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Emily Lakdawalla        

Senior Editor at The Planetary Society

Emily Lakdawalla is an internationally admired science communicator and educator, passionate about advancing public understanding of space and sharing the wonder of scientific discovery.

Lakdawalla came to The Planetary Society in 2001 to oversee a portion of the Society's Red Rover Goes to Mars project, an education and public outreach program on the Mars Exploration Rover mission funded by LEGO. She ran worldwide contests that selected and trained high school students to travel to Pasadena to participate in rover operations training exercises in 2002 and then in actual Mars Exploration Rover mission operations during January and February of 2005.

Meanwhile, Lakdawalla first blogged for the Society in 2002, as a member of a Society-funded team sent to Devon Island in the Canadian high Arctic to gather data to support future tests of autonomous software for Mars airplanes. She continued to write news articles for the Society's website for the next few years, covering a range of planetary science topics from Cassini to Mars orbiters to asteroid encounters, while also contributing articles to the Society's print publication, The Planetary Report. Another brief blogging effort coincided with the descent of the Huygens probe to Titan in January 2005, which Emily reported on from ESA mission operations in Darmstadt.

Lakdawalla then joined the operations team of the Society's Cosmos 1 solar sail mission, with a tactical responsibility for the spacecraft's camera data. But she was also tasked with a communications responsibility of writing a blog about the mission, from before to after its launch. Many days of uncertainty followed the launch failure, during which Emily's attention wandered from the sad fate of Cosmos 1 to happier events in Cassini's exploration of the Saturn system and the rovers' adventures across Mars. When the Cosmos 1 mission was declared officially over, the Planetary Society Blog continued on.

Lakdawalla has become a leader in a worldwide community of amateur space image processors. These enthusiasts take advantage of the enormous archives from five decades of planetary exploration missions, applying creative talent to the processing of sometimes gnarly data into scenes of awesome beauty. Lakdawalla frequently highlights their work on her blog, in print articles, and through public talks and private speaking engagements.

Lakdawalla's first book, The Design and Engineering of Curiosity: How the Mars Rover Performs Its Job was published by Springer-Praxis in March, 2018. A second book, Curiosity and Its Science Mission: A Mars Rover Goes to Work will follow in 2019. She is an expert on children's books about space and does freelance work fact-checking and writing introductions for them.

She was awarded the 2011 Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Sciences Journalism Award from the Division for Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society for her blog entry about the Phoebe ring of Saturn. Asteroid 274860 was formally named "Emilylakdawalla" by the International Astronomical Union on July 12, 2014. She received an honorary doctorate from The Open University in 2017 in recognition of her contributions in communicating space science to the public.

Speech Topics


Seeing the Solar System through Robot Eyes

In the last two decades, dozens of spacecraft have explored planets, moons, asteroids, and comets, returning a treasure trove of scientific data. Thanks to generous data release policies and the proliferation of high-speed Internet, the worldwide public has rapid access to huge quantities of spacecraft image data. Skilled amateur image processors produce stunning views of alien places, and represent a valuable and underutilized resource for increasing public support of planetary exploration.

The New Mars

Was Mars ever warm and wet? or always cold and dry? Was there Martian life? Dozens of orbiters, landers, and rovers have been sent to Mars to try to answer these questions. Thanks to a recent Renaissance in Mars exploration, we now have a new picture of Mars as a complex world with a rich history. In some places, at some times, Earth-like life could have thrived there. Emily Lakdawalla will tell Mars' story and explain the science with stunning photos of the planet next door.

Looking for Life in the Solar System

Lakdwalla tours the solar system with the goal of informing the audience about the variety of different science missions actively exploring our solar system right now, with emphasis on the scientific motivations for their exploration (our origins and the search for life), with lots and lots of pretty pictures.

News


Sending a Tesla into space wasn't such a dumb idea - The Verge
Emily Lakdawalla (@elakdawalla) February 7, 2018. Elon Musk, the master salesman of our times, has found the perfect implement for making science sexy and ...

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