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Sarah Stewart Johnson

American astronomer and planetary scientist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Sarah Stewart Johnson is an American biologist, geochemist, astronomer and planetary scientist. She joined Georgetown University in 2014[1] and is currently the Provost's Distinguished Associate Professor of Biology and the Science, Technology, and International Affairs program in the School of Foreign Service.[2]

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Early life and education

Johnson was born in Kentucky and grew up in Lexington.[3] She received her bachelor's degree from Washington University in St. Louis, where she was an Arthur Holly Compton Fellow and majored in math and environmental studies. During college, she won a Goldwater Scholarship and a Truman Scholarship.[3][4][5] Johnson then attended Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar where she earned bachelor's and master's degrees.[6][1] In 2008, she completed a PhD in planetary science at MIT.[7]

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Career

Johnson was a Junior Fellow at Harvard University from 2008-2009 and 2011-2013.[8] She was a White House Fellow working for the President’s Science Advisor, under the Obama administration from 2009-2011.[9] Johnson became a faculty member at Georgetown in 2014. Her work involves the use of analog environments to study the habitability of the surface and subsurface of Mars and icy moons.[10][9] Her lab at Georgetown is currently focused on the detection of agnostic biosignatures, sometimes referred to as "life as we don't know it".[11][12] She is a visiting scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center with the Planetary Environments lab.[13] She participated in the Curiosity, Opportunity, and Spirit missions.[6][3]

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Bibliography

Honors

  • Desert Writers Award (2013)[14]
  • White House Fellow (2009)
  • Harvard Junior Fellow (2008)
  • Hugh Hampton Young Fellowship, MIT (2008)
  • National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship[1]
  • Rhodes Scholarship (2001)
  • Truman Scholarship (2000)
  • Goldwater Scholarship (1999)
  • Arthur Holly Compton Fellowship, Washington University in St. Louis (1997)

References

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