1 00:00:00,001 --> 00:00:13,692 "Hubble Women Making History" 2 00:00:13,692 --> 00:00:20,332 My name is Madison Brodnax and I'm an electrical  power systems engineer on the Hubble Space Telescope. 3 00:00:20,332 --> 00:00:25,200 Being an electrical power systems  engineer entails making sure everything goes   4 00:00:25,200 --> 00:00:30,480 smoothly on the telescope, basically keeping it  safe. Something I do every year is manage the   5 00:00:30,480 --> 00:00:36,720 solar eclipses for the telescope to make sure  that it can, power wise, make it through that. Me   6 00:00:36,720 --> 00:00:42,420 and the other electrical power systems engineers  manage any anomalies that might arise that are   7 00:00:42,420 --> 00:00:47,460 power or electrical related or even thermal  related. I think a lot of people think it's   8 00:00:47,460 --> 00:00:52,380 just a telescope floating around in low Earth  orbit, and it just kind of does its own thing,   9 00:00:52,380 --> 00:00:58,860 but in reality there are tons of people keeping  it safe and healthy day to day with whatever   10 00:00:58,860 --> 00:01:04,620 problems may arise. It goes through hot seasons,  cold seasons, there could be electrical problems   11 00:01:04,620 --> 00:01:09,900 or pointing and control problems with it, there's  a huge team of people that keeps that going and   12 00:01:09,900 --> 00:01:14,880 seamless so that the public gets these really  great images, you know, year after year. 13 00:01:14,880 --> 00:01:20,820 What I find most rewarding about the work is probably  being able to flex my engineering brain every day.   14 00:01:20,820 --> 00:01:27,300 I think of working on such a historic project  that has a lot of information that needs to be   15 00:01:27,300 --> 00:01:33,960 learned about it, back to its conceptualization all  the way up to now in 2023, and is really like a   16 00:01:33,960 --> 00:01:41,700 privilege and also keeps me on my feet every day.  In my day-to-day I wake up and I pet my dog for a   17 00:01:41,700 --> 00:01:48,960 good like 15-20 minutes. If I'm coming in office  it's me versus 295 for a good 45 minutes. Once I   18 00:01:48,960 --> 00:01:52,920 come in I usually get to talk with my teammates  about the things that have been happening for   19 00:01:52,920 --> 00:01:56,940 the past week. I really enjoy being able to  collaborate with everybody in the mornings,   20 00:01:56,940 --> 00:02:01,980 then I sit down and do some work, chug away at  some more coding or some more numbers, hopefully   21 00:02:01,980 --> 00:02:07,680 have a cool meeting and get to schmooze some other  NASA people, and then also head home and go to the   22 00:02:07,680 --> 00:02:14,040 gym or trivia. I think one thing to take away  from, you know, being a woman in STEM is that   23 00:02:14,040 --> 00:02:18,120 you're stronger and more knowledgeable than you  think. You are the smartest person in the room,   24 00:02:18,120 --> 00:02:22,260 all of us are the smartest person in the room,  and I I think, you know, worrying about confidence   25 00:02:22,260 --> 00:02:28,260 level is not as important, just showing up, flexing  the knowledge that you know you already have is   26 00:02:28,260 --> 00:02:32,400 really important. My favorite Hubble image is  probably the Butterfly Nebula, it's you know,   27 00:02:32,400 --> 00:02:36,480 one of the older ones, but I love all the pinks  and purples in it, I think it's really pretty. 28 00:02:36,480 --> 00:02:43,496 Follow us on social media @NASAHubble