Board of Directors
Heidi Hammel
Heidi B. Hammel joined The Planetary Society's Board of Directors in 2005. A
Senior Research Scientist with the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colorado,
Hammel herself lives in Ridgefield, Connecticut.
She received her undergraduate degree from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology in 1982 and her Ph.D. in physics and astronomy from the University
of Hawaii in 1988. After a post-doctoral position at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory (Pasadena, California), Hammel returned to MIT, where she spent
nearly nine years as a Principal Research Scientist in the Department of
Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences.
Hammel primarily studies outer planets and their satellites, with a focus
on observational techniques. For the impact of Comet Shoemaker-Levy
9 with Jupiter in July 1994, Hammel led the Hubble Space Telescope Team that
investigated Jupiter's atmospheric response to the collisions. An expert
on the planet Neptune, she was a member of the Imaging Science Team for the
Voyager 2 encounter with the gas giant in 1989. Her latest research
involves studies of Neptune and Uranus with Hubble and other Earth-based
observatories. Hammel is also an Interdisciplinary Scientist for Hubble's
successor, the James Webb Space Telescope, which is scheduled for launch
in 2011.
Hammel received the 2002 American Astronomical Society's Division
for Planetary Sciences (AAS/DPS) Sagan Medal for outstanding communication
by an active planetary scientist to the general public .
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