, Astrophysicist . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  52. ^ Gleick, James (Baronial four, 2020). "This Is How Information technology All Ends" – via NYTimes.com.
  53. ^ "Katie Mack: 'Knowing how the universe will finish is freeing'". August three, 2020 – via www.bbc.com.
  54. ^ "THE END OF EVERYTHING | Kirkus Reviews" – via world wide web.kirkusreviews.com.
  55. ^ "15 translations Tweet". Retrieved 2020-12-28 .
  56. ^ Mack, Katie (2020-08-04). The End of Everything. ISBN978-ane-9821-0354-5.
  57. ^ Brady, Haran. "The Loftier Jumping Cosmologist (with Katie Mack) - Numberphile Podcast". Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  58. ^ "'I desire you to live frontward, just see backward': a theoretical astrophysicist's manifesto | Aeon Videos". Aeon . Retrieved 2019-03-26 .
  59. ^ "Katie Mack | 500 Queer Scientists". 500 Queer Scientists . Retrieved 2020-12-19 .

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Katie Mack on Twitter
  • Katie Mack at NC State University

adkinsalaim2000.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katie_Mack_(astrophysicist)

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