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The
Volcano Adventure Guide
Dr. Rosaly Lopes
Dr. Rosaly M. C. Lopes was born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,
where she lived near the famous Ipanema beach.
She moved to London, England, in 1975 to study astronomy at the University
of London, from where she graduated with honors in astronomy in 1978.
For her doctoral studies, she specialized in planetary geology and volcanology
and completed her Ph. D. in Planetary Science in 1986 with a thesis
on comparing volcanic processes on Earth and Mars.
Her major research interests are in planetary and terrestrial surface
processes with an emphasis on volcanology. During her Ph.D. she traveled
extensively to active volcanoes, particularly Mount Etna in Sicily,
and became a member of the U.K.'s Volcanic Eruption Surveillance Team.
Rosaly began her post doctorate career as the Curator of Modern Astronomy
and Deputy Head of the Astronomy Section at the Old Royal Observatory
in Greenwich, U.K. In 1989 she performed hazard mapping at the Vesuvius
Observatory in Italy as a Visiting Researcher at Osservatorio Vesuviano,
Naples.
She joined JPL as National Research Council Resident Research Associate
in 1989 and, after 2 years, became a member of the Galileo Flight project.
Dr. Lopes worked on the Near Infra-red Mapping Spectrometer (NIMS) team
planning and analyzing of observations of Jupiter's volcanic moon Io
from 1996 to 2001. During this exciting period of her career, she discovered
71 volcanoes on Io that had never before been detected as active. In
2002, Rosaly became Investigation Scientist on the Cassini RADAR Team.
She plans science observations of Saturn, its moons, and rings and Co-Chairs
the Cassini Satellites Orbiter Science Team. Her main interest on Cassini
is on Saturn's largest moon Titan. The Synthetic Aperture (SAR) data
from the RADAR instrument show that Titan has volcanic features, but
not like silicate volcanism on the Earth or Io. Titan's flows and other
volcanic features are likely the result of ice volcanism (cryovolcanism).
Rosaly is a strong supporter of education, diversity, and outreach both
nationally and internationally. She has given many public lectures in
several countries in Europe and the Americas and was the co-organizer
of the United Nations/ European Space Agency/The Planetary Society workshops
in 1992 and 1993.
In 2005, she was awarded the Carl Sagan medal by the Division for Planetary
Sciences of the American Astronomical Society, in recognition of her
significant efforts over the past 20 years in public outreach and education,
particularly among Hispanic groups and young women. This work includes
innumerable public talks, media interviews, articles in magazines and
newspapers, a book on planetary volcanism, and major efforts to nurture
and mentor young scientists.
She has served on many scientific committees including the JPL Director's
Advisory Committee for Women, Committee for Minorities and Women in
Geosciences at the Geological Society of America and the Subcommittee
on Diversity at the American Geophysical Union. Her awards include the
Latinas in Science medal from the Comision Feminil Mexicana Nacional
in 1991, the 1997 Woman of the Year in Science and Technology Award
from the Miami-based GEM television, and the Medal of Ecellence from
Women at Work in 2006. She is a Fellow of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science (elected 2006), the Royal Geographical Society,
and the Explorers Club. She is a member of the International Astronomical
Union, the American Geophysical Society, and the International Association
of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior.
Rosaly has written many research papers, articles, book chapters and
encyclopedia entries. She has been active in the media has been featured
on two documentaries for Discovery channel and on Nightline, and interviewed
by a variety of national and international media. She has written four
books, The Volcano Adventure Guide (Cambridge University Press,
2005),Volcanic Worlds: Exploring the Solar System Volcanoes
(co-edited with Tracy Gregg; Praxis/Springer-Verlag, 2004), Io After
Galileo (co-edited with John Spencer, Prxis/Springer-Verlag, 2006)
and Alien Worlds (with Michael Carroll, due out in 2007, Johns
Hopkins Press). She is currently chief editor on a research book on
Io (for Praxis/Springer-Verlag). Rosaly's hobbies include scuba diving,
traveling to volcanoes all over the world, and collecting volcano art.
Books by Dr. Rosaly Lopes:
The Volcano Adventure Guide - Buy
it Today by clicking Here!
Volcanic Worlds: Exploring the Solar System Volcanoes (with Tracy Gregg)
- Buy
it Today by clicking Here!
Io
After Galileo (with John Spencer) - Buy
it Today by clicking Here

Download
PDF of the cover (236 KB)
Coming
soon:
Alien
Volcanos: Johns Hopkins Press 2006 (Pre-Order)

Dr. Rosaly M. Lopes
Email: rlopes@lively.jpl.nasa.gov
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