Doris Daou (born 1964)[1] is a Lebanese-born Canadian-American astronomer who was formerly the Director for Education and Public Outreach of the
NASA Lunar Science Institute[2] and the associate director of the
NASA Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI),[3] and is currently the program contact for NASA's "Small Innovative Missions for Planetary Exploration (SIMPLEx)".[4][5]
Early life and education
Daou's family fled war-ravaged
Lebanon when she was a child, and settled in
Canada.[6] Daou was educated at the
Université de Montréal in
Quebec, where she studied the atmospheric parameters of
variable stars.[1] She holds a B.Sc. in Physics and Mathematics, as well as a M.Sc. in Astronomy and Astrophysics. Her PhD dissertation in 1989 was titled, Études spectroscopiques et paramètres atmosphériques des étoiles ZZ Ceti.[7]
Career
She then moved to
Baltimore, Maryland, in the United States, where she spent nine years working on the
Hubble Space Telescope. In 1999, Daou transferred to the team preparing to launch the
Spitzer Space Telescope,[8] where she worked in education and
public outreach[9] and helped found the Spitzer Space Telescope Research Program for Teachers and Students.[10] She joined the NASA Headquarters in 2006, and has served the institution in a variety of roles, including Education and Public Outreach Program Officer. She became the Director of Education and Public Outreach at the NASA Lunar Science Institute - Ames Research Center, in 2008[11] and the
NASA Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI) Associate Director in 2010. She has been actively involved in NASA's grant programs.[12][4] As of 2018, she continues her work as an astronomer at the NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C.,[13] and serves as Senior Scientist, as Program Officer and Chief of Staff for the Director of the Planetary Science Division in the Science Mission Directorate (2014–Present).[14][15]
She has worked as an outreach and education specialist at
Ames Research Center[16] and for NASA's grant programs. From 2012 to 2018, Daou served as an associate of commissions for the International Astronomical Union,[17] and has been involved in the following commissions:
55 Communicating Astronomy with the Public (2012-2015)
55 WG CAP Conferences (until 2015)
C2 WG CAP Conferences (2015-2018)
55 WG Outreach Professionalization & Accreditation (until 2015)
55 WG Washington Charter For CAP (until 2015)"[17]
She is the creator and producer of the Ask an Astronomervideo podcast.[18] Her research interests include: observational astronomy, astrophysics, and astronomy,[15] as well as solar systems, exoplanets, and international partnerships,[14] and she actively publishes in science journals.[19][20][21] In 2008, she co-authored Touch the Invisible Sky, which is a book written in
Braille,[22] and in 2017 she co-authored proceedings of the Planetary Science Vision 2050 Workshop as part of the
Lunar and Planetary Institute.[23]
Daou, Doris; Skinner, C. J.; Axon, David (1997). "NICMOS Pointed Thermal Background: Results from On-Orbit data". The 1997 HST Calibration Workshop with a New Generation of Instruments: 267.
Bibcode:
1997hstc.work..267D.
^
ab"SIRTF Profiles: Doris Daou". Spitzer Space Telescope. NASA. Archived from
the original on 11 July 2010. Retrieved 11 January 2017. I was only five years old... They are walking on the moon, she said." "My journey started at the University of Montreal, where I completed my degree. I worked on determining the atmospheric parameters of a group of pulsating stars.
^Daou, Doris (1989). Études spectroscopiques et paramètres atmosphériques des étoiles ZZ Ceti (Thesis) (in French). Montréal: Service des archives, Université de Montréal, Section Microfilm.
OCLC1019338836.