Amanda Stockton: The Girl With The Big Nose
The Story Collider
Story Collider, Inc.
4.4 • 824 Ratings
🗓️ 1 April 2016
⏱️ 13 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Growing up on a cattle ranch, Amanda Stockton dreams of searching for life elsewhere in the universe. Dr. Amanda Stockton is an assistant professor in the Chemistry and Biochemistry department at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Her work walks the line between engineering and science to develop instrumentation capable of looking for organic molecules elsewhere in the solar system. These molecules could be the feedstock for an emergence of life or the remnants of past life now extinct on places like Europa, Enceladus, and Mars. Dr. Stockton grew up on a cattle ranch in Oklahoma, where she graduated from the Oklahoma School of Science and Mathematics. At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, she majored in Aerospace Engineering and Chemistry – seemingly unrelated topics but perfect for her “dream job,” i.e. the one she has now. After obtaining a masters at Brown in chemistry, she earned her PhD with Dr. Richard Mathies at the University of California, Berkeley working on increasing the analytical chemistry capabilities of the Mars Organic Analyzer microchip capillary electrophoresis instrument platform. She continued in this vein at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, by furthering the microfluidic engineering side of the technology as first a NASA Postdoctoral Program Fellow and then as a Technologist. At Georgia Tech, her group’s work seeks to do both the engineering and the science to synergistically promote instrument capabilities and robustness. Currently, the group’s main NASA-funded project is a version of the Mars Organic Analyzer that could fit on a kinetic impactor mission to an icy moon – a project for which testing involves a giant rail gun and a magnetic capture system to decelerate the instrument at 50,000 g or the equivalent of hitting a planet at 5 km/s.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | A science story, huh? |
| 0:04.0 | Is NYU scientists the... |
| 0:06.0 | It felt... |
| 0:07.0 | I was so... |
| 0:09.0 | And I just thought, well... |
| 0:10.0 | It was that golden moment. |
| 0:12.0 | Because science was on my side. |
| 0:15.0 | Hi, everyone. I'm Ben Lilly, and welcome to The Story Collider, where we bring you true personal stories about science. |
| 0:29.6 | This week's stories from Amanda Stockton. |
| 0:32.0 | It was recorded in March 2016 at the Atlanta Shakespeare Tavern in Atlanta, Georgia as part of the Atlanta Science Festival. |
| 0:50.7 | Well, I grew up on a cattle ranch in Oklahoma. People like to ask me, where was it? What was the town we were close to? |
| 0:58.0 | And I don't honestly like to tell them because it was Slaughterville. |
| 1:02.0 | But it was named after Joe Slaughter, who kept the town alive through the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl. |
| 1:10.0 | Now to call it a town might be a little bit liberal. We didn't have a postage. You kept the town alive through the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl. |
| 1:11.2 | Now to call it a town, a town might be a little bit liberal. |
| 1:14.4 | We didn't have a post office or a school or a fire department or anything like that. |
| 1:19.4 | For those things you had to go over to Noble or Lexington. |
| 1:23.3 | One time Pita came down to try to get us to change her name from Slaughterville to Beggiville. |
| 1:31.2 | Five generations the Slaughter family showed up. We're still called Slaughterville. Now, the land is so |
| 1:39.1 | flat there. There aren't very many trees. And that makes the sky so big. I think there's a reason why you get such a |
| 1:46.0 | high astronaut per capita ratio in Oklahoma. You get this beautiful view of the Milky Way at night. |
| 1:53.2 | And honestly, with the tornadoes this time of year, you spend a lot of time looking up. |
... |
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