John Johnson (astronomer)
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John Asher Johnson (4 January 1977) is an American astrophysicist and professor of astronomy at
Harvard Harvard University is a private Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 1636 as Harvard College and named for its first benefactor, the Puritan clergyman John Harvard, it is the oldest institution of higher le ...
. He is the first tenured African-American physical science professor in the history of the university. Johnson is well known for discovering three of the first known planets smaller than the Earth outside of the solar system, including the first Mars-sized exoplanet.


Early life and education

Johnson grew up in St. Louis. He graduated from the
University of Missouri at Rolla Missouri University of Science and Technology, or Missouri S&T, is a public research university in Rolla, Missouri. It is a member institution of the University of Missouri System. Most of its 7,645 students (fall 2020) study engineering, busin ...
(since renamed the Missouri University of Science and Technology) in 1999 with a Bachelors of Science degree in physics. In-between his undergraduate degree and graduate school, he also worked as a research scientist with LIGO at Caltech. He entered graduate school at UC Berkeley having never taken a course in astronomy. Johnson completed his Ph.D. in astrophysics in 2007 under Geoff Marcy. His thesis was titled "Planet Hunting In New Stellar Domains" and included the detection of several unusual hot Jupiters.


Scientific career

Johnson is currently a professor of astronomy at Harvard, where he is one of several professors who study exoplanets along with David Charbonneau,
Dimitar Sasselov Dimitar D. Sasselov ( bg, Димитър Д. Съселов, born 1961) is a Bulgarian astronomer based in the United States. He is a Professor of Astronomy at Harvard University and director of the Harvard Origins of Life Initiative. In 2002, Sass ...
, and others. When he was appointed to this position in 2013, he became the first tenured African-American professor in any of the physical sciences at the university. He was formerly a professor at the California Institute of Technology and a researcher with NASA's Exoplanet Science Research Institute. Before attaining a faculty job, Johnson was a National Science Foundation (NSF) post-doctoral fellow at the Institute for Astronomy, a part of the University of Hawaii.


Research

Johnson does research on the detection and characterization of exoplanets, that is, planets located outside the solar system. His work involves planets detected with a variety of methods. He is a founding principal investigator of the
Miniature Exoplanet Radial Velocity Array The MINiature Exoplanet Radial Velocity Array (MINERVA) is a ground-based robotic dedicated exoplanet observatory. The facility is an array of small-aperture robotic telescopes outfitted for both photometry and high-resolution Doppler spectroscop ...
(MINERVA), a ground-based robotic telescope array that searches for exoplanets primarily through the
radial velocity method Doppler spectroscopy (also known as the radial-velocity method, or colloquially, the wobble method) is an indirect method for finding extrasolar planets and brown dwarfs from radial-velocity measurements via observation of Doppler shifts in ...
while also looking for transits. More related to transiting planets, Johnson has worked on precisely measuring the properties of planet-hosting stars found with the Kepler mission, a vital task for determining the properties of the planets themselves. He is also involved with K2, the successor to the original Kepler mission. In 2012, Johnson's team discovered three small rocky exoplanets in a
red dwarf ''Red Dwarf'' is a British science fiction comedy franchise created by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor, which primarily consists of a television sitcom that aired on BBC Two between 1988 and 1999, and on Dave since 2009, gaining a cult following. T ...
star system observed with the Kepler space telescope.Philip S. Muirhead, John Asher Johnson, Kevin Apps, Joshua A. Carter, Timothy D. Morton, Daniel C. Fabrycky, J. Sebastian Pineda, Michael Bottom, Barbara Rojas-Ayala, Everett Schlawin, Katherine Hamren, Kevin R. Covey, Justin R. Crepp, Keivan G. Stassun, Joshua Pepper, Leslie Hebb, Evan N. Kirby, Andrew W. Howard, Howard T. Isaacson, Geoffrey W. Marcy, David Levitan, Tanio Diaz-Santos, Lee Armus, James P. Lloyd,
Characterizing the Cool KOIs III. KOI-961: A Small Star with Large Proper Motion and Three Small Planets
» published in ''The Astrophysical Journal'' – .
The system was renamed Kepler-42 and the outermost planet was found to be nearly as small as Mars, making it the smallest known exoplanet at the time. A subsequent study used the host star's similarity to Barnard's Star and observations from the Keck Observatory to more precisely measure the properties of the system, including the sizes of the three planets.


Diversity initiatives

Johnson is the founder of the Banneker Institute, a summer program hosted at the Center for Astrophysics Harvard & Smithsonian. The program provides research funding for undergraduate students from backgrounds underrepresented in astronomy, with a focus on students of color. It has merged with a similar program into the joint Banneker & Aztlán Institute, which also targets Latin and Native American students. In addition to research, the institute emphasizes discussions on social justice issues and their relevance in the field of astronomy.


References


External links


John Johnson's Research Group Page (The Johnson ExoLab at Harvard)

John Johnson's Personal Blog: Mahalo.ne.Trash


* {{DEFAULTSORT:Johnson, John 21st-century American astronomers Discoverers of exoplanets Living people People from Albuquerque, New Mexico Physicists from Missouri Scientists from St. Louis 1977 births 21st-century African-American scientists 20th-century African-American people