![]() |
| Bearded Lady Scientists Image by Kelsey Vance (2017) |
8. Why Equal Access to the Academic Stage is Still an Upward Battle
The AAS Committee on the Status of Women in Astronomy maintains this blog to disseminate information relevant to astronomers who identify as women and share the perspectives of astronomers from varied backgrounds. If you have an idea for a blog post or topic, please submit a short pitch (less than 300 words). The views expressed on this site are not necessarily the views of the CSWA, the AAS, its Board of Trustees, or its membership.
![]() |
| Bearded Lady Scientists Image by Kelsey Vance (2017) |
In order to familiarize the astronomy community with the AAS Board and encourage participation, the CSWA created a Reflection Survey for outgoing AAS Board members to complete after their terms ended in June. Over the coming weeks, we will feature the responses we've received on the Women in Astronomy blog. Enjoy!

Our first participant in our AAS Board Reflections project is Adam Burgasser, PhD. Dr. Burgasser is a professor in the department of Physics at UC San Diego, and an observational astrophysicist, whose research interests include the lowest mass stars, low-temperature brown dwarfs, and extrasolar planets. He also conducts research in Physics Education and Art-Science collaboratories. Adam received his PhD in Physics at Caltech, followed by a Hubble Postdoctoral Fellowship at UC Los Angeles, and a Spitzer Postdoctoral Fellowship at the American Museum of Natural History. He was on the faculty at MIT before coming to UC San Diego in 2009, where he directs the Cool Star Lab. Adam is committed to addressing inequities in Physics and Astronomy, and has served as member and Chair of the American Astronomical Society Committee on the Status of Minorities in Astronomy, co-organized the 2015 Inclusive Astronomy Conference, and co-directs the UCSD-Morehouse-Spelman UC-HBCU Physics Pathways program, among other activities. He has also served on the AAS Board of Trustees. He has been awarded UC San Diego’s Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action & Diversity Award, Outstanding Mentor Award, and Distinguished Teaching Award. Dr. Burgasser is a member of the International Astronomical Union, American Astronomical Society, National Society of Black Physicists, and SACNAS.
Name: Adam Burgasser
1. Happy 100th Birthday Margaret Burbidge!
2. Mourning the loss Ph.D. Student José Flores Velázquez
3. You can't think outside the box if you're locked inside it
4. 4 Hurdles to Successful Salary Negotiation — and How to Tackle Them
5. The Scully Effect and the Feminist Future of STEM
6. Fermilab promotes science and diversity at Wakandacon in Chicago
7. Lancet Editors Reject ‘Manels’ With New Policy
8. America's Top STEM Schools For Women
10. How to Submit to the AASWomen Newsletter
11. How to Subscribe or Unsubscribe to the AASWomen Newsletter

August 12 is the 100th birthday of Dr. Margaret Burbidge. Her contributions to the field of astronomy include verifying nucleosynthesis in stars, measuring redshifts to some of the first quasars, and helping develop the Faint Object Spectrograph onboard the Hubble Space Telescope &emdash among many others. In 1971, Margaret Burbidge refused to accept the AAS Council's Cannon Prize because "the prize, available only to women, was in itself discriminatory." The Council's response was to set up a committee, the "Special Committee on the Cannon Prize," which not only dealt with this issue but also recommended that the AAS review the status of women in astronomy. These events were the catalyst that started the Committee on the Status of Women in Astronomy (CSWA).
Dr. Burbidge impacted astronomy in so many ways. She is not only a brilliant researcher but also an inspiration to future astronomers. Today, the CSWA is honoring Dr. Burbidge by sharing stories that show her impact in advancing both discovery and community in the field of astronomy.
This week's issues:
1. Summary of the Symposium Honoring Vera Rubin
2. 'Can teach men' - The story of Irish astronomer Rose O'Halloran
3. UW professor Ann Nelson remembered as brilliant physicist, advocate for diversity in science
4. Distinguished chemist Polly Arnold appointed as chemical sciences director at Berkeley Lab
5. How gender bias excludes women from international scientific collaboration
6. After Investigation, Neil deGrasse Tyson Will Keep His Job
8. Why we need to keep talking about equality in physics
9. Study suggests use of gender-neutral terms to describe people leads to gender equality
11. How to Submit to the AASWomen Newsletter
12. How to Subscribe or Unsubscribe to the AASWomen Newsletter
!doctype>A symposium honoring the legacy of Vera Rubin was held at Georgetown University June 24-26, 2019. Rubin, who passed away in 2016, was a pioneer in astronomy who used measurements of the rotation curves of galaxies to infer the presence of large amounts of matter out to their observed edges. She found that her measurements of the motion of stars around the centers of the galaxies implied the existence of an unknown type of matter, now called dark matter, in amounts exceeding that of the observed matter.
1. Astro2020 Decadal Survey White Papers
2. Still Soliciting Memories of Margaret Burbidge
3. Working Scientist podcast: Why physics is still a man’s world, and how to change it
4. What not to do in graduate school
6. In science, questions matter a lot. Men are more likely than women to ask them
7. Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy awarded for gender advancement
8. Women In Optics events at SPIE Optics + Photonics 2019
9. NASA analyst crowned Miss Universe Ireland
10. Wikipedia bios for women scientists are more likely to be flagged for removal
11. How to Submit to the AASWomen Newsletter
12. How to Subscribe or Unsubscribe to the AASWomen Newsletter
!doctype>