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Charlene Heisler spent two years as a post doctoral researcher at [[York University]] where she also began her work in science education. Heisler taught two undergraduate classes, gave public talks and inspired young women in science. In 1993, she moved to [[Sydney]] and became a postdoctoral research fellow at the [[Anglo-Australian Observatory]]. She continued the research from her thesis believing
Charlene Heisler spent two years as a post doctoral researcher at [[York University]] where she also began her work in science education. Heisler taught two undergraduate classes, gave public talks and inspired young women in science. In 1993, she moved to [[Sydney]] and became a postdoctoral research fellow at the [[Anglo-Australian Observatory]]. She continued the research from her thesis believing


After her death, the [[Astronomical Society of Australia]] created the Charlene Heisler Prize which is awarded annually to the most outstanding PhD thesis in the field of astronomy at an Australian university.
After her death, the [[Astronomical Society of Australia]] created the Charlene Heisler Prize which is awarded annually to the most outstanding PhD thesis in the field of astronomy at an Australian university<ref>{{Cite web|title=Charlene Heisler Prize {{!}} Astronomical Society of Australia|url=https://asa.astronomy.org.au/prizes_and-grants/prizes-awards/charlene-heisler-prize/|access-date=2022-02-12|language=en-AU}}</ref>.

== Notable publications   ==

* Charlene A Heisler; Stuart L Lumsden; Jeremy A Bailey. (February 1997). "Visibility of scattered broad-line emission in Seyfert 2 galaxies". [[Nature (journal)|Nature]]. '''385'''(6618): 700-702. [[Digital object identifier|doi]]: [https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/link_gateway/1997Natur.385..700H/doi:10.1038/385700a0 10.1038/385700a0]


== Publications ==
{{Infobox scientist
{{Infobox scientist
| name = Charlene Heisler
| name = Charlene Heisler

Revision as of 16:17, 12 February 2022

Charlene Heisler (1 December 1961- 28 October 1999) was a Canadian astronomer.

Early life and education

Charlene Heisler was born in Calgary, Canada[1]. Heisler graduated from the University of Calgary with a BSc in applied maths and physics in 1985[1]. During her time at Calgary, she worked as a summer research assistant for Sun Kwok and Gene (Eugene) Couch as well as working at the Calgary Centennial Planetarium. Before starting her PhD, Heisler was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis and was informed by her doctor she would not live more that two years and that she should abandon her PhD studies. However, she went on to live 8 more years and she completed her PhD at Yale under the supervision of Jeanette Patricia Vader in 1991.

Research and career

Charlene Heisler spent two years as a post doctoral researcher at York University where she also began her work in science education. Heisler taught two undergraduate classes, gave public talks and inspired young women in science. In 1993, she moved to Sydney and became a postdoctoral research fellow at the Anglo-Australian Observatory. She continued the research from her thesis believing

After her death, the Astronomical Society of Australia created the Charlene Heisler Prize which is awarded annually to the most outstanding PhD thesis in the field of astronomy at an Australian university[2].

Notable publications  

  • Charlene A Heisler; Stuart L Lumsden; Jeremy A Bailey. (February 1997). "Visibility of scattered broad-line emission in Seyfert 2 galaxies". Nature. 385(6618): 700-702. doi: 10.1038/385700a0
Charlene Heisler
Born1 December 1961
Died28 October 1999
Alma materUniversity of Calgary, Yale University
Scientific career
Thesis Galaxies with Spectral Energy Distributions Peaking at 60 Microns: Morphology and Activity Explained by Interactions.

References

  1. ^ a b Norris, Ray P.; De Robertis, Michael; Kwok, Sun (2000-01-01). "Obituary: Charlene Anne Heisler, 1961-1999". Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society. 32: 1668–1669.
  2. ^ "Charlene Heisler Prize | Astronomical Society of Australia". Retrieved 2022-02-12.