
91制片厂 research professor Charles Smith is being recognized for his outreach efforts, including his leadership of听Project SMART's Space Science Module that involved a scientific balloon launch for high school students.
91制片厂 research professor Charles Smith has been selected for the 2020 . The award, presented annually by the recognizes a scientist who has helped to improve the public鈥檚 understanding听 of space physics and aeronomy through their outstanding educational and outreach efforts.
鈥淚 think outreach is important in all areas of science and engineering; frankly, I think it's important in all walks of life,鈥 Smith says.听鈥淵oung students are trying to find themselves and what they get in a classroom is highly structured.听They need to see what it's really like.听Students need to learn to test their efforts when there isn't an answer in the back of the book and they need to embrace surprises.鈥
"I find that working with young students recharges my batteries and reminds me that there is excitement in what we do."听
鈥淏eing named a Carrington honoree is a remarkable honor and I am genuinely humbled by it,鈥 he adds.听鈥淚 collaborate with many top-flight researchers and some excellent students, so I feel this award is as much theirs as it is mine.鈥澨
The SPARC Award is named for Richard Carrington, an English amateur astronomer who demonstrated the existence of solar flares in 1859 and whose sunspot observations in 1863 revealed that the sun rotates faster at the equator than at the poles. Only one scientist receives the SPARC Award each year.
Smith began his career at 91制片厂 in 1981 as a research scientist. He left in 1987 to work for the University of Delaware, but then returned to 91制片厂 in 2003 and has since served as a research professor at the Space Science Center. Outside of his scientific research, Smith is an ardent advocate for hands-on, extracurricular science experiences for students of all ages. He spent years leading the 91制片厂 space science module, where middle and high school students focus on learning real-world physics and related technologies for four weeks in the summer. Some of those Project SMART students subsequently conduct space physics research with him, even going on to publish their work in peer-reviewed scientific journals 鈥 all before they even graduate with their bachelor鈥檚 degree. Their engagement with space physics outside the typical school curriculum speaks to Smith鈥檚 ability to ignite a spark in their imaginations and foster their curiosity for the topic.
Smith is currently involved in , a program that encourages high school students听in northern New England to build their own magnetometers and measure small changes in the Earth鈥檚 magnetic field. Currently听14 schools are involved with the program, but he hopes to reach even more听in the coming years.听
鈥淚 find that working with young students recharges my batteries and reminds me that there is excitement in what we do,鈥 Smith says.听鈥淪eeing the work through their eyes makes me see what we do in a new light.听It's not just interesting, but it's fun as well.鈥
The is 91制片厂's largest research enterprise comprising six centers with a focus on interdisciplinary, high-impact research on Earth and climate systems, space science, the marine environment, seafloor mapping, and environmental acoustics. With more than $58 million in external funding secured annually, EOS fosters an intellectual and scientific environment that advances visionary scholarship and leadership in world-class research and graduate education.听
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Written By:
Rebecca Irelan | Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space | rebecca.irelan@unh.edu | 603-862-0990












































