Non-Academic Astronomers Network by Degree

Degree Types (which may or may not be populated) = B.A.  |  B.S.  |  M.A.  |  M.S.  |  M.B.A.  |  Ph.D.  |  Ph.D. and additional degree(s)

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B.A.

Name Title Phone Company
Charles (Kip) King III Special Consultant 617.871.6900 Greylock McKinnon Associates
Additional Info I am an economic consultant for Greylock McKinnon Associates. I obtained my B.A. from Harvard in 1974 amd did 1 year of graduate study at CalTech. I obtained my J.D. from Yale Law School in 1979 and a Ph.D. in economics from MIT in 1997.
Christine Shupla Education Outreach Specialist (281) 486-2135 Lunar and Planetary Institute
Additional Info While pursuing my bachelor's, I realized I wanted a career that involved a wider variety of activities and allowed me to interact more with people. I went on to get an MA in Education (Curriculum & Instruction). I decided to go into the planetarium field, where I've been for many years. I enjoyed the interactions with the public and school groups, and the variety of tasks involved in creating original shows. Eventually, I was drawn to the slightly different field of working in both formal and informal space science education.

B.S.

Name Title Phone Company
Erin-Michael Gill Director of Intellectual Property OQO, Inc.
Additional Info After a BS in Astronomy and a BA in Physics from Benedictine College, I spent a year in a traditional physics PhD program; then transferred into the part-time applied physics masters program at John's Hopkins University and accepted an examiner position - just like Einstein - at the US Patent Office. Unlike Einstein, I left grad school and government service to take a patent strategy position at DuPont and did not discover anything like relativity (gave it a shot anyway). I am now head of Intellectual Property for a computer company in San Francisco and have learned that an Astronomy background is a great foundation for an IP career. For more info check out http://emgill.blogspot.com.
Irfan Siddiqui Sr. UNIX Administrator 682-605-6632 Electronic Data Systems (EDS)
Additional Info I have a BS in Physics/Astronomy and Computer Science. During my student years, I tried to get jobs which were more technical oriented on a part-time basis, such as working at a Flight Safety institute or a local PC shop fixing computers, or debugging C programs. This brought up my technical skills and a working resume along with the educational background. I was also working as a volunteer at my school's observatory and participated in some of the public projects and such. All of these activities brought me experience with good communication skills and paved the path for better employment. I still love Astronomy and every now and then attend/arrange star parties with my personal telescopes. I also take Astronomy lectures into libraries and elementary schools and other non-profit organizations to enthuse young minds towards the field. My Physics and Astronomy background trained me for critical thinking and trained me to ask questions, which helped me shape my career in the corporate world. Other than having been exposed to technology and its challenges, I also got the opportunity to participate in creating Security Policies and Standards (for the technology usages), and teach others as to how to compute securely and responsibly. Needless to say that my teaching background in school always come in handy.

M.A.

Name Title Phone Company
Robert McCutcheon Nuclear Non-Proliferation Officer +7 (495) 728-5156 (w) Dept. of State;
Additional Info MS in astronomy (Yale, 1978); MA in Russian Affairs (Georgetown, 1985) After 25 years doing flight dynamics and attitude support for GSFC and STScI, I moved to the Foreign Service in 2004. I spent my first year on "The Russia Desk" at Main State in Foggy Bottom, where I handled the Russia external relations portfolio. Now at Embassy Moscow in the EST office, I am responsible for reporting and analysis on the Russian nuclear sector as well as providing support for teams that come to Moscow for ongoing negotiations on numerous U.S.-Russian bilateral agreements in the nuclear sector. In my spare time I keep up on astronomy through friends and contacts at the Space Research Institute (IKI), Pulkovo, and elsewhere.
Christine Pulliam Public Affairs Specialist Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
Additional Info I am a public affairs specialist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) in Cambridge, Mass. One of my main tasks is writing and distributing press releases about CfA research. I also help coordinate and conduct many public events such as lectures and star parties, where we open the public's eyes to the many wonders of the night sky. Prior to joining CfA, I was a community relations coordinator at Brookhaven National Laboratory, a Department of Energy facility on Long Island, NY. I obtained my M.A. in Astronomy from the University of Texas at Austin in 1997.
Heidi J. Tebbe Media Developer Option Six
Additional Info Working on MS in Telecommunications

M.S.

Name Title Phone Company
Blake Bullock Mission Integration Manager, Civil Space Development 310-813-8410 Northrop Grumman Space Technology
Additional Info Blake Bullock is mission integration manager, Civil Space Business Development, for Northrop Grumman Space Technology. In this role, she is responsible for leading and supporting business development efforts to build, maintain, and strengthen relationships with customers and the science user communities and to identify and create new business opportunities within Environmental Sensing, Space Science, and Exploration areas. Prior to her current assignment, Ms. Bullock served as Risk Manager and Systems Engineer for the James Webb Space Telescope Program at Northrop Grumman Space Technology. Ms. Bullock holds a Masters degree in Astronomy from Wesleyan University and a Bachelor’s degree in Astrophysics from the University of California, Berkeley. She is a member of the American Astronomical Society and served as a Mass Media Fellow for the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2000. As a Presidential Management Fellow from 2000 to 2002, Ms. Bullock served at NASA Headquarters, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, and in the Office of the Secretary of Defense, Strategic and Space Programs Directorate. Northrop Grumman Corporation is a $30 billion global defense and technology company whose 120,000 employees provide innovative systems, products, and solutions in information and services, electronics, aerospace and shipbuilding to government and commercial customers worldwide.
Joseph Catanzarite Staff Scientist Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Additional Info I became interested in Astronomy as Physics Professor at Cypress Community College. I got involved in extragalactic astrophysics research on Cepheid variables during sabbatical at Carnegie Observatories in Pasadena. Next sabbatical became involved in the WIRE (Wide-Field Infrared Explorer mission) at Caltech/IPAC (Infrared Processing and Analyis Center). Left teaching to pursue astronomy full time at IPAC, first as a contractor, then as a Caltech staff employee. Upon demise of WIRE, began working on SIM and pursuing a career in exoplanets. Currently struggling to continue working in the exoplanet field in a post-SIM world.
Ori Fox Astronomer (434) 924-4347 University of Virginia
Additional Info I'm currently a graduate student at the University of Virginia and plan to obtain my PhD in Astronomy in the summer of 2010. I will be continuing with a NASA Postdoc Fellowship at Goddard Space Flight Center in Fall 2010. I'm interested in exploring non-academic positions in industry and science policy, including a more person-to-person oriented career.
Chris Gottbrath Product Manager 662-694-1488 Rogue Wave Software
Additional Info My role at Rogue Wave is to manage the "product" aspects of three scientific and technical software development tools: TotalView, MemoryScape and ReplayEngine. I've been with Rogue Wave for one year but working with the same team of developers for more than 10 (our company got acquired by Rogue Wave about 1 year ago). Product management involves talking regularly with customers and prospective customers. In my case many of these are scientists (quite a few of them are astronomers), engineers, and software developers. I do a lot of training and explaining and an equal amount of listening and analysis in order to develop an understanding of users experiences. I use this information to try to guide a detailed strategy for developing and enhancing the company's products. I work with colleagues in all parts of the company from engineering and management to marketing and sales in order to see that the products are successful.
Guus Oonincx VP in Equity Derivatives Products (trader) ING Financial Markets
Additional Info
C. Aaron Price Technical Assistant 617-354-0484 AAVSO
Additional Info I also run an Astronomy Podcast with other non-academic astronomers at www.slackerastronomy.org. At the AAVSO I get a mixture of science and technical computing duties, which is nice because I keep all my skillsets up to date. Being able to work with both professional and amateur astronomers is a real treat and keeps the astronomy passion burning. I hope to move from a doctoral program to the PhD program at James Cook University. I'm doing that for personal development as I see my career continuing indefinitely at the AAVSO.
Andre Wong Test Engineer Teledyne Scientific and Imaging
Additional Info After finishing my BS, I worked for Gemini Observatory for 2 years as a data analyst before deciding I wanted to pursue a career as a engineer. To gain some experience I worked in the field of instrumentation in addition to taking courses in engineering during my 2 years in grad school. After completing my Masters Degree in 2010, I started as a test engineer at Teledyne Scientific and Imaging. As a test engineer, I work with the astronomy division, testing and characterizing infrared detectors before they are bound for ground- and space-based observatories

Ph.D.

Name Title Phone Company
Dana E. Backman Associate Director for SOFIA for Education and Public Outreach 650-604-2128 NASA Ames Research Center
Additional Info Career Path: Post-doc and infrared observer support, Kitt Peak National Observatory; NRC post-doc, NASA-Ames; Professor of physics and astronomy, Franklin & Marshall College, Lancaster PA (received tenure). Present job description: lead of education and public outreach group and public affairs / press office for Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA) based at NASA-Ames; I am a contractor, not a NASA civil servant, hired through SOFIA E/PO subcontract at the SETI Institute.
Leila Belkor Science Writer, Project Supervisor 949-559-8815 Self-employed
Additional Info After completing my Ph.D. I was employed as an editor at a national physics lab--this involved writing for the public as well as for more technically informed audiences. Then I was the science public information officer (PIO) for a state university, and I also taught physics and astronomy there. Then I took a year off to write a popular level book, which turned into a couple years. (The book came out in 2003.) During this writing time I also taught technical writing to engineers at a private university. Now I'm staying home with a preschool age child, but supervising the writing projects of astronomy students through Swinburne University. I am also working on freelance writing projects which are extremely interesting and personally (though not always financially) rewarding to me.
Jennifer Blum Researcher Department of Defense
Additional Info I currently work as a researcher for the Department of Defense. I work on various projects that include rigorous research, analysis, and a good understanding of the physical sciences.
Blaise Canzian Systems Engineer (412) 967-7553 L-3 Communications/Brashear
Additional Info Career path - Postdoc at STScI (3 years) - 1.5 years of pure research and 1.5 years of combined research and functional (support) duties. Then 12 years as an astronomer at the U.S. Naval Observatory (Flagstaff), first under contract to USRA and then as a civil servant employee of the U.S. Navy. Now at L-3/Brashear in my home town using knowledge and skills in optics, computing systems, and telescope systems.
Lawrence Chernin Senior Manager Cadence Design Systems (San Jose)
Additional Info
Glenn Cooper System Administrator 630-840-8254 Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Additional Info
Rolf Danner Senior Scientist Civil Systems Division 310-812-0093 Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems
Additional Info I’m a senior scientist in business development with Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems. While original research is not part of my official job duties, there is never a shortage of interesting and challenging projects to engage in and I still do publish technical papers. I am the principal investigator on some of our internal research and development projects, have led proposal teams and contribute to our ongoing programs with NASA. I regularly interact with our colleagues and customers at NASA, research institutions and universities. While I enjoy my work and colleagues I have also discovered how volunteering and creative projects outside of science and technology can energize your life and bring new impulses to your career. To learn more about that side of me go to http://www.lifepowernow.com Please contact me, if you would like to know more.
Nicholas M. Elias II Senior Systems Engineer 303-939-5152 Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp.
Additional Info I've done most of my work in Civil New Business, doing applied research for advanced interferometric instrumentation such as TPF and SPECS.  Recently, I've been reducing CCD images for an ozone-mapping satellite called OMPS (part of NPOESS).
Webster Ewell Operations Research Analyst 703-697-0063 Department of Defense
Additional Info After getting my Ph.D. I went to work as a Naval Operations Analyst, and I now work in Program Analysis and Evaluation for the Department of Defense.
Richard Fienberg Editor in Chief 617-864-7360 x144 Sky Publishing Corp.
Additional Info B.A., physics, 1978 (Rice University), M.A./Ph.D., astronomy, 1980/1985 (Harvard University). I discovered during my graduate training that I enjoyed teaching and writing more than I enjoyed doing astrophysics research. When an opportunity opened up at Sky & Telescope magazine in 1986, I jumped on it. I've been with Sky Publishing ever since, in a variety of editorial and management capacities, thriving at the nexus of the amateur and professional astronomical communities and working on magazines, books, software, Web sites, eclipse tours, and other projects.
Gregory J. Hartke Fellow Engineer Northrop Grumman
Additional Info
Gary M. Heiligman Senior Professional Staff 443-778-7931 Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab.
Additional Info
Nicole Homeier Senior Staff Scientist Atmos. & Env. Research, a Verisk Analytics Company
Additional Info Near the end of my first post-doc I knew I did not want a career in astronomy. It took me about a year to go from deciding to pursue a career as an actuary to accepting my first job. There are 9 exams to become a fully credentialed actuary (a "Fellow", which takes 4-10 years), and companies support you in studying for them. Typically one needs to pass 1-2 exams to get a job. I passed 1 exam before applying for jobs (Exam P/1). Through contacts, I had 4 interviews within a month. Without those contacts, it would have taken longer, but I still had some bites. The main actuarial career fairs are in Sept-Nov, which I was unaware of, and that is probably a good way to get interviews. After just a couple months on the job (as of mid-2007) I am enjoying myself and very glad I made the change. Feel free to contact me with any questions.
Scott Horner Instrument Scientist 650-424-2570 Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center
Additional Info I am the Instrument Scientist for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam). My job is to ensure that the instrument that is being built will be able to achieve its scientific objectives when on orbit. This job is similar to being a systems engineer, but from a broader perspective of being active on the science team and addressing the science objectives. The programs and missions of the Advanced Technology Center can be found at http://www.lockheedmartin.com/ssc/AdvancedTechnologyCtr/index.html The Lockheed Martin career website can be found at http://www.lockheedmartinjobs.com/
Kriten Joshi Senior Strategist, Global Sales & Distribution IBM
Additional Info After my Ph.D. at MIT, I worked for McKinsey as a strategy consultant for three years. I then joined IBM to do strategy for their Healthcare and Life Sciences business before moving into a global corporate strategy role.
Alan Karp Principal Scientist Hewlett-Packard Laboratories
Additional Info After a post-doc at IBM Research, I spent a year as an assistant professor at Dartmouth College. I then joined the IBM Scientific Center in Palo Alto, CA, where I worked in atmospheric radiative transport, oil reservoir modeling, and parallel computation. I joined HP Labs in 1992 where I worked on tools for debugging parallel programs, was one of the architects of Intel's Itanium processor, developed a secure distributed computing environment, and worked on automated negotiation. I am currently heading a group developing a virus safe computing environment for Microsoft Windows. As you can see from my checkered career, industrial research requires a great deal flexibility and the ability to learn new subjects quickly.
Anthony Kaye Senior Principal Scientist 505 298 7366 ITT Industries, Inc.
Additional Info I've gone from a national laboratory (straight from graduate school) at which I was first a post-doc and then full-time staff to industry. I maintain tenuous links to academia through my current job position and by appointments as adjunct professor at two universities.
Steven Kilston Manager of Extrasolar Planet Advanced Missions 303-939-4998 Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp.
Additional Info Career path:  4 years as a high school teacher, 1 year as a junior college professor, 25 years in aerospace industry, culminating in developing IKONOS commercial high-resolution remote sensing satellite and managing Terrestrial Planet Finder design efforts.
John G. Kirk Deputy Manager, System and Simulation Engineering 805-692-2333 x219 Northrop Grumman Simulation Technologies
Additional Info
Anita Krishnamurthi John Bahcall Public Policy Fellow 202-328-2010 American Astronomical Society
Additional Info After my postdoc, I decided I wanted to switch trajectories and went to work at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, DC. I was a Program Officer in the Office on Public Understanding of Science (OPUS) for nearly two years, designing and implementing science outreach programs targeted at adults. After a brief stint at the National Academies Press, I moved on to a position at NASA Headquarters with the space science education and public outreach group. I got a lot of exposure to the intricacies of managing large programs and initiatives, setting policy and how large government bureaucracies really work! I had a very diverse set of responsibilities at HQ - from managing a variety of education-related programs to reviewing EPO programs of different scales to coordinating a variety of communication efforts. I then moved to the Goddard Space Flight Center as the EPO lead for the Astrophysics Division. While there, I led a group of about 8 FTEs and was responsible for the strategic plan for EPO in the division and designing, implementing and managing the EPO programs for the division. I am now on a 2-year policy fellowship with the AAS and serve as an advocate for astronomy with the Executive and Legislative branches of government. I work with colleagues from many different scientific societies and I am getting a fascinating education in how science policy is made in the United States. I enjoy being at this interface between the science and the public and it has been an interesting career path thus far.
Vincent Lee Professor of Management (Adjunct) St. Francis College, Brooklyn Heights, NY
Additional Info Brief Description of Responsibilities: As Director of Corporate Strategy, Industry and Competitive Assessment (Retired) Verizon Communications, New York, NY, my job funtions were: -Directed a team of researchers in developing telecom industry financial and competitive analyses for use by the Corporate Chairman and Board of Directors of a $70B communications company. -Created the annual telecom industry competitive environment analysis which enabled Directors to quickly gain understanding changes in a rapidly evolving industry. -Provided financial oversight and recommendations for multi-discipline teams developing major investment business cases by creating detailed long-term cash flow valuation models of investment opportunities. -Researched and wrote proprietary analysis and recommendation white papers on topics such as growth prospects of new industry technologies, cash flow positions of major industry players and potential acquisitions, and in-depth corporate profiles of major competitors.
Andrea Leistra Senior Data Analyst Yahoo!
Additional Info left astronomy immediately after my PhD. My advice for other astronomers in the same situation is that the skills employers are interested in may not be what you're used to thinking of, and the most challenging part of your job search may well be finding the employer who will recognize the transferability of your skills (in my case, working with very large datasets thanks to my thesis work mining the 2MASS catalog), as well as your demonstrated ability to think analytically and learn quickly, which will be useful anywhere!
Larry Lesyna Technical Consultant 702-492-9946 LXL Technology
Additional Info
Robert Link Senior Scientist IET, Inc.
Additional Info PhD in astrophysics, Indiana University, 1999.
Sarah Lipscy Systems Engineer Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp.
Additional Info
Timothy A. Livengood Astrophysicist/Science Educator 703-683-9740 Challenger Center for Space Science Education
Additional Info The Challnger Center for Space Science Education is a non-profit 501 (c) (3) organization founded in 1986 by the families of the astronauts tragically lost in the Challenger 51-L mission. Dedicated to the educational spirit of that mission, Challenger Center programs continue the crew's mission of engaging students in science, math and technology and foster in them an interest to pursue careers in those fields.
James Marshall Software Engineer
Additional Info I originally intended to follow the usual academic path, because I wanted to do research, and being able to teach as well seemed like a good option. However, when I started looking for post-docs and fellowships in the year before I finished my Ph.D., I was unable to get an offer. Around that time, I decided that I would like a change from the research work I had been doing, and started looking for teaching or tutoring jobs. I continued to look for jobs after graduation, and was contacted by Innovim about a software engineering position. I was concerned that I didn't have enough of a computer science background for the job, but they told me that they were more interested in bringing in someone with a science background then. Shortly after my interview, I received and accepted their employment offer. My current work is at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in the Earth science area, particularly with data systems. While this is a change of area, it gives me a chance to expand my skills. For example, I'm doing more web development, computer programming, and helping to run the activities of a working group. However, I would still like to get back into astronomy work, and I hope that as Innovim grows, they will expand into space science. I believe this is their plan, so hopefully in the future I will be able to do astronomy work again.
Kevin B. Marvel Deputy Executive Officer 202-328-2010 x114 American Astronomical Society
Additional Info I began following a standard trajectory after receiving my doctorate, landing a postdoc position at a well-known radio observatory. In my second year I noticed an ad for the AAAS Congressional Science fellow positions and considered applying. About the same time, the AAS advertised an Associate Executive Officer position focused on public policy. I figured that the AAS job is what I would like after completing the AAAS fellowship, so I opted to try for the AAS job first. I did a lot of research ahead of the application process by calling active public policy/government relations staff in DC and speaking with them about their normal activities. I learned a lot and it came in handy during the application and interviewing process. I also received good advice and support from two senior astronomer mentors, both of whom are actively involved in the public policy arena, which encouraged me to "go for it." I'm very glad I did.
Sean J. McKenna Associate Department Head 603-893-9311 Mitre Corporation, Bedford, MA
Additional Info I am senior principal scientist in the broad area of sensor systems development for Intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems. My primary sponsor is the US Air Force. I have convinced my sponsors that personnel with advanced degrees in physics, astronomy, chemical physics, etc. have demonstrated their ability to tackle complex and difficult problems. This is the dominant skill needed to advise DOD and OSD.
Erin McMahon Senior Professional Staff 240-228-9525 Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laborator
Additional Info
Annie C. Mejia Exhibits Developer Museum of Flight
Additional Info I have earned a Ph.D. in astronomy from Indiana University (graduate minor in computational science). Today I develop (research, edit, write) the exhibits at the Museum of Flight (www.museumofflight.org). I choose content in terms of text, images, multimedia, and artifacts and work with designers to produce exhibits about aviation and space exploration. My website is www.anniemejia.com
Michael Muno Technical Staff MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Additional Info I took a position as a systems analyst at Lincoln Lab after 6 years as a postdoc, including three years as a Hubble Fellow and 2 years paying my salary with soft money. I was attracted to Lincoln Lab because it has been on the forefront of many modern technological developments. Astronomers will recognize Lincoln Lab for inventing the sodium laser technology used in adaptive optics systems, developing the ACIS CCDs on the focal plane of the Chandra X-ray observatory, running the LINEAR project to identify near-earth asteroids, and managing the MIT Haystack radio observatory. However, most of its work is in the defense sector. In my position, I apply my knowledge of signal processing, image analysis, statistics, and basic physics to evaluating the performance of systems that are used in defense and homeland security. As an outlet for my scientific interests outside of work, I maintain http://astrohow.org/blog/ . Feel free to contact me with questions.
Pete Newman Higher Scientific Officer +44(7952)910184 Government Operational Research Service (UK)
Additional Info At the time of writing (2005 Feb.), I am about to start my first job in a new career with the UK Civil Service, working as an Operational Research specialist (www.operational-research.gov.uk) with an initial posting to the Home Office Immigration and Nationality Directorate's Operational Modelling team (www.ind.homeoffice.gov.uk). I spent twenty years in the computer industry, mostly on business systems projects and spent the last twelve years in astronomy, most recently working as one of the observers at Apache Point Observatory (www.apo.nmsu.edu) on the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (www.sdss.org). You might still find some personal links from that time at http://galileo.apo.nmsu.edu/~prn. Operational research makes good use of my backgrounds in business and organisations (from my career in computer systems) and numerical methods (from astronomy). There are many organisations beside government that employ OR staff, most notably airlines.
Alicia Oshlack Postdoc +61(0)393452631 Walter & Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research
Additional Info I completed my Ph.D. in astronomy at the end of 2002. I have now shifted research feilds and am working in the growing field of bioinformatics where I do research into the statistics and analysis of biological data. I have a post-doc position at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institue of Medical Research the premier medical research institute in Australia, and work on a variety of projects including cancer, malaria and evolution of primates.
Wellesley Pereira Physical Scientist Air Force Research Lab., Space Vehicles Dir.
Additional Info
Joseph Pesce President 703.790.0612 Omnis, Inc.
Additional Info Career path: Postdoc, Space Telescope Science Institute; Research Associate, Penn State University, State College; In 1998 I went to work for the U.S. Government as an analyst, and in late 2005, started my own science and technology consulting and training company in Northern Virginia, where I am President. I am also an Associate Professor in the Physics & Astronomy Department at George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia. Job experience in academia (teaching and research), government, and private industry.
Rachel Pildis Senior Application Developer AdGooroo
Additional Info I am now working for my second internet startup company, this time helping gather search engine advertising information and search results around the world. Just like in astronomy, I am dealing with large datasets and detecting changes in them, but time is a lot more critical in industry. I sometimes miss the days of billion-year timescales!
Ronald Polidan Chief Architect, Civil Space Systems, Business Development 310-812-0199 Northrop Grumman Space Technology
Additional Info
Bruce Popp Patent Translation Specialist 508-624-9767 Bien Fait Translations
Additional Info Although my career trajectory has taken some sharp turns, it has always been propelled by a significant need for intellectual challenge. I have in general done quite well in satisfying that need with work that requires learning, research, sorting out what is important, and rigor. See www.bien-fait.com/en for more information.
Irene Porro EPO Scientist MIT
Additional Info
Doug Ratay Research Analyst (352) 262-3538 Cortana Corporation
Additional Info I work for a small defense contractor in the DC area, with a focus on naval applications. I generally do program management, technical writing, and a bit of programming, but there’s a lot of flexibility.
Harold Reitsema Deputy for Civil Space Systems Ball Aerospace
Additional Info My work in industry has involved teamwork for developing concepts for astronomical instrumentation for space missions and participating in getting scientific results. My astronomical training was also valuable for the analytical, software, communication and proposal tools that I developed thru my research work. I have been a co-investigator on a number of space missions, with primary responsibilities for assisting in the interface between scientific objectives and hardware implementation approaches. I have been involved in many proposal and space program activities and now am responsible for ensuring that Ball Aerospace is able to work productively with the space science community to maximize the return from NASA missions.
Naomi Ridge Vice-Consul, Science and Innovation 617-245-4500 UK Consulate-General, Boston
Additional Info PhD In Astronomy, 2 postdoctoral positions before the two body problem led me to look outside of academia.
Eric Rubenstein Senior Physicist 860-528-9806 x112 Advanced Fuel Research Inc.
Additional Info As PI on several gov't.-funded projects, I have a fast-paced, research position. AFR, has a track-record of entrepreneurial spin-offs, with an emphasis on innovative technology R&D. In addition to tech. projects, we do basic research in chemistry, and, since my hire, astronomy and imaging sciences. Many projects are SBIR funded, an excellent means of getting support without loosing intellectual property rights (just don't disclose proprietary data in the abstract!). When I left academia, it would have been nice know which skills were most important to industrial R&D employers. The skills most important in my transition were intellectual flexibility (applying astronomy tools and techniques to non-astronomy problems), oral/written presentation skills, and the ability/desire to be able to quickly obtain a critical-mass of knowledge in a new field (knowing HOW to learn). Astronomers are well positioned to take on roles in corporate R&D--even in dramatically different fields.
Andrea Schweitzer Freelance Consultant 970-691-4747
Additional Info After completing my Ph.D., I went into industry and found I liked it much more than I ever would have expected! I received excellent training in engineering project management, got my student loans paid off quickly, and was able to live in the region of the country that I chose. More background about my transition into industry is posted in the article, "Living the Dilbert Life," at http://www.astrosociety.org/pubs/mercury/9705/dilbert.html. I have worked as a project manager for R&D and as an international trade analyst for high-tech goods. I also chaired the Employment Committee for the AAS. Since taking a layoff package in 2002, I have been working for myself on NASA and aerospace projects. My clients have included NASA, Boeing, the Space Science Institute, Applied Design Corp., and the Southwest Research Institute. I enjoy working as an independent consultant, but it is rarely possible to do this early in your career; you need a significant professional network first. I am happy to talk with early-career astronomers about the choice to go into industry, or with established-career astronomers about how to work as a consultant, which is an excellent option if you would like to be semi-retired.
Mark Sincell Patent Agent (713) 934-4052 Williams, Morgan & Amerson, PC
Additional Info I received my PhD from Johns Hopkins in 1994 and spent a few years postdoc-ing before realizing that research was not the job for me. I began science writing and eventually established myself as a freelance writer for Science, Astronomy, Sky&Telescope, Discover, Physics World, and other publications. A number of my clients suffered in the tech collapse, which dramatically reduced my workload, leading me to look into patent law. I discovered that it shared many characteristics with journalism (such as interviewing, writing, cutting edge science/engineering) and also had several advantages, like the chance to do more analysis/advocacy/strategy and substantially higher pay. So I made the jump to being a patent agent and have been happily toiling away for the last several years.
Denise Smith Origins Education Forum Manager 410-338-4434 Space Telescope Science Institute
Additional Info
David Sprayberry Associate Director for Instrumentation 520-318-8372 National Optical Astronomy Observatory
Additional Info I started out in engineering school, then switched to political science and law to combine an interest in government with a viable career path. After practicing law for eight years, and growing increasingly less satisfied with the nature of the intellectual challenges I was facing, I went back to school to study Astronomy. This required me first to get another Bachelor's degree, this time in Physics, before pursuing my PhD. Since getting my PhD, I have found myself more and more strongly "pushed" in the direction of program management. I say "pushed" because it's largely been a result of which jobs I was able to get. My previous work in law and business has equipped me with skills that not every astronomer has, and so the movement into program management has seemed to fit my background. The drawback it has taken me out of doing research as part of my work.
Joseph C. Wang Software Developer 512 964 6086 QuantLib
Additional Info My career path is that I went from my Ph.D. in 1998 into petroleum exploration working at Halliburton for almost seven years until I was laid off, and my day job currently involves working for a small Austin-based software company that does dispatching. However, I'm currently in the process of moving into academic quantitative finance and trying to specialize in understanding Chinese deriviatives. I'm also working on Wikiversity and Wikipedia which I hope to use as an academic support network.

Ph.D.+

Name Title Phone Company
James Deane Technology Development Associate 919-966-3929 Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Additional Info Ph.D. in Astrophysics, U. Hawaii, 2000. MBA Cornell's Johnson Graduate School of Management, 2002. Working in "technology transfer" the patenting and licensing of university inventions for commercialization. This is a growing field centered at universities but providing a career path to business development roles in companies. Requirements include advanced degrees/training in physical or life sciences, plus some business experience and/or MBA. We work with faculty inventors to evaluate the commercial potentials of the products of their research, with patent attorneys to secure intellectual property protection, perform industry research and company outreach for technology marketing, negotiate business and financial terms of license agreements, and assemble management teams and business plans for startup companies around the highest-potential technologies. Two professional societies serve this industry: Assoc. of Univ. Tech. Managers (www.autm.net) and Licensing Executive Society (www.usa-canada.les.org).