Sixty UCSD faculty, staff, students and friends gathered to view the launch of the Space Shuttle Atlantis on a theatre-sized screen. Megan McArthur, a Scripps Institution of Oceanography graduate, is the only woman and one of four rookie astronauts on the 11-day Hubble mission.
McArthur received a doctorate in Oceanography from Scripps in 2002. The 37-year-old was once a volunteer show diver in the Birch Aquarium's kelp tank. Scripps Institution of Oceanography Professor William Hodgkiss was McArthur's faculty advisor. He says her engineering studies at UCLA and work in ocean sciences at Scripps dovetail with her tasks in space.
"The nature of the work draws on physics and mathematics and understanding how acoustics interacts with the seafloor in the ocean," Hodgkiss says. "And so because it's mathematical, it's physically-based, translates directly into anything you do in terms of science or supporting science on a space mission."
McArthur will use robotic arms to stabilize and assist astronauts working on the Hubble during five planned spacewalks.
"And I remember Megan, what a powerful resume. What an incredible interest in opening the space frontier. So she did it on merit," he says.
The shuttle engines kicked in and the group viewing the launch also amped up.
Ed Joyce, KPBS News.