In her academic career - she’s currently on the faculty at North Carolina State University - she investigates the nature of dark matter, the physics of the early universe, the evolution of galaxies and the nature of black holes. “Since WMAP was partly led by people at Princeton, it was a big part of life there, and hugely exciting I felt like I was right at the ground floor on some of the most exciting discoveries in cosmology.” at Princeton University, the first results from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) came out, providing “our first really detailed accounting of the contents of the universe,” she said. As she began her undergraduate studies at the California Institute of Technology, cosmologists were processing the 1998 discovery that some mysterious entity called “dark energy” was pushing galaxies apart from one another. “The destruction of the whole universe: There’s nothing bigger and more dramatic than that,” she said.Ĭhange is in the nature of her career. Apocalyptic topics that can put even these uncertain times into perspective. She just likes thinking about the end - the annihilation of Earth, the solar system, our galaxy and especially the universe. “I don’t think I’m a gloomy person,” Katie Mack said.
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