Academics » Graduate Awards
The Astronomy Department offers several awards which honor the efforts of our
graduate students for their research, teaching, and service efforts. The awards,
and recent honorees, are listed below.
The Zia Award
The Zia Award recognizes outstanding research by a graduate student in the NMSU
Astronomy Department. Recent honorees include the following.
| Daniel Ceverino-Rodriguez | 2007 |
| Glenn Kacprzak | 2007 |
| Ashley Ruiter | 2006 |
| Joe Helmboldt | 2005 |
| Peregrine McGeehee | 2004 |
| Melinda Kahre | 2003 |
| Takafumi Temma | 2002 |
| Octavio Valenzuela | 2001 |
Excepts from recent nomination letters:
"Glenn Kacprzak's work has had a large impact on the domestic and
international community. He has attended four international conferences and
given talks at two of them, and his work has already been cited in journal
publications by other authors 47 times to date. Glenn's meeting attendance
has not only enhanced his research and future job prospects, it has enhanced
the recognition of our department on local, national, and international levels"
"Because of his intense work ethic and research accomplishments, Glenn
is an ideal role model for all students in the astronomy department. He is
always willing to share his knowledge and advice with others. He provides a
standard to other students of what graduate school, ultimately, is all about."
"Daniel Ceverino-Rodriguez presented a poster on the effects of stellar
feedback at the IAU Symposium 245 which won first prize - his was the best
poster of the entire symposium, as judged by more than 200 experts in the
field of galactic structure."
"We often rely on the help of our graduate students when preparing grant
proposals. This year Daniel's scientific results were instrumental in
our receiving two NSF grants, bringing roughly $500,000 of research funds to
the astronomy department. This was not about Daniel helping out by making
plots and such - this was about his research, and his results, making the
scientific case in an extraordinary way."
"Ashley Ruiter leaped to an early start in performing research at NMSU,
and is a standout in this regard. She was the first author on a manuscript
recently published in the prestigious Astrophysical Journal Letters, and
played a prominent role as a co-author of two more published papers. Her work
in population synthesis calculations has enabled the first actual calculations
of the number of faint white dwarf x-ray sources in the Galactic Centre. Her
strong research efforts indicate great promise, and she has a bright future
ahead of herself in the field of stellar astrophysics."
"Joe Helmboldt has completed a large Ph.D. project that produced
significant results on an important stage in galaxy evolution, star formation
in galaxies at diverse ends of the Hubble Sequence, and was characterized by
remarkable independence on his part. He is the lead author on the five
derivative journal papers for a very good reason: he did all the work."
The Pegasus Award
The Pegasus Award recognizes outstanding teaching by a graduate student in the NMSU
Astronomy Department. Recent honorees include the following.
| Cat Wu | 2007 |
| James Stockton | 2006 |
| Jim Norwood | 2005 |
| Mike Sussman | 2005 |
| Glenn Kacprzak | 2004 |
| Mark Blackmon | 2003 |
| Melinda Kahre | 2002 |
| Steven Nelli | 2001 |
Excepts from recent nomination letters:
"Cat Wu's formal and informal student evaluations demonstrate her
ability to teach, and the feedback from her students is very positive. Their
comments highlight three of Cat's greatest attributes: (1) Cat is
knowledgeable, and is able to convey the material in such a way that students
can understand and relate to it easily; (2) Cat takes the time to answer every
question a student has, and will further make sure that they understand the
answer, no matter who long it takes; (3) Cat's presentation skills are
exceptional. These qualities are, in my opinion, the makings of a future
professor."
"Cat has the ability to create a relaxed environment, where students can
feel comfortable asking questions and discussing lab topics within their
discussion groups. She rotates from group to group posing questions and
leading students to the correct answers, making sure that they arrive at the
correct destination through the combined efforts of each individual in the
group. Many times groups call her over to settle an issue because they have
been arguing (quite extensively) about topics introduced in her mini-lectures."
"James Stockton's supervisors all speak well of his enthusiasm for
working with students. He is popular with the undergraduates whom he teaches,
who cite his well-prepared presentations and good delivery style in the
laboratory and classroom. His work as a teaching assistant showcases his
strong desire to help non-scientists to understand and enjoy modern science."
"Mike Sussman is serving ably as the head of our campus observatory
efforts this semester, not only running the telescopes on open nights but
staying on top of instrumental issues and providing training sessions for
other T.A.s. Few of our students are asked to teach both ASTR105 and ASTR110,
and Mike has cheerfully developed a new set of laboratory and short lecture
materials for ASTR110 this fall, having put considerable effort into similar
efforts in the previous year for ASTR105."
"Jim Norwood began as a graduate assistant with virtually no teaching
experience, but he quickly overcame any uneasiness about being in front of a
classroom to become an excellent teaching assistant. His students have
repeatedly commented to me that they appreciate the extra time he spends with
them to explain difficult concepts. Jim's creativity and motivation have
improved the quality of our undergraduate instruction and are in direct
alignment with the teaching mission of NMSU."
"I am particularly pleased with the dedication that Mike Sussman and
Jim Norwood showed last year in teaching ASTR105, where both T.A.s
attended each other laboratory sessions as a matter of course in order to
produce the best combined lessons through joint effort."
The Rappaport Award
The Barry Neil Rappaport Scholarship acknowledges outstanding public service by a
graduate student in the NMSU Astronomy Department. It is awarded bi-annually in
recognition of an exceptional record of public outreach and service or for an
exceptional completed research project in observational astronomy which
demonstrates excellence and breadth. Recent honorees include the following.
| Douglas Hoffman | 2007 |
| Melinda Kahre | 2005 |
| Jason Peterson | 2003 |
| Denise Stephens | 2001 |
| Vanessa Galarza | 1999 |
| Amy Simon | 1997 |
Excepts from recent nomination letters:
"I knew Barry Rappaport from 1979 until his untimely death. If he was in our
department today, I could guarantee that Doug Hoffman's thesis is
exactly the type of project that Barry would have liked to have undertaken.
Barry had a passion for charting the heavens, and the classification of
previously unrecognized variable stars would have thrilled him."
"Doug Hoffman was the lead author on a 2006 Astronomical Journal paper
which utilizes several data sets (AAVSO proved, NMSU 1-meter obtained) to
constrain the process(es) involved in the timing changes of certain eclipsing
binary systems.
He also served as the Vice President of the AGSO (with the responsibility of
coordinating most outreach requests for the astronomy department for a full
year). During Fall 2006 a request came in from Berino Elementary School for a
weeknight observing event. Doug coordinated graduate student participation,
arranged for telescopes to be available, and participated in the event
himself. Student, teachers, and parents were very appreciative, and displayed
their appreciation in the form of a 12-foot long hand drawn and signed banner
delivered to the department."
"Melinda Kahre represents the best of what we hope to produce in our
program: a talented, intelligent astronomer/planetary scientist who considers
it an obligation to give back to the community the excitement of the work in
which she is privileged to be engaged. She participated in at least nine
outreach activities last year, spanning the range from young students (a
six-week course astronomy class for middle school students) to mature learners
wishing to increase their knowledge of the world around them (public talks at
the Golden West retirement home, and the Las Cruces Natural History Museum).
Melinda had a spectacular year in research, and was the lead author on three
peer-reviewed journal papers on the effects of Martian dust redistribution on
planetary albedo, on mechanisms involved in inter-annual variability in global
Martian dust, and on climate history and the interpretation of various
geological features tied to Martian surface dust reservoirs."