Mayly Sánchez
Mayly Sánchez | |
---|---|
Born | Mayly Carolina Sánchez c. 1975 Caracas, Venezuela |
Nationality | Venezuela |
Alma mater | Universidad de Los Andes, ULA International Centre for Theoretical Physics Tufts University |
Occupation | researcher, academic |
Years active | 2003- |
Employer | Iowa State University Argonne National Laboratory |
Known for | experimental work with neutrinos |
Mayly Sánchez is a Venezuelan astrophysicist who researches the at Argonne National Laboratory, run by the US Department of Energy, and teaches at Iowa State University. In 2011, she was awarded the Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), the highest honor given by the United States to beginning scientists, who are in the early stages of their research careers. In 2013, she was named by the BBC as one of the top ten women scientists in Latin America.
Biography
Mayly Sánchez was born in Caracas, Venezuela and relocated with her family to Mérida, Venezuela at the age of 13. She attended high school at the Colegio Fátima and went on for her university studies at Universidad de Los Andes, ULA in Mérida. She completed an undergraduate degree in physics in 1995, and won a scholarship for postgraduate work at[1] the International Centre for Theoretical Physics in Trieste, Italy. Earning her diploma in high energy physics in 1996, she was accepted into a doctoral program at Tufts University outside of Boston, Massachusetts[2] and completed her PhD in 2003.[3]
Upon graduation, Sánchez joined the faculty of Iowa State University as an Assistant Professor of Physics and Astronomy and the team working at the US Energy Department's Argonne National Laboratory. Her research is part of the Long Baseline Neutrino Experiment, which is planned to send an intense beam of neutrinos from the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Batavia, Illinois to a detector located at the Homestake Mine in South Dakota.[4] The experiment is designed to help scientists understand how the universe formed and why neutrinos change form, especially when they pass through rock.[5] Sánchez is also working on the Main Injector Neutrino Oscillation Search and NOνA experiments designed to study neutrino oscillations sent from Fermilab detectors in northern Minnesota.[4] In 2012, the White House announced[6] that Sánchez was one of the 2011 PECASE Award winners, which is the highest award granted by the United States to young scientists beginning their careers.[7] In 2013, she was named by the BBC as one of the top ten women scientists in Latin America.[8]
References
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