Planetary Radio: Space Exploration, Astronomy and Science - Internships, conferences, and grad school: A space student's guide
Episode Date: October 16, 2024This week, Planetary Radio offers advice for students pursuing higher education in space-related fields. Elizabeth Koenck, a Zed Factor Fellow, shares how her internship at The Planetary Society has h...elped her pursue a future in space policy. Sara Miller, the organizer of AbGradCon and a Ph.D. candidate at Cornell, discusses how to best leverage conferences and build community. Then, Briley Lewis, a recent Ph.D. graduate at UCLA and a correspondent at STARtorialist, will teach you how to survive grad school. Stick around for What's Up with Bruce Betts, our chief scientist, as he shares more about The Planetary Society's new book series for kids. Discover more at: https://www.planetary.org/planetary-radio/2024-space-students-guide See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
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So, you want to pursue higher education in space science and exploration?
We've got some tips, this week on Planetary Radio.
I'm Sarah Al Ahmed of the Planetary Society, with more of the human adventure across our
solar system and beyond.
This week we're exploring the challenges and rewards of pursuing higher education in space-related fields. From internship
insights to conference strategies and grad school survival tips, we've got you
covered. First, Elizabeth Coyne, our new Z-Factor Fellowship intern at the
Planetary Society, shares her story of the power of space internships as she
pursues her future in space policy.
Sarah Miller, who is an organizer of AbGradCon and a PhD candidate at Cornell, discusses how to best leverage conferences. Then Briley Lewis, a PhD graduate at UCLA
and a correspondent at StarTorialist, lets you know how to survive grad school and celebrate
in the process. We'll close out our show with Bruce Betts, our chief scientist in What's Up.
Our new children's book series about planets, which was written by Bruce, is sure to fire
up the imaginations of the young space fans out there.
If you love planetary radio and want to stay informed about the latest space discoveries,
make sure you hit that subscribe button on your favorite podcasting platform.
By subscribing, you'll never miss an episode filled with new
and awe-inspiring ways to know the cosmos
and our place within it.
But before we get into the bulk of today's show,
I want to send a congratulations from everyone here
at the Planetary Society to all the people around the world
that helped make NASA's Europa Clipper mission possible.
The spacecraft blasted off on its way to Jupiter
and its moons earlier this week on Monday, October 14th. It was a beautiful launch and the culmination
of decades of work. We'll share more about that next week, but in the meantime
take a moment in the coming days to go out there and look up at the skies and
imagine Europa Clipper cruising on its way to Jupiter. It's gonna help us
unlock the mysteries of Europa's subsurface ocean and its potential for life. So this is a big moment in the history of space exploration. Congratulations,
everyone. We finally have a dedicated mission to Europa on its way. Now, for a few years,
the Planetary Society has been working with an organization called the Z-Factor Fellowship to
provide internship opportunities to students. The Z-Factor Fellowship to provide internship opportunities to students.
The Z-Factor Fellowship connects aspiring aerospace professionals from historically excluded backgrounds
with organizations in the aerospace industry to help them build their careers.
Elizabeth Coyneck, our new intern, hopes to pursue a job in space policy.
She's been working with our team in Washington, D.C. to learn more about how to shape the future of space exploration.
One of her major projects here at the Planetary Society is finding new ways to empower space advocates outside of the United States.
Here's her story of the power of internships and the ways that space science fosters international collaboration.
Hi, Elizabeth.
Hi, Sarah.
It's wonderful to meet you.
It's great to meet you. Thank you for having me here.
So you're one of our interns working with our space policy team. How did you first become interested in space policy?
Yeah, I think for me it kind of goes back like a long way. I think I've always been interested in space in some capacity part of it. Grew up in Colorado, you know, I can drive 20 minutes from home
and I can see the Milky Way.
And I think that just gives you this tangible appreciation
of space that doesn't exist everywhere.
And then growing up, I always liked science.
I always was interested in that.
I competed in science fairs for physics projects.
I took several years of physics when I was in high school.
And for a long time, like that was the plan,
just study physics, go do all this cool stuff.
Fortunately for me, as someone who never liked doing labs
and all that very much,
I discovered that there are other options out there
and I became really interested
in studying international relations
and that's a whole different long story.
But for a while, I thought that would be a complete journey
away from studying space, from talking about space.
A girl from my high school came back
and spoke to one of my classes about how she had gone
to Johns Hopkins for international relations,
realized, well, she still loves space,
and she found a way to work in space policy.
And that's kind of what did it for me.
So now I'm a student at Georgetown University
in Washington, DC, where there's this increasing dialogue
about how space and international relations interact
and what that means in the future.
Space is something for everyone.
So that's really interesting to me.
It's so funny how so many of us got into these space careers
being like, I wanna know the mysteries of the universe.
Then through that ended up thinking,
you know what I want to do? Here's my specialized niche within this.
I want to do science communication or I want to do space policy.
There's so many options for people out there that are far
beyond just doing the math and building the spaceships.
Yeah. I wish I had realized that sooner because there was
this time period where I was like, well,
it's one or the other
You can't do both and it's good to know that science isn't just for scientists and there are other ways
To interact with them. There's other people that are needed in science
So how did you end up as an intern at the Planetary Society?
So last January I applied to the Z-Factor Fellowship.
That's a fellowship that helps underrepresented groups, so women, minorities, people with
financial need, get access to internships in space.
I learned about it through the Georgetown University Space Initiative.
I applied, I interviewed with the Planetary Society, and they accepted me as an intern,
which is super
exciting.
The Zeph Factor Fellowship is just doing such wonderful things and every intern we get from
the organization just adds something so wonderful to our group.
It's wonderful that this exists because I know for me as a woman from the Middle East
and just as a woman in general, I felt like there were so many barriers in front of me
when I wanted to get into space.
And it's really cool having an organization like this
that tries to set people like you up with a dream
and an organization that can help you facilitate that.
No, I absolutely agree.
I think especially with internships are so complicated,
they can be unpaid.
It can be so hard just to gain a foothold gain experience in an industry which of course is a
prerequisite for any job. So I think it's so important that there is an
organization out there just dedicating itself to finding people who have this
interest, who have these talents, and making sure they can make their dreams
possible somehow. So I really appreciate that they do that.
I know there's probably a lot of different organizations you could have ended up working
with, but you ended up with us. What is your kind of read on the planetary society and
what has your time been like so far?
I think every day I get a little bit more impressed. To be honest, I wasn't sure what
it was going to be like going in. I worked for nonprofits before, but this is a different setup.
It's about advocacy.
It's really interesting just to see the way the organization functions.
And I think the work that the Planetary Society does, both US and abroad, is really good and
important and I'm glad someone's doing it.
I've really enjoyed my internship so far.
I've gotten to just learn a lot about the space world. I haven't taken
any classes on it in school, so it's cool just to be able to learn a little bit more about the
history of space policy, the history of space exploration, and then apply that to our modern
day problems. What are some of the adventures you've been able to go on so far? I'm a government
relations intern and I'm based in Washington, D.C., so I've been able to go on so far? I'm a government relations intern and I'm based in Washington, D.C.
So I've been able to go to the Hill to a few meetings.
I've gone to the Space Capital Forum by Payload.
A couple of events like Legacy of Light was a space business roundtable.
And recently you got to hang out with some of the people from Australia
who are interested in space as well, right?
Yeah. So the Space Capital Forum who are interested in space as well, right?
Yeah.
So the Space Capital Forum, which was held by Payload, they released a newsletter all
about space.
It's great, highly recommend, was at the Australian Embassy and there are representatives from
all sorts of Australian companies there.
So it's really interesting to be able to see this new and emerging space market and
how they're interacting with everyone here in DC.
So while you're working with us, what is your focus?
I am working on some of that space policy stuff, the government relation stuff, building those
relationships with Congress to ensure space gets its funding. But most of my time is dedicated to
a research project about how the Planetary Society can better engage with
its members abroad.
Planetary Society has a lot of members who don't live in the U.S. and a lot of our advocacy
focuses on U.S. and NASA-centric issues, so learning about how other space agencies function,
what opportunities exist for members to engage with their governments, and hopefully lead
to international advocacy efforts around the world.
Yeah, we've had a lot of collaboration with international space agencies,
but each and every one of them is different.
And it's still very meaningful that we do most of our work with NASA
because it is the largest and most well-funded space program.
It feeds into partnerships all around the world, but there is so much that we could do to allow people to interface directly with
their space agencies and with their governments. But as I said, I mean that's
that's a really complicated thing. What are some of the biggest challenges
you're finding and trying to figure out how to facilitate that connection? First
of all, I'll just stress how important this is. I think my interest in international relations in space comes from this idea that space is
global.
Every single country could one day have access to space, and we need to figure out how to
better collaborate.
And that means engaging people as well.
It's a challenge though.
Every agency is different.
Every government works differently.
We're really lucky here in the U.S. that it's so easy to go to our members of Congress to go
directly to NASA to advocate for the things we want to see. And that's not true everywhere.
Or if it is, it's more bureaucratic, there's more steps, or we just don't have the connections
in place to be able to facilitate that. So I think it's just building up that network
and learning how advocacy works.
That's the biggest challenge right now.
It's a really complex thing.
I mean, if you take even one of them,
like the European Space Agency as an example,
that's a bunch of smaller space agencies
from different nations, which all have their own roles.
They're all collaborating in this larger system together.
It's basically a bunch of separate space agencies
in a trench coat together pretending to be one entity.
And that's a really hard thing to master.
How do you go about learning
about each of these space agencies
so that you can find a meaningful way
for people to do this advocacy work?
I love that description of a bunch of space agencies
in a trench coat.
And it's even more complicated than that,
because for ESA, not every country even has a space agency. Some of them just have an office
housed under some other department that helps direct space policy so it gets
really complicated and I think I've just been approaching it trying to learn as
much about these space agencies as I can. They publish lots of information, other
people publish information, a lot of them work
with NASA. What does that look like and how does that inform their work? And then in terms of
advocacy, trying to research well how does the budget process work for each of these agencies
in each of these countries and then what opportunities already exist for citizen engagement.
And sometimes those are limited so then it's, well, if these opportunities don't exist here exactly, how
else can people engage?
So in Canada, it can be kind of hard to advocate for space funding just because the process
of departmental priority list is complicated.
So organizations and movements like Don't Let Go Canada have had a lot of success doing grassroots
organizing, so it's then learning about, okay, what might grassroots movements look like in
these various countries and how can those help our members get what they want today?
Yeah, because if systems don't already exist for people to do this kind of advocacy,
we can then try to form steps to allow people to make those connections, and maybe in the future we can find a way to do more advocacy
and impact those spaces and agencies through this process.
But, I mean, it's a very large thing.
I'm thinking specifically of these kind of rising space agencies
that we've been seeing more recently,
like the Indian Space Research Organization has been absolutely crushing it, right?
Their missions have been pivotal. And it's wonderful seeing that nation kind of go through its own kind of Apollo era almost.
Everyone there is so excited. But how do the people there interface with their government to try to support these missions?
And then how do we use that same kind of logic in nations that are just starting out, right? You've got places like Australia or the UAE,
the United Arab Emirates that have these space agencies,
but they're kind of getting started.
They've got some space missions going,
but they're just getting on the ground.
So if we can make the impact early,
we can hopefully help create this bridge
so that there is a larger, more robust system
of communication between the people and that space agency.
Absolutely. And a lot of it is just building up those connections, reaching out to people,
asking the agencies themselves what opportunities exist. And I think an important thing too
is to recognize that the Planetary Society, our infrastructure is built to do this advocacy
in the U.S. And in order to do this effectively abroad, we need to recognize that other countries
have different systems and we have people to work within those systems and understand
that they might function in different ways.
That doesn't mean it's dysfunctional, it just means it's different.
I mean, come on, if we can actually help support these space agencies, help everyone get the
advocacy that they need,
and then build those bridges
so they can all collaborate together.
Just imagine what opportunities
that would bring up in space.
We won't have to be so upset as an example
that NASA is losing funding for X mission
when we know that India is gonna do it
or China is gonna do it.
It really kind of takes a lot of that pressure off
so that we can be a little less sad about it
and a little more joyous as we help support
all the space agencies around the world.
I agree.
And this kind of speaks to my own personal passion
in this area, which is ensuring that countries
around the world have access to space
because space as we know, as we well know,
is such a valuable tool for national security,
for people, for building sustainable food systems, for environmental monitoring. And every country
should have access to these tools and making sure these new space agencies that are coming up
have access to them and facilitating that for the people in those countries is going to be so
important to ensure that space is an area for all the people of the world, not just people who live in
a country with NASA. Well said. I mean honestly as a child I don't know what my
experience would have been like if I didn't have the knowledge that someday I
could grow up and use my space dreams to actually form a career. If I thought I
had to jump through hoops to immigrate to another country
or you know those opportunities just weren't there for me, who knows how that could have changed the
trajectory of mine or your life. Oh absolutely I think about that all the time and the thing is
it shouldn't be that way because we can all no matter where on planet earth we are can look up
at the sky we can see the same sky up there,
northern hemisphere, the same stars,
southern hemisphere, the same stars,
and we should all have access to that.
Well, before I let you go,
what are you hoping to do with all this in the future?
Where are you hoping to take this career?
That's a great question.
It's one I ask myself every day.
I will say I think opportunities are arising everywhere every day.
Space is revolutionizing itself every moment. Last week a really good report came out from RAND
about how the Space Force can use its technology for human security to help people to look for
human trafficking, to look for environmental concerns, to protect against famines.
And I think doing research in that area is something I'm looking forward to in the future.
And honestly, we'll see where it all takes me.
I think that's still to be determined.
Well, we'll see.
And I know everyone here will be cheering you on along the way as we do with all the
interns that come through.
We love seeing their journey afterwards and where they end up in life.
So I wish you seriously all the luck.
I appreciate that so much. Thank you so much.
Thanks Elizabeth.
Internships and research positions are great ways to build up your connections and skills.
And so are conferences. They're key to helping students build community and find job and
research opportunities.
Our next guest is Sarah Miller, a PhD candidate in Earth and Atmospheric Science at Cornell
University.
She was one of the organizers for this year's Astrobiology Graduate Conference, or ABGRAD
Con.
ABGRAD Con has been around for nearly two decades and is organized by students and faculty
that hope to build an interdisciplinary and inclusive astrobiology community.
It fosters collaboration and provides practical
training for early career scientists. This year the conference was held at Cornell University
from June 6th through the 14th. There were 101 conference participants, from first-year
graduate students to postdocs. They came from 10 countries and 59 different universities
and institutions. This conference, along with others, is free to attendees because there are many generous
people out there who want to support students who want to build these connections.
The Planetary Society, with the support of the Hala Geolu Family Foundation Gift, sponsored
20 international students to attend the conference.
Our decision to sponsor international students who wanted to attend this event came from
feedback that we received during our internal Search for Life Symposium earlier this year. Sarah Miller had such a
wonderful and transformative time at one of the previous Ebb Grad Cons that she decided to become
one of the organizers this year. Hi Sarah, thanks for joining me. Hi, yes, thank you for having me.
So I was speaking in a recent meeting with some of my colleagues about this episode and all
of the people I'd spoken with about their journey
toward becoming a graduate student and what that's like.
And immediately, Jen Vaughn, our COO,
mentioned that I had to talk to you because
of our recent involvement in AbGradCon.
How did you get involved in organizing this event?
So I was first in attendee of ABGradCon last year.
So it was kind of my third year of graduate school
and it was held at UC San Diego.
And it was a wonderful event.
It was just really impactful on me
and my kind of science journey, science career.
I met some really great people
who I'm still kind of close friends with to date. I found kind of some people to collaborate with in my research and I'm
very fond of kind of the the history of AvGradCon and what it's done for
graduate students. It's really kind of a low stakes way to present your research.
It's a peer-to-peer environment so it's a great way to you know practice
presenting and sharing your science and so I really really wanted to have a hand in making it
even kind of even better the next year. And my advisor, Dr. Brittany Schmidt here at Cornell,
she kind of during her time as a graduate student was an organizer of ABGradCon and was really
supportive of kind of me picking up the baton and trying to do that this past year. So I had a lot
of really great support here at Cornell and I had a really great experience in San Diego last year. So I had a lot of really great support here at Cornell and I had a really great experience
in San Diego last year. So I was excited to kind of do it again locally.
It's really wonderful when you find an event that makes such a difference in your personal life that
you want to then take that next step and really support it because you know what it could mean
for other people. Absolutely. Yeah. And thankfully, I think depending on timing, we might have Brittany
Schmidt on the show
next week to talk about the Europa Clipper launch.
So that'll be really cool to let people get to know her a little better.
I hope so.
She's really incredible.
She's just done so much in the field already.
And it's really, it's pretty spectacular.
Yeah, I had a great time with her in Washington, DC this last year at our Day of Action.
It's wonderful how just kind of getting into this community, you see
these people on their journeys and particularly at conferences, you end up bumping into them
and forging these friendships that can make a huge difference in your career.
I think it's so helpful, especially because astrobiology in general is such an inherently
multidisciplinary field that collaboration is so important. I think you can be really
impactful in the field as a physicist or a chemist or a biologist,
but you really need to work with others who know kind of other pieces of the puzzle.
And it's great because most people know Brittany.
I think everybody I've met in the field, they're like, oh, yes, I know Brittany.
You know, I have a great experience or story or something with her.
And it's nice to go to conferences for that reason.
I think they're so important for kind of building and maintaining your community and your network.
But especially when we're talking about something like trying to understand life on other worlds.
This is a field that, while it has a long legacy, is only kind of crystallizing.
We're finally having technologies and missions that are allowing us to do this work,
which necessarily means that a lot more people are going to begin to try to
pursue those careers. And I think ABGradCon and other conferences in this vein can really allow
people to kind of help shape those careers through their connections. What do you think
is the most powerful bit about ABGradCon and these other graduate conferences that can help people to
make these connections and actually form the career that they're hoping for?
help people to make these connections and actually form the career that they're hoping for?
I think kind of the diversity of science that's shared is so impactful when you go and you hear about kind of your peers who are studying kind of in the lab like nanoscale microbes and biosignatures
and then you see people who are like kind of going into the field and going to places like
Western Australia and studying hyper saline lakes and things on macroscales. And it's so interesting just to see kind of the broad spectrum of like what you can
do to contribute in astrobiology. And I think it's just a really, yeah, it's a really neat
opportunity to see what's out there and see kind of options for where you could go in your career,
because there's really so many different areas where you can contribute meaningfully. I did have that issue personally when I was going through school.
Like I knew what I wanted to do, but trying to connect that to how to find a career,
doing that was very challenging.
So going to these events, I think, is a really powerful way to actually find those
career paths that you might not be aware of.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I think you talk to your peers too and really like kind of not
necessarily commiserate, but really just share experiences with like, you know, I'm in the
job hunt now or just hear how other people are kind of finding opportunities for using
their research meaningfully. It's a kind of great way to just bounce off of each other
and really kind of learn from your peers on how they're making an impact in the field
and kind of planning their futures.
We're all on our own unique journey, right?
But it can feel very lonely when you don't know
what to do next or like you're struggling
with the thing that you're working on.
It's that power of friendship and that power of connection
and seeing your struggles and other people
that can really allow you to contextualize that
and push through those challenging moments
so that you can actually have that career that you want.
Absolutely, I think like the overarching goal of AvgradCon and push through those challenging moments so that you can actually have that career that you want. Absolutely.
I think the overarching goal of ABGRADCON
is really to give young planetary scientists
an opportunity to share their science.
But I think maybe even more than that,
observationally, what I've seen at the conference itself
is that people build a stronger community,
that they rely on their entire careers.
I know from Brittany, my advisor,
that she still is in contact and close contact
with the people that she planned and attended at GradCon with,
which is such a cool, I think, example
of how lasting these relationships are and meaningful.
I think a lot of people that go into these complex scientific fields
grapple with two things primarily,
this idea of imposter syndrome.
Like, how do I fit into the context of this? Am I worthy of being here? Apple with two things primarily, this idea of imposter syndrome.
Like how do I fit into the context of this?
Am I worthy of being here?
Am I smart enough to do this?
And then there's the secondary issue of,
do I feel represented in my field?
Am I welcome in this community?
How do you feel like Ab GradCon helps people deal with those feelings
or hopefully overcome them?
That's such a great question, because I personally have really kind of struggled with imposter syndrome over the years.
I came into astrobiology from aerospace engineering where I was very much kind of in the minority as a woman.
And then when I switched fields kind of in my graduate career, I felt like, oh, I don't have the right background.
And it's more about, I think, kind of how you look at it.
Like, Brittany was so supportive in saying, like, you know, your engineering background
and the fluid dynamics that you studied and everything you've done to this point is useful.
Like, you can use it towards kind of adding a good fresh perspective to astrobiology.
And I think that's one of the kind of the beauties of going to these events and these
conferences is it's, you'd be hard pressed to find something
with your exact background
or find somebody who shares your exact background.
I think it's great to go there
and to see kind of how everybody really contributes
something very unique and very different
and it all adds to the field in different ways.
And I think it helps knowing that there's not a right way
to go through graduate school
or to get a job in astrobiology because
there's not really that many ways that are repeated. I think people are successful in
taking very different paths and it's kind of neat to see the diversity of that at these events.
Do you have any advice for people on the best ways to network or leverage those connections
after you make them at the conferences? So for example, coming up in kind of the end of the year is another big
conference for a lot of people in astrobiology.
It's the American Geophysical Union general meeting.
And so at AGU is just a really kind of a large meeting ground for
people of different fields.
And so in our kind of astrobiology and ABGRADCON community, we were
already talking about who's going to be there, where are you presenting and when, when can we meet up.
And I know after ABGRADCON this last year, even remotely, different kind of chats were
set up for the microbiologist and kind of the geochemist just to kind of keep sharing
relevant research and tools that they've found.
So I think now it's even easier, you know, to hop on a Zoom call with somebody and catch
up.
I know I often kind of with the close group of organizers that I worked with, we have coffee chats where mostly we just talk
about our lives and have coffee and chat. But occasionally, you know, it is sharing how our
research is going and kind of what progress we've made and what tools we've found. So I think it's
so easy to kind of maintain connections now, and especially if you attend more events and kind of
have opportunities to kind of renew those connections in person.
Any time I'm at these events in person,
it's really magical to see the connections
that people put together.
And when you start talking about the issues
that you're having with a particular thing you're
researching or something you've been
thinking about in general, there's always
someone there that has some interesting insight,
and suddenly you're in a collaboration together. I love that. Yeah, I think it's so helpful too to kind of to see what other
people are doing and how they're approaching their research and it really it can often even later I
think influence how you approach your own. So I yeah I think it's so helpful just to stay connected.
What are some of your favorite moments from this year's AbGradCon?
I think most of my, there was, I will preface this with,
there was so much amazing science shared.
Every time I, last year when I attended AbGradCon
as an attendee and then this year as an organizer,
I am floored by some of the science that shared things
I didn't know you could do.
And just really interesting fresh perspectives. But my favorite moments are kind of the little things that went into
organizing it and kind of building that connection with those participants.
So there was a moment where it was like a lot of people, you know, it's like
over, over a hundred attendees.
And so I went to go pick up pizzas for one of the dinners and I filled my
kind of SUV entirely to the of the dinners and I
filled my kind of SUV entirely to the brim with pizzas and I was driving back
to the event with another organizer and balancing pizzas on our lap with like
it just, I think my car still smells like pizza. And everybody kind of you go there
and everybody knows you at that point so everybody pitches in to come and help
shuttle pizzas to the you know the dining area and it's just I think it's kind of the little things you really almost instantly
rely on those people to kind of help you with like, you know, your science and
moving pizzas. It's really great. We had movie nights, we kind of watched and we
did a sing along to Mamma Mia most nights. Cause after science is done, you
kind of just want to do anything else to like let some steam off and kind of give
your brain a break. So there was lots of karaoke at night and just a kind of just a really fun way to decompress from trying,
trying really hard to share your science well and to be a sponge and to absorb all of the great information that's being shared at the conference.
It's always the after hours karaoke that is my favorite part.
Oh, I love it. And I think it, yeah, it really just, that's the part that you remember. And
I think that really solidifies the bonds that are built there. And it's really, it's so
great.
Well, for people who aren't into the specific realm of science, do you have any recommendations
for how to find the conference that best suits your needs and your future career?
Yeah, absolutely. I wouldn't be afraid to kind of step outside of what you think are the bounds of your research. And so astrobiology, as I mentioned before, it's so inherently
multidisciplinary. I think you can, you can value, you can be a valuable contributor coming
from a lot of different fields and perspectives and different research. So AvGradCon, it could
be a great first conference for a lot of people. It's a great way to share your science if
you don't have a lot of background presenting
at conferences.
One of the beauty of the conference is it's fully funded for graduate students.
So you apply and with the help of our amazing donors like the Planetary Society, we're able
to kind of bring students here with funding.
So that's great.
But I think, yeah, just kind of not being afraid to step outside of the bounds of your
own field.
So I've presented my own research, which is in kind of planetary oceanography
and specifically Europa at Earth Oceanography conferences, where I really kind of have to
go into more background about Europa as a moon of Jupiter, and it has this global ocean.
And then of course, it like kind of very niche, you know, astrobiology science conference
at Psycon, where, of course, you don't need to do that background, you know, astrobiology science conference, AbSciCon, where of course you don't need to do that background, you know, you really just
dive into the model and the results, but of course you need to kind of maybe explain more
oceanography background. So I think, you know, you approach it different ways, but I think
I'm not being afraid to kind of go outside of your comfort zone a little bit and connect with
different communities because it's amazing how many people can help you with your research who aren't necessarily
strict astrobiologists or whatever your field is.
Who knows? You might stumble upon a topic
or someone you want to collaborate with,
and suddenly you're realizing that the thing that you thought
your career was going to be could be something else,
and you can apply that science to
a totally different realm of discovery.
Absolutely. That's how I found astrobiology too, is I didn't even know about it
until I'd already started a PhD program in electric propulsion engines. And I'm still so
passionate about electric propulsion, but I, in the course of my master's degree back at Georgia
Tech, I took kind of an elective class in planetary science just because I needed a science
elective and it was available and it sounded kind of interesting and it fit my schedule well more than anything.
And I was hooked.
It was so fascinating.
And I remember having a conversation with that professor and saying, man, I wish I knew
this was an option when I was choosing graduate programs.
And he's like, Sarah, if it's too late for you to switch fields, like God help the rest
of us because you have so much career ahead of you.
And it's, you know, if you love this, go for it.
And so I just kind of all the encouragement I needed.
But I really, I think it's so it's so great to expose yourself to go take classes outside
of your field and do attend conferences outside of your field and to just really try to be
a sponge and absorb as much as you can from as many people as you can.
Well thanks for being the kind of person that has this experience that impacts your life
and then sharing it with others.
I think that's a really powerful and uplifting thing to do.
Oh, absolutely.
I think as much as you can kind of prevent those feelings of imposter syndrome and kind
of make this community more welcoming and accepting, the better.
It's really, I think it's better for everybody.
Absolutely.
I mean, so many of us have had to overcome these feelings
and the more people we can get together,
the more we can impress upon people
that this isn't just about you and your innate abilities.
This is about us all working together
to solve some of the biggest mysteries
in the history of humanity.
It's all right if you don't get it right the first time
and it's okay to lean on your friends
and the people that you connect with.
If we can do that, I think we can make this a really welcoming community.
Yeah, and just kind of not being afraid to ask for help and to really kind of lean on
your collaborators and your peers.
That's great.
Yeah.
Well, I'm glad that we could help send people out for this event, and I hope you have a
good AbGradCon next year.
Thank you.
Yes, I'm really excited about next year's
event. I think AbGradCon 2025, it's going to be held in Boulder, Colorado at the University of
Colorado at Boulder. And the organizing team was all in attendance at this past AbGradCon. So I
think the baton has been passed and they're already doing such a good job about kind of making it
even better and more inclusive. And it's going to be great. Thanks so much
for joining me Sarah. Thank you for having me. We'll be right back after this short break.
Greetings Bill and I here. NASA's budget just had the largest downturn in 15 years,
which means we need your help. The U.S. Congress approves NASA's annual budget and with
your support we promote missions to space by keeping every member of Congress
and their staff informed about the benefits of a robust space program. We
want Congress to know that space exploration ensures our nation's goals
in workforce technology, international relations, and space science.
Unfortunately, because of decreases in the NASA budget,
layoffs have begun.
Important missions are being delayed, some indefinitely.
That's where you come in.
Join our mission as a space advocate by making a gift today.
Right now, when you donate, your gift will be matched up to $75,000
thanks to a generous Planetary Society member.
With your support, we can make sure every representative and senator in D.C. understands
why NASA is a critical part of U.S. national policy. With the challenges NASA is facing,
we need to make this investment today. So make your gift at planetary.org slash take action. Thank you.
I've made so many wonderful connections at these conferences. You never know when
a chance meeting could completely change the course of your life. Networking and
seeking opportunities that can help you build out your resume are helpful, but if
you want to go into space science,
the key factor is making sure that you have the community support you need to make it through your education. As we've spoken about in recent weeks on the show,
I'm a huge fan of showing my love for space through the outfits and jewelry that
I wear. One of my favorite online shops is StarTorialist.
It's a woman owned small business that was founded by professional astronomers.
A few weeks ago, I got one of their emails in my inbox.
It was celebrating one of their graduate student correspondents, who's our next guest, Dr.
Briley Lewis.
She recently got her PhD at the University of California, Los Angeles, or UCLA.
As part of processing this huge moment in her life, Briley wrote an article for Star
Torialist called,
What is a PhD and Why is Celebrating It Important?
Getting a PhD is a huge and admirable undertaking
no matter what field you go into.
But there are some unique challenges
when it comes to pursuing a doctorate
in space-related fields.
Briley's been through all of it
and she's got some great advice for students
along with the friends and family that want to support them.
Briley's worked with many organizations over the years, including AstroBytes, Scientific
American, Popular Science, and Space.com.
Her research focuses on high contrast imaging of exoplanets and debris disks.
Now that she's got her PhD, she's moving on to her next chapter in life as a postdoc.
Hey, Briley. Hi, nice to see you.
Or should I say Dr. Lewis?
Yeah, that's still unreal.
Absolutely unreal.
That's got to be a really wacky feeling after so many years working towards this.
I mean, I think people do have some understanding that getting your PhD is difficult, but the
sheer time commitment and the scale of the work that goes into it is something that I
don't think a lot of people really generally appreciate.
Yeah, it was, it was very strange because it's, it's something that I've worked on for
so long that it just became like, this is what my life is now.
And it almost seemed like I can keep doing this indefinitely and it's fine.
Like I'm, I'm doing research, I'm hanging out. And so on the day of my actual
defense, I thought it was going to be this like triumphant moment. And if anything, it
was just kind of this weird sort of like, you know, the feeling you get when like a
Netflix show ends, and you're like, Oh God, what comes next? I feel like emptiness. It
was more of that.
And I basically stared at a wall in my office
the rest of the day,
just trying to process that six years
of working on this thing was over.
Sometimes when those big moments come,
it doesn't hit you all at once.
You just got to take that moment to kind of decompress
and then it will hit you in the small moments.
You'll be cooking eggs two weeks later
and suddenly it's like, I did that. Yeah, that's pretty much exactly how it's been.
I think that's why it's so important to take these moments to celebrate every step along the way.
It's one thing to internally process, but it's another thing to have the people around you
really support you in your journey and to mark those big moments and to take the moment to
celebrate because how are you as a single person supposed to process this huge thing you've just been through
without the support of your community and your friends and your family there
to really mark those moments with you?
Yeah, exactly.
And I feel very lucky that I've had a really supportive community
around me, all of grad school.
I know that there are some poor stories.
Not everyone has a great experience in grad school,
but I had a great cohort of other
grad students with me.
I had the best advisor I could have asked for.
I had Emily Rice who sent that email for a Stratorialist and she's basically the reason
I ended up at the grad school I did anyways.
She really helped me talk through that decision.
And then my family, even if they didn't always know the intricacies and details of what academia
is like, because I'm the first in my family to get a PhD, and even if they didn't totally
viscerally know what it was like, they still were really supportive.
And I have a bunch of friends in astronomy who are a year older than me, so they did
their degree one year ago, so they just went through it.
And then some of the students who were younger than me,
it's just nice when there's this sort of like ecosystem
of you get to see the people before you do it,
and then you get to go cheer on the people
after you once you've been through it.
And having a great grad community
was definitely like the most important thing
in grad school for me.
We can attempt to do these kinds of Herculean tasks alone, but the way I always try to describe
it to people, and this might just be me watching too many cartoons, but friendship is magic.
You cannot get through these things by yourself, and no one ever has before.
And everyone in scientific history is standing on the shoulders of someone else who worked
with someone else who worked with someone else, right?
So building up that community around you and connecting with the students and the professors is really what it's all about.
I was telling my students this. So I was teaching during the quarter that I graduated. So I was teaching summer session C at UCLA this summer. I kept telling them that it's, it's not that I just know things.
It's that I, one worked a long time for this. And I've been just like,
I've been in school simply longer than they have. They were incoming freshmen.
So they were all, you know, like, this is my first week of college.
I'm terrified. And so I kept trying to remind them like,
I'm not doing this alone. This is not just me.
Like there are all of these other people that were involved. And also like, I'm not doing this alone. This is not just me. Like there are all of these other people that were involved.
And also like, if this is something you want to do, you can do it.
And even them, even though they only met me like two weeks before my defense, they
were so sweet and so supportive.
Like, yeah, they were so excited to call me doctor when my defense was done, which
I just thought was the most precious thing.
What would you say are some of the most helpful things that people can do to support grad students
when they're mid-journey, mid-stress? I feel like the most important thing that someone can do to
support a PhD student, even if they are not familiar with academia, is checking in on them,
asking how they're doing,
if they need anything, how it's going.
My grandma, for example,
if she hadn't heard from me in a bit,
would just text me and be like,
I'm thinking about you, how's it going?
That especially was useful in
the last few months of the degree.
The first five years of the degree are a marathon where like
you have to like live your life during it, otherwise you're just going to put everything
off for five years. But the last few months, the last nine months of it, honestly for me,
were a sprint where I was like, I'm doing my best, but I'm underwater. And in that time in
particular, having, you know, my grandma just say, I know you're busy, but I wanted you to know I'm underwater. And in that time in particular, having, you know, my grandma just say, I know you're busy,
but I wanted you to know I'm thinking about you.
And if you wanna do something, I'm around.
And so that was really helpful.
Like when I didn't have the like brain space
to be as good about reaching out to people,
having, you know, the other people like pick up
some of that slack.
Like I think that's one of the things that I found the most helpful,
honestly, in life in general is if one person's going through a busier time,
then the person who's not can pick up some of
that slack in terms of making that connection and support.
Then the other most important thing is just showing an interest in it,
or at the very least,
understanding that we talk about it because it is a big part interest in it, or at the very least, like, understanding that we talk about it
because it is a big part of our lives and we love it.
You don't have to want every single detail,
but, like, just any amount of curiosity
of, like, what I've been working on means so much
because it feels like everyone wants people
to be interested in their lives.
Like, that's how we feel connected.
And so people asking questions like, oh, okay.
So like, what is it that you have to do next
for this to be like closer to done?
Or like my grandma trying to understand
what I was working on and like asking questions
so that she could try to get it.
Or like one of my good friends, my volleyball team,
someone that hosted the party,
they were so, they're so interested
in space. Actually, one of the best pictures that I've ever seen is I took them with my class I was
teaching on a field trip to JPL because I had like an extra spot. And there's this picture of them
just like absolutely like mouth wide open, like staring in awe at one of the Rover models. And it's
it's like hilarious and wonderful.
They would want to know what was going on
and like ask me questions about my thesis work
and like we're really trying to understand.
And they were always like,
if you don't wanna talk about work, that's okay.
But also I'm so curious.
And yeah, so that interest means a lot.
I don't need everyone to want to hear
the details of my research,
but just knowing that
it's a big part of my life and that I care about my work a lot.
What encouragement would you give people who are considering going into this field, given
that they're going to have to climb the mountain of physics and mathematics in order to do
it?
You're not going through this alone. If you think that you are uniquely bad at everything,
that's probably false.
The people around you are your community, not your competition.
And it really is more about who can get to the end, get to the finish line.
You just got to go through the journey. And honestly, the cliche advice that is really true
is it's about the journey, not the destination.
Like the destination is big and important,
don't get me wrong.
But for most of that six years,
I wasn't thinking about my defense.
I was thinking about all the small steps in between
and how to start knowing the
things I needed to know, learning things I needed to learn.
You got to pace yourself. You got to try to have work-life balance.
Definitely important.
It's very easy in the beginning to feel like, Oh my God,
if I don't work all the time, I'm going to be the one that's behind.
And I'm going to be the one that doesn't know things.
And that's just simply false.
No human can sustain working 24-7 for six years.
It's impossible. It's a marathon.
Rely on the people around you.
Whatever time your degree takes is the time your degree takes.
There might be a nominal time to degree according to your university.
Like, oh, people take six years on average. But there's nothing inherently better about finishing faster.
Some people do, and that's what works for them. But I know plenty of people who are
very successful in astronomy and took more than the average time to degree. Thing my
advisor says all the time or former advisor now. Oh my god, that's terrifying.
He always said, you just can't compare yourself to other people. And that's especially true in
grad school. Unlike in earlier career stages where there are these, you know, numbers placed upon you
to judge your performance like GPA or SAT scores, that does not exist anymore.
There is no, you got 100% on your thesis.
That doesn't happen.
So you can't compare yourself to other people.
And what counts as success in the PhD is very personal.
It's like, what did you want to get out of it?
Did you do the things that you wanted
to do to set yourself up for the career you wanted to have?
But it's really, PHD is really about like,
what is it that you want to do, you know?
There are so many opportunities
that are only opening up for the first time
now that we're advancing our technology to this point.
There are so many people who have no idea the opportunities
they're about to get themselves into and what's out there, but they have to be aware of the
amount of work it's going to take and try to lay the foundation for the safety net and
the people that are going to help support them so that they can get through this kind
of work because it is a lot and you're going to have to balance both academia and life
and being a human in order to be whole and healthy and happy as you go through it.
Yeah. The being a human part is often the hardest.
Yeah. I think so. But yeah, I think,
I think if I remember statistics correctly,
there's like more grad students now than ever,
which also kind of makes sense because there's so much work to be done.
There's truly so much work to be done.
And this is only in like my small corner of astronomy.
There are so many realms of science where there are these huge questions facing humanity,
but there's something so hopeful and curiosity peeking about space science in particular,
because the issues we're grappling with are, you know, are we alone in the universe?
And why are we here? And what even is the fate of all of this? And how did the universe
progress over time? You know, such large questions, and it's going to take maybe even hundreds,
if not thousands of years for humanity to fully grapple with all of it. But we now have
the opportunity to really dig into it now that we have these
foundational bits of physics figured out and all these new technologies. This is the beginning
of some of the greatest discoveries in the history of history.
Oh, yeah. And that that actually reminded me of something else, which is I think one
of the things that's really cool about astronomy in particular, is that the people that are
attracted to working in this
field are people that are interested by those big questions and that are thinking about our role in
the universe and how small and fragile earth is. That is really good perspective to convince you
to be nice to other people and take care of the planet. And so at least in my experience,
astronomy is just like a field,
but it's filled with so many good people.
I feel like astronomy is a great place to work.
I mean, there are also so many people, you know, involved in this field
that are just excited about like sharing things with other people, you know,
like you, like trying to get out all of this cool information that's going on.
And so there's definitely something about the fact that we consider those big
cosmic questions all the time that I think helps make this a good place to work is that
we all kind of have that perspective.
We'll have seriously the best time doing your next steps and going on this journey.
You've been through a thing. So have a cake, go throw a party,
go sit on a beach and watch our star set, you know?
Thank you so much.
Yeah, it's fun to be having this conversation with you
and at the end of my first week as a postdoc,
there's so many things to look forward to
and it's just so much possibility.
It's a little overwhelming, but in a good way.
Well, seriously, thank you so much, Briley,
and good luck on everything that comes next.
Remember, space friends, you're not alone.
You're not an imposter, and you don't
need to be a genius to love and study space.
Just because something is challenging
does not mean that you are failing.
Finding a community that can help you on your path
is just as important
as studying hard and seeking out career opportunities. Remember that it's okay to ask for help.
We're all in this together and I know because I wish desperately that someone had sat me down
and said all of this to me years ago. So if you need to hear it or someone you love needs to hear
it, let them know that
it's okay and that you're there for them.
Now it's time for What's Up with Dr. Bruce Betts, the chief scientist at the Planetary
Society. He's written a new children's book series from the Planetary Society to help
inspire the next generation of space fans.
Hey, Bruce!
Top of the morning to you.
And the morning right after Europa Clipper launched, I was on the edge of my seat.
It launched.
It's on its way.
It's so awesome.
That's really cool.
I always love it.
After all the tension of not knowing whether or not it was going to launch or when it
was going to launch and the shrinking time window, finally seeing it on its way is very
relieving.
Yes, for a lot of people.
Yeah.
Especially the ones who have spent many years of their lives getting that ready to go and
ready to do some great science a few years from now.
Yeah.
I think about all the kids out there that are just now learning about Europa because
of this mission, or all of the other students that are just starting out on their education
process for getting into space science, they might be the ones that
get to do all this Europa science and this mission is going to completely change their
lives and they don't even know it yet.
It's exciting that that will happen for them and for a bunch of other scientists sitting
around waiting for Europa data for a very, very long time.
But this week we spoke with a bunch of different people about different ways to support students
that are going into space science and how to survive grad school and find conferences
and internships. But something else that we do here is we have our Planetary Academy,
which is the membership program for kids. And you've also done a large amount of writing
for kids around space to try to give them educational resources. I understand you have a whole new book series out.
Pete I do indeed with Plantary Society partnering with Lerner Publications. We issued one book a
while ago for eclipses called Casting Shadows, and then now we put out eight books tied to eight planets, one per planet, that are targeted
at kind of a second, third grade level but are applicable while I've met adults who are
enjoying them.
But that's what they're targeted for an elementary school level.
And they have lots of pretty but very scientifically accurate imagery and hopefully language gets kids excited. I mean, the pictures
alone got me excited when I was a kid, so throwing a few words and it's groovy. So go
to planetary.org slash radio and find the wonderful links to the wonderful books to
get kids going and excited and learning about space.
But I really like about this is that, you know, even if you don't have kids yourself
or if they're past that age, there's still opportunities to help get these books into
the hands of students by trying to request that they can put them in libraries.
Yeah, they're really a lot of it's designed to go into school libraries, so lots of kids
can get access to them for free.
And so if you can encourage your school library to pick up the series
eight or nine, that would be great. It comes in two forms. One is a paperback. One is a
hardcover, which looks is a little more expensive than usual because it's a library binding.
So apparently is particularly tough. I haven't actually thrown it to the dogs yet to find
out how tough, but it is quite sturdy.
Well, before we move on to the random space fact, I wanted to acknowledge a massive amount
of emails I've gotten this week from people who listened to our show last week.
Must be an important topic.
So Casey Dreyer and I had a conversation about Europa, as one does the week before Europa
Clipper launch.
And we were talking about sci-fi
things set on Europa and how we wanted to see more of them. And neither one of us
was super familiar with the movie Europa Report. And it fired people up because
Casey said, wasn't there a bad movie about Europa at some point? So I just
wanted to promise everyone Casey and I are going to rewatch that movie. And we
will give some extra thought to whether or not it is a good one and let you know.
Because even if it isn't the best movie in the world, or as one person said, even if
it's not Oppenheimer, it's important to have these bits of sci-fi, even if they're not
optimal, just to give visibility to these worlds.
So I hereby promise that I will rewatch your Roper Report for you guys.
Enjoy. I'd ask you about it, Bruce, but I don't think you've seen it.
No, I have not.
I've read some Europa Reports.
Right?
Now, I'm sure, like, you know, I get it all confused with the video game Callisto Protocol.
Europa Report, Callisto Protocol, they confuse in my brain.
So you know.
They're practically identical.
Practically.
Well, anyway, what is our random space fact this week?
Goat simulator now in high definition.
So this one that maybe a lot of people know, but I think it's super interesting.
And in case you don't speak into that Europa, I know Europa and Ganymede are in an orbital
residence.
So every time Ganymede goes around Jupiter once, Europa goes around
twice and Io goes around four times. They're in a one, two, four so-called resonance with
about one and a half days for Io and three days for Europa and about seven days for Ganymede.
And you may ask, what about Callisto?
Callisto is a rebel. Not in the orbital resonance, although it may have been
once upon a time. It's I think around 17 days.
I was gonna ask, I mean, how do you get a scenario like that where you've got all
these big moons kind of all in resonance and then one that's just kind of doing
something random?
Bad attitude.
Yeah, you know, that makes sense.
What was the Callisto game? Protocol. Yeah, it's the Callisto protocol. That's what results in
it being a rebel. No, just the farther out, it's all tied to the different moons interacting
with each other and then interacting with Jupiter. And the farther out you get, like
with Callisto, it's harder to establish that loving relationship.
AMT – I mean, I wonder, like, we're just kind of learning more about these. We see them in the
moons in our own solar system, but I wonder how it impacts larger scale systems like planetary
systems that are all in resonance with each other because they're really close to each other or to
their star. There's got to be some really cool things that happen there just on the sky or who even knows? Who even
knows?
I think they're all discussed in your Oprah report.
Well, we'll find out next week here on Planetary Radio.
Nice. All right, everybody go out there looking at the night sky and think about your nose
because it's right there. It's you're looking at the night sky and think about your nose because it's right there
as you're looking at the night sky. Thank you and good night. We've reached the end of this
week's episode of Planetary Radio, but we'll be back next week to celebrate the launch of Europa
Clipper. If you love the show, you can get Planetary Radio t-shirts at planetary.org
If you love the show, you can get Planetary Radio t-shirts at planetary.org slash shop, along with lots of other cool spacey merchandise.
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Josh Doyle composed our theme, which is arranged and performed by
Peter Schlosser.
And until next week, add Astra.