Tod R. Lauer

American astronomer (born 1957) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tod Richard Lauer (born 1957)[citation needed] is an American astronomer on the research staff of the NSF NOIRLab.

Born1957 (age 6869)[citation needed]
Ohio, United States[citation needed]
AwardsNASA Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement (1992)
FieldsAstronomy
Quick facts Born, Alma mater ...
Tod R. Lauer
Born1957 (age 6869)[citation needed]
Ohio, United States[citation needed]
Alma materCaltech
UC Santa Cruz
AwardsNASA Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement (1992)
Scientific career
FieldsAstronomy
InstitutionsNSF NOIRLab
Princeton University
ThesisHigh resolution surface photometry of elliptical galaxies (1983)
Doctoral advisorSandra M. Faber
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Early life and education

Lauer studied Astronomy at the California Institute of Technology and graduated with a BS degree in 1979. He received his PhD degree in Astronomy from the University of California, Santa Cruz in 1983 for High resolution surface photometry of elliptical galaxies.[1]

Career

Lauer was a member of the Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field and Planetary Camera team, and is a founding member of the Nuker Team. His research interests includes observational searches for massive black holes[2] in the centers of galaxies, the structure of elliptical galaxies, stellar populations, large-scale structure of the universe, and astronomical image processing.[3] He was the Principal Investigator of the Destiny JDEM concept study,[4] one of the precursors to the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope mission. Asteroid 3135 Lauer is named for him. He appears in an episode of the documentary series Naked Science.[5] He joined the New Horizons Pluto team in order to apply his extensive experience with deep space imaging to the New Horizons data, yielding significantly clearer and mathematically accurate images of Pluto and Charon.

Awards and honors

An asteroid, (3135) Lauer, was named in his honor in 1981.[6] In 1992, Lauer was awarded the NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal for his work with the Wide-Field and Planetary Camera aboard the Hubble Space Telescope.[7] Lauer has been twice awarded the AURA Outstanding Achievement Award for Outstanding Science for 1993[8] and 2016[9] by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy. As a member of the New Horizons team, Lauer shared the 2017 NASA Group Achievement Award.[10] As a member of the Event Horizon Telescope collaboration, Lauer shared the 2020 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics.

References

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