Profile

Maria Walach
At the moment I am processing some radar data when I am not chatting to you guys!
My CV
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Education:
Northampton School for Girls & University of Leicester.
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Qualifications:
A-Levels (Physics, Maths, Art, French, and German), MPhys degree in Physics & a PhD (and an orange belt in Karate!)
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Work History:
University of Leicester and Lancaster University
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About Me:
When I was younger, I was really bad at mathsβ¦
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β¦but now I am a physicist (for which I have to know a lot of maths)!
I live in Lancaster and I have a lot of hobbies.
I spend a lot of time doing sports:
π€Ίπ₯π₯βΈπββοΈπββοΈποΈββοΈ (I love fencing and surfing and last year I started learning Karate!)When I donβt d0 sports, I eat or cook! I love making fresh food and trying new flavours.
I love the summer and the sunshine! βοΈπβ±ππ ππ»πββοΈ
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My work is about working out how the Sun and Earth are connected. This happens via electric and magnetic fields!
βοΈβπ
I look at radar and spacecraft data to see whatβs going on out there..
The Earth has a magnetic field, which we canβt see by eye.
This field is REALLY big and goes really far into space.
And itβs connected to the Sunβs magnetic field.
I look at how the two are connected and how it changes over time.
Because we canβt see it by eye, we have to use spacecraft that can measure it for us!
And we can see the aurora (or northern lights), which are there because of our magnetic field.
They change over time too and itβs one of the things we can look at.
The spacecraft then send us the data back to Earth (like measurements of the magnetic field, particles, or pictures of the aurora), so we can look at it.
ππ β β βπ° β π§ βπ
Example of what a spacecraft sees when they look for aurora! (click on it, to see how it changes over time.. this one morphs into a heart-shape, which is really rare!)
Imagine you are a spacecraft looking down at the aurora β this is what you might see! The white bits are data gaps and the dark red is where the aurora is stronger.I also look at how the Sun-Earth connection changes things in the most upper parts of the atmosphere. Like: βHow can changes in the Sunβs magnetic field affect our weather?β and βCan we predict what will happen better?β
To look at this, I use data from radars.
I spend most of my day in front of a computer, analysing my data.
To do this I have to write a lot of programming code!
The code then makes plots and diagrams of the data, so it is easier to understand by humans.
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My Typical Day:
cycle to work, science, coffee & cake, sport (fencing!), FOOD, sleep!
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Itβs all about finding out new things and asking questions!
And then I have to go and find answers.
I do this by looking at data.
Itβs fun because I get to ask questions that I think are interesting. And I work with people who work on similar problems.
And when we get stuck we talk to each other about how we can solve them.
Because the spacecraft and radars collect all the data for us, most of our problems are about how do we find out what the data means? And how is the data from different space missions connected?
Some of my colleagues work on data from different planets or moons in our solar system, so I know a lot about those too.
Most of the problems we come up against, involve computers. So, I guess over time, I have become a bit of a computer-whizz!
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What I'd do with the prize money:
Make gherkins glow in the dark by building a pickle-torch!
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My Interview
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How would you describe yourself in 3 words?
space plasma physicist
What did you want to be after you left school?
An airline pilot
Were you ever in trouble at school?
Yes
Who is your favourite singer or band?
Robyn
What's your favourite food?
Chocolate cake
If you had 3 wishes for yourself what would they be? - be honest!
Be able to bring happiness to everyone around me, have the ability to make the sun come out whenever I want, and have another free 1 million wishes!
Tell us a joke.
What did the fish say when it swam into a wall? - Oh, dam!
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