Marcia Rieke, a scientist who worked on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope and Hubble Space Telescope, has received the Gruber Foundation’s 2024 Cosmology Prize. Rieke will receive the award and gold laureate pin at a ceremony August 8, 2024, at the General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union in Cape Town, South Africa.
Marcia Rieke is Regents’ Professor of Astronomy at the
University of Arizona and was the principal investigator for the Near-Infrared
Camera (NIRCam) on the Webb telescope.
University of Arizona
Rieke was awarded the prize “for her pioneering work on astronomical
instrumentation to reveal the breadth and details of the infrared universe. Her
contributions to flagship space missions have opened new avenues for
understanding the history and mechanisms of star and galaxy formation. She
enabled the development and delivery of premier instruments providing
groundbreaking sensitivity to near-infrared wavelengths to both the Webb and
the Hubble telescopes. Through these substantive contributions along with
earlier work, Marcia Rieke has had a lasting impact on our understanding of the
universe,” according to the Gruber Foundation’s announcement.
The
Cosmology Prize honors a leading cosmologist, astronomer, astrophysicist, or
scientific philosopher for theoretical, analytical, conceptual, or
observational discoveries leading to fundamental advances in our understanding
of the universe. Since 2001, the Cosmology Prize has been cosponsored by the
International Astronomical Union. Presented annually, the Cosmology Prize
acknowledges and encourages further exploration in a field that shapes the way
we perceive and comprehend our universe.
Rieke is Regents’ Professor of
Astronomy at the University of Arizona and was the principal investigator for
the Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) on the Webb telescope.
As principal investigator for the
NIRCam, Rieke was responsible for ensuring that the instrument was built and
delivered on time and on budget. She worked with the engineers at Lockheed
Martin who built NIRCam and helped them decipher and meet the instruments’
requirements.
“As principal investigator of the
James Webb Space Telescope NIRCam instrument, Dr. Rieke’s vision, dedication,
and leadership were inspirational to the entire team and a key contribution to
the success of the Webb telescope,” said Lee Feinberg, Webb telescope manager
and optics lead at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Maryland.
Rieke’s research interests include
infrared observations of the center of the Milky Way and of other galactic
nuclei. She has served as the deputy principal investigator on the Near
Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer for the Hubble Space Telescope
(NICMOS), and the outreach coordinator for NASA’s retired Spitzer Space
Telescope.
“As a leading scientist on a
premiere Hubble Space Telescope science camera, NICMOS, Dr. Rieke’s expertise
enabled ground-breaking discoveries on everything from star formation to
distant galaxies,” said Dr. Jennifer Wiseman, Hubble Space Telescope senior
project scientist at NASA Goddard. “Subsequent cameras on Hubble, and infrared
space telescopes like Spitzer and Webb, have built upon Dr. Rieke’s pioneering
work.”
“Dr. Rieke has also poured herself
into wide international scientific leadership, leading countless scientific
panels that envision and shape the best instruments for future powerful
astronomical discovery,” Wiseman said.
“There’s a story beginning to
emerge,” Rieke said about the science Webb has returned in the first two years
of its mission. “But we still need some more pieces to the story.” For the
duration of Webb’s lifetime, many of those pieces will emerge from the
instrument that Rieke led.
The James Webb Space Telescope is
the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our
solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing
the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb
is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space
Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).
Media Contact
Rob Gutro
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Source: NASA Webb, Hubble Scientist Marcia Rieke Awarded Gruber Cosmology Prize - NASA
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