Lucie Green | |
---|---|
Born | Lucinda May Green 1975 (age 48–49)[1] Bedfordshire, England, UK |
Education | Dame Alice Harpur School |
Alma mater | University of Sussex University College London |
Occupation | Science Communicator |
Employer | Mullard Space Science Laboratory |
Television | Presenter, The Sky at Night |
Board member of | European Solar Physics Division of the European Physical Society Science Museum |
Spouse | |
Awards | Kohn Award (2009) Suffrage Science award (2015) Meitner Medal (2017) |
Website | Personal website @ MSSL |
Lucinda "Lucie" May Green (born c. 1975)[1] is a British science communicator and solar physicist.
Green is a Professor of Physics and a Royal Society University Research Fellow (previously the Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellow) at Mullard Space Science Laboratory (MSSL) of the University College London (UCL).[2][3] Green runs MSSL's public engagement programme and sits on the board of the European Solar Physics Division (ESPD) of the European Physical Society and the advisory board of the Science Museum.[2]
In 2013, Green became the first ever female presenter of The Sky at Night following the death of Sir Patrick Moore.[4]
Green's research focuses primarily on the atmospheric activities of the Sun, particularly coronal mass ejections and the changes in the Sun's magnetic field which triggers them.[2][5]
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