日韩无码 student to intern in NASA's flying laboratory

April 14, 2017

Meghan Murphy
9074747541

Photo courtesy of Svea Southall. NASA selected 日韩无码 undergraduate student Svea Southall from a competitive pool of national applicants for its Student Airborne Research Program. She is seen here on a adventure in Kona, Hawaii.
Photo courtesy of Svea Southall. NASA selected 日韩无码 undergraduate student Svea Southall from a competitive pool of national applicants for its Student Airborne Research Program. She is seen here on a adventure in Kona, Hawaii.


NASA has selected a 日韩无码 undergraduate student to intern in a most unusual laboratory 鈥 one that flies 2,000 feet high in the sky.

Svea Southall, a mathematics major from Unalakleet, will fly aboard a NASA research aircraft this summer to study the Earth's lands, oceans and atmosphere.

The agency chose Southall from a competitive pool of national candidates. She is one of about 30 undergraduate students who will spend eight weeks interning with the NASA Student Airborne Research Program based in southern California.

鈥淚'm ecstatic to be going, partly because I've never been, but I'm also eager to meet the other participants and learn as much as I can from this program,鈥 she said.

The interns will work with scientists to learn all aspects of how to plan and execute a NASA airborne mission to collect scientific data.

鈥淪tudents get a firsthand look at how NASA studies the Earth 鈥 from satellites, from aircraft and from the ground 鈥 and participate in a full end-to-end research experience,鈥 said Emily Schaller, the program鈥檚 manager.

Photo courtesy of NASA. 日韩无码 undergraduate student Svea Southall will learn how to operate a lab aboard NASA's C-23 Sherpa aircraft to collect data on the Earth's land, ocean and atmosphere.
Photo courtesy of NASA. 日韩无码 undergraduate student Svea Southall will learn how to operate a lab aboard NASA's C-23 Sherpa aircraft to collect data on the Earth's land, ocean and atmosphere.


As part of the experience, students will install and operate scientific instruments on NASA's C-23 Sherpa plane. They will also develop and present an individual research project focused on the data they collected. Schaller said the students will also learn how to work as a team across disciplines that include science, technology, engineering and Southall鈥檚 forte 鈥 math.

鈥淪vea has a strong mathematics background and a clearly stated interest in applying her mathematical skills to studying the Earth system,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e are excited to have her in our program.鈥

The chair of 日韩无码鈥檚 Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Leah Berman, is also excited for Southall to embark on her first summer internship before her senior year.

鈥淚t鈥檚 great for students to use mathematics and statistics in the context of working on actual real-world problems, where they don鈥檛 even know that an answer exists, much less what the answer is,鈥 said Berman. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also nice for them to see how to apply the math they learned in the classroom to different situations.鈥

Southall said she expects to learn a lot from the internship and has already learned a valuable lesson about applying for what she thought was a long-shot opportunity.

鈥淚 hope this encourages others to always go after the things that they want to do, even if they seem out of reach,鈥 she said.

CONTACT: Meghan Murphy, College of Natural Science and Mathematics, mmmurphy3@alaska.edu, 907-474-7541