Twenty-five years old Sophia Sánchez- Maes's world line originates in the New Mexico borders. She is employed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, where she works to find and characterize worlds beyond our solar system.
Sophia Sanchez-Maes is a scientific realist working in fine reciprocity, her current theoretical exploration examines whether spacetime might have a fantastic topology.
In her continuing geological work in confluence with tutor Jun Korenaga, she showed that water is a necessary but inadequate condition for plate tectonics; making face abysses an implicit geologic observable for exo- worlds.
She has also served as top investigator on a NASA Space entitlement probing astral exertion, and written law for the Mars Rover. For her work, she has been designated an NSF Young Scholar, entered the transnational Guiseppe Sciacca beforehand- career prize for exploration, presented her findings to President Barack Obama, and was awarded the National Jefferson Award for topmost public service by an individual 25 or under.
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Sophia Sánchez-Maes '19 at the Jefferson Awards gala on June 16. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images for Jefferson Awards Foundation) |
Sophomore Sophia Sánchez-Maes ’19 wins Jefferson Award for public service https://t.co/fuHiRUiEkf
— Yale University (@Yale) July 15, 2016
As member of Timothy Dwight council at Yale University, she's seeker for double major in drugs( int.) and astrophysics. She'll pursue a Ph.D. and continue into a career in drugs as an experimenter.
She writes for the scientific magazine and is chairman of the Yale Society of Physics scholars. She makes habit of reading short stories, writing wisdom fabrication, and keeping written correspondence.
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Sophia Sanchez-Maes Education
Sophia Sanchez-Maes Achievements, Awards, Recognitions
- In 2016, Sophia Sanchez-Maes won Jefferson Award for public service.
- In May 2015, Sophia Sanchez-Maes was recognized for the 2015 U.S. Presidential Scholars Program award.
- In 2015, Sophia Sanchez-Maes speaks to President Obama about converting algae to energy at the White House Science Fair.
- She was also recognized at Teen Choice Awards.