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2021 Dissertation Prize

2021 LAD Dissertation Prize Goes to Jennifer Bergner

Jennifer BergnerThe Laboratory Astrophysics Division (LAD) of the American Astronomical Society (AAS) is pleased to announce the recipient of its 2021 Dissertation Prize, given to an individual who has recently completed an outstanding theoretical or experimental doctoral dissertation in laboratory astrophysics. This year’s prize goes to Dr. Jennifer Bergner for her thesis Tracing Organic Complexity During Star and Planet Formation. Dr. Bergner earned her PhD at Harvard University, working with Professor Karin Öberg. She is now a NASA Hubble-Sagan Postdoctoral Fellow in the University of Chicago’s Department of the Geophysical Sciences.

Dr. Bergner is being cited “for the discovery of new, cold pathways to complex molecule formation and for creative, interdisciplinary explorations of the origins of organic molecules during planet formation.” Her research is aimed at understanding chemical evolution in the progenitors of planetary systems and its implications for how the ingredients for life are delivered to nascent planets. For her thesis she performed a series of laboratory astrochemical experiments involving ices, all aimed at finding and characterizing cold formation pathways of complex organic molecules. She and others use these results together with observations from telescopes such as the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile and the Institut de Radio Astronomie Millimétrique (IRAM) 30-meter dish in Spain to study organic chemistry in protostars and protoplanetary disks and to characterize how physics and chemistry interact on solar system scales.

The LAD Dissertation Prize includes a cash award, a framed certificate, and an invited lecture by the recipient at a meeting of the Laboratory Astrophysics Division.

Contacts:
Phillip Stancil
LAD Chair
University of Georgia
+1 (706) 542-2485
lad.chair@aas.org

Randall Smith
LAD Past-Chair
Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian
+1 (617) 495-7143
rsmith@cfa.harvard.edu

Rachel L. Smith
LAD Secretary
NC Museum of Natural Sciences / Appalachian State University
+1 (919) 707-8239
ladsec@aas.org

Jennifer Bergner

Department of the Geophysical Sciences

University of Chicago

jbergner@uchicago.edu

 

The AAS Laboratory Astrophysics Division (LAD, https://lad.aas.org) advances our understanding of the universe through the promotion of fundamental theoretical and experimental research into the underlying processes that drive the cosmos.

The American Astronomical Society (AAS, https://aas.org), established in 1899 and based in Washington, DC, is the major organization of professional astronomers in North America. The mission of the AAS is to enhance and share humanity’s scientific understanding of the universe.