WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.167 --> 00:00:02.302 [music] 2 00:00:02.302 --> 00:00:05.506 The Planetary Science Winter School is a program for 3 00:00:05.506 --> 00:00:08.442 early career scientists and postdocs like myself to come 4 00:00:08.442 --> 00:00:13.881 together for the first time and see how a mission goes from just 5 00:00:13.881 --> 00:00:15.949 a science concept to something that could 6 00:00:15.949 --> 00:00:17.985 actually fly in space one day. 7 00:00:17.985 --> 00:00:20.320 The Winter School is a great hands-on experience, because it 8 00:00:20.320 --> 00:00:24.458 gives us the ability to actually get involved with the design of 9 00:00:24.458 --> 00:00:27.327 a real mission that might actually fly some day. 10 00:00:27.327 --> 00:00:30.597 We actually are trying to develop an instrument concept 11 00:00:30.597 --> 00:00:33.700 for a client, and we figure out, "Is it feasible? 12 00:00:33.700 --> 00:00:35.035 How much does it cost? 13 00:00:35.035 --> 00:00:36.103 How much does it weigh?" 14 00:00:36.103 --> 00:00:40.374 And so we have things like volume, mass, and power to deal 15 00:00:40.374 --> 00:00:42.809 with for this entire week. 16 00:00:42.809 --> 00:00:45.646 My role in the Planetary Science Winter School was working with 17 00:00:45.646 --> 00:00:47.347 the thermal systems leads. 18 00:00:47.347 --> 00:00:50.450 We looked at our instrument and we have to determine how to 19 00:00:50.450 --> 00:00:53.420 handle things related to temperature stability, 20 00:00:53.420 --> 00:00:56.189 gradients, but also the environment that you're in. 21 00:00:56.189 --> 00:00:59.226 My role was flight software and electrical. 22 00:00:59.226 --> 00:01:01.762 I got to team up with two mentors in my case so I think 23 00:01:01.762 --> 00:01:02.930 I'm double lucky. 24 00:01:02.930 --> 00:01:06.066 I had no idea, since I'm a scientist I've never really done 25 00:01:06.066 --> 00:01:09.469 anything on the electrical back end of something scientific, so 26 00:01:09.469 --> 00:01:11.338 this is a really great opportunity for me to see 27 00:01:11.338 --> 00:01:14.308 everything that goes on in design. 28 00:01:14.308 --> 00:01:17.811 My role in the Winter School was basically figuring out, "What is 29 00:01:17.811 --> 00:01:19.880 the design of the detector that we want?" 30 00:01:19.880 --> 00:01:21.748 We learned on the first day of the study that there was going 31 00:01:21.748 --> 00:01:26.386 to be a second type of detector, and so what I was fascinated by 32 00:01:26.386 --> 00:01:29.156 was just watching people roll with that new information. 33 00:01:29.156 --> 00:01:32.426 So there's a lot of organized chaos that comes together, where 34 00:01:32.426 --> 00:01:35.963 people sort of don't really know what they're doing at first. 35 00:01:35.963 --> 00:01:38.732 I think that's something you see in science in general, as you 36 00:01:38.732 --> 00:01:39.766 start to do more work you realize 37 00:01:39.766 --> 00:01:41.368 how much goes into things. 38 00:01:41.368 --> 00:01:43.804 We just sort of run around talking to each other, saying, 39 00:01:43.804 --> 00:01:44.938 "I have a problem with this. 40 00:01:44.938 --> 00:01:46.306 How do we solve this?" 41 00:01:46.306 --> 00:01:47.874 And together we figure it out. 42 00:01:47.874 --> 00:01:51.478 [music] 43 00:01:51.478 --> 00:01:54.514 The engineering part of a mission really in some ways is 44 00:01:54.514 --> 00:01:57.551 the controlling part of what type of science you get to do, 45 00:01:57.551 --> 00:01:59.553 and it's incredibly important for scientists 46 00:01:59.553 --> 00:02:00.921 to understand that. 47 00:02:00.921 --> 00:02:03.590 Now I've seen what it takes to develop these instruments from 48 00:02:03.590 --> 00:02:06.626 the engineering side, and so in the future when I come back on 49 00:02:06.626 --> 00:02:09.529 the customer side where I have an instrument that I want to 50 00:02:09.529 --> 00:02:14.801 have built by the IDL lab, I'll understand what information the 51 00:02:14.801 --> 00:02:18.505 engineering team needs in order to do that effectively. 52 00:02:18.505 --> 00:02:21.208 So I think one of the next steps in my career, in the next five 53 00:02:21.208 --> 00:02:23.877 or ten years, is to actually become an instrument scientist. 54 00:02:23.877 --> 00:02:26.813 The only way to really start that process of learning how to 55 00:02:26.813 --> 00:02:29.516 do those things is something like this, an opportunity like 56 00:02:29.516 --> 00:02:31.685 the Planetary Science Winter School. 57 00:02:31.685 --> 00:02:33.954 When you're thinking about scientific topics, it's really 58 00:02:33.954 --> 00:02:37.958 thinking in terms of angels on pinheads, where you have this 59 00:02:37.958 --> 00:02:41.428 concept that's very high-level and that isn't necessarily 60 00:02:41.428 --> 00:02:44.331 well-formulated in terms of a plan to get data. 61 00:02:44.331 --> 00:02:47.134 And I think the Planetary Science Winter School helps you 62 00:02:47.134 --> 00:02:50.137 take the science that's in your mind and try to apply it to the 63 00:02:50.137 --> 00:02:52.139 real world, to something that's more tangible. 64 00:02:52.139 --> 00:02:54.941 [music] 65 00:02:54.941 --> 00:03:05.485 [satellite beeping]