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Margaret Galland Kivelson

1928-

Contributions
Publications
Honors
Additional Information

Some Important Contributions

Discovered and measured the intrinsic magnetic field of Ganymede, the largest moon of Jupiter (also the largest moon in the solar system), with K.K. Khurana, C.T. Russell, R.J. Walker, J. Warnecke, F.V. Coroniti, C. Polanskey, D.J. Southwood, and C. Schubert.

Reported a magnetic signature associated with Jupiter's moon Io which indicates an internal field, and estimated the strength of the field.

Observed magnetic signature associated with the asteroid Gaspra, with K.K. Khurana, R.J. Walker, J.A. Linker, C.T. Russell, D.J. Southwood, and C. Polanskey.

Found magnetic signature indicating an internal field associated with the asteroid Gaspra, with L. F. Bargatze, K. K. Khurana, D. J. Southwood, R. J. Walker, and P. J. Coleman, Jr.

Theoretical analysis of the propagation of electromagnetic waves in plasmas taking Landau damping into account to all orders in the electromagnetic coupling constant, with D. F. DuBois and V. Gilinsky.

Some Important Publications

"Discovery of Ganymede's magnetic field by the Galileo spacecraft" with K.K. Khurana, C.T. Russell, R.J. Walker, J. Warnecke, F.V. Coroniti, C. Polanskey, D.J. Southwood, and C. Schubert, Nature, 384: 537 (1996).

"A magnetic signature at Io: Initial report from the Galileo magnetometer" with K.K. Khurana, R.J. Walker, J.A. Linker, C.T. Russell, D.J. Southwood, and C. Polanskey, Science, 273: 337 (1996).

"Magnetic signatures near Galileo's closest approach to Gaspra", with L. F. Bargatze, K. K. Khurana, D. J. Southwood, R. J. Walker, and P. J. Coleman, Jr., Science, 261: 331 (1993).

"Propagation of electromagnetic waves in plasmas", Phys. Rev. 129: 2376 (1962) with D. F. DuBois and V. Gilinsky.

Honors

Radcliffe Institute Fellow 1965-1966
John Simon Guggenheim Fellow 1973-1974
Radcliffe Graduate Society Medal 1983
Harvard University 350th Anniversary Alumni Medal
NASA Group Achievement Award for Galileo Ida Encounter/Dactyl Discovery Team 1995
NASA Group Achievement Award for the Project Galileo Team 1996
Member American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1998
Member National Academy of Sciences (U.S.) 2000

Jobs/Positions

1955-1971 Consultant in Physics, The RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA
1967-1971 Assistant Research Geophysicist, Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, UCLA
1971 Adjunct Assistant Professor, Department of Physics, UCLA
1971-1972 Associate Research Geophysicist, Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, UCLA
1972-1975 Associate Research Geophysicist, Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, UCLA
1972-1973 Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Physics, UCLA
1975-1977 Associate Professor in Residence, Department of Geophysics and Space Physics, UCLA
1975-1977 Associate Research Physicist, Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, UCLA
1977-1983 Research Geophysicist, Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, UCLA
1977-1980 Professor in Residence, Department of Earth and Space Sciences, UCLA
1980-present Professor (Chair, 1984-1987; Vice-Chair, 1978-1981), Department of Earth and Space Sciences, UCLA
1983-present Professor, Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, UCLA

Education

A.B. Radcliffe College 1950
A.M. Radcliffe College 1951
Ph.D. Radcliffe College 1957

Sources

M. G. Kivelson

Additional Information/Comments

- Excerpts from a talk Margaret Kivelson gave at Radcliffe College, Harvard University, May 17, 1997.

"I had low expectations for my career and so did others. While still in high school, I had been advised to become a dietitian by an uncle who was a professor. He was well aware of where women with a scientific bent fit readily into an academic institution, and it wasn't in the physical sciences! But for someone who was interested in research, in uncovering new ideas and finding new ways of thinking about old and new problems, for a person who wanted to be a creative scientist, the university was the place to be. To be sure, there was employment for scientists outside of academe...but most of the exciting advcances were occurring in universities."


"Creative science has much in common with other creative arts: painting, sculpture, poetry, music. A creative scientist applies tools familiar to the artist, demanding solutions with underlying symmetry, often deliberately broken to produce special effects, demanding elegance, valuing minimalism, and then typically supplementing these constraints with the rigor of mathematical analysis. ... Many scientists share a belief-structure that could well be accepted by contemporary painters and choreographers."


Married to Daniel Kivelson. They have a daughter and a son.


Field Editors: Ferdinand Coroniti/ Nina Byers

<Coroniti@physics.ucla.edu> / nbyers@physics.ucla.edu >


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