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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pinilla in 2018

Paola Andrea Pinilla Ortiz is a Colombian astrophysicist whose research concerns the accretion of interplanetary dust clouds into protoplanetary disks as part of the formation of exoplanets. Educated in Colombia and Germany, she works in England as associate professor in exoplanets at the University College London Department of Space & Climate Physics, affiliated with the university's Mullard Space Science Laboratory.[1]

Education and career

Pinilla is originally from Bogotá,[2][3] and was inspired to go into astronomy following the interest of her older brother, and by watching the television series Cosmos: A Personal Voyage.[4]

As a student at the University of the Andes (Colombia), Pinilla earned a bachelor's degree in physics with a minor in mathematics in 2007 and a master's degree in physics in 2009. She went to Heidelberg University in Germany for doctoral study in physics, completing her Ph.D. there in 2013. Her dissertation, Testing models of dust evolution in protoplanetary disks with millimeter observations, was supervised by Cornelis P. Dullemond.[5]

After postdoctoral research at Leiden University in the Netherlands and as a NASA Hubble Fellow at the University of Arizona in the US,[5][3] in 2018 she won a Sofia Kovalevskaya Award from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, funding her research for a five-year term as a group leader at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg.[4][6] She moved to her current position as associate professor at University College London in 2022.[5]

Recognition

Pinilla was a 2024 recipient of the New Horizons in Physics Prize, jointly with her coauthors Laura M. Pérez, Nienke van der Marel, and Til Birnstiel, "for the prediction, discovery, and modeling of dust traps in young circumstellar disks, solving a long-standing problem in planet formation".[3][7]

References

  1. ^ "Paola Pinilla", Expert profiles, University College London, retrieved 2024-04-08
  2. ^ Paola Pinilla, German National Library, retrieved 2024-04-08
  3. ^ a b c "Paola Pinilla Wins the 2024 New Horizons Prize in Physics", AcademiaNet, 31 October 2023, retrieved 2024-04-08
  4. ^ a b Paola Pinilla and the birth of the planets, Universidad de los Andes, 18 December 2019, retrieved 2024-04-08
  5. ^ a b c Curriculum vitae (PDF), retrieved 2024-04-08
  6. ^ "Paola Pinilla Receives a 2018 Sofja Kovalevskaja Award of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation", Department of Astronomy and Steward Observatory, University of Arizona, retrieved 2024-04-08
  7. ^ "UCL physicist investigating planetary formation awarded New Horizons prize", UCL News, University College London, 14 September 2023, retrieved 2024-04-08

External links

This page was last edited on 19 April 2024, at 19:50
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