Profile
Jillian Scudder
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About Me:
I teach Physics and Astronomy at Oberlin College in Ohio, USA! I study galaxies, sing, draw, and write.
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When galaxies collide, they don’t just smack into each other and get stuck – there’s a long period of time where the two galaxies are circling each other before they actually merge into a single object. I study what happens to these galaxies during that early period before they become a single object. Each galaxy pulls on the other due to gravity, which stretches the galaxies apart, slowly changing their shape and moving the stars and gas inside the galaxy into new places.
This is a Hubble image of two galaxies mid-collision – you can see that the galaxy on the right has a stream of stars that now connects it to the other galaxy. Those stars have been pulled out of the galaxy by gravity.
Because there’s so much stretching and pulling of the galaxies going on, some of the gas starts to form new stars – you can see them as the bright blue points in the picture.
About me: I grew up in Florida in the US, moved to Minnesota for university, moved to Canada to do my Ph.D., and I’m now in the UK working at the University of Sussex. Astronomers move internationally a lot. I’ll probably move overseas again after my time in the UK is finished!
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My Typical Day:
A combination of coding, email, reading about other people’s work, and meetings.
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I spend the vast majority of my time working on my computer.
Since astronomy is such an international community, I can be working with people who are on the other side of the world from me, and the best way to keep in touch is via email. This also means you can get work emails at any time of day or night. I usually try and answer any important emails in the morning when I get in. Then I need to check the new papers which have come out that day (also online). Some of them might be of interest to my work, so those I pull aside to read later.
My own work is also usually on the computer – I write my own programs to get the data I’m working with to do what I need it to, so I spend a lot of time trying to fix the errors in my code (or googling how to do it).
Depending on the day of the week, the group of us at Sussex that works together also has meetings, I have meetings with my boss, and I attend meetings via Skype with my old group (where I did my Ph.D), and the whole astronomy department gets together to hear about some new research as well. We also have a visitor from some other university come give a talk once a week.
I try not to work in the evenings!
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What I'd do with the prize money:
Travel to schools to speak with students directly!