Published: Sept. 26, 2018

Emma Simmerman, a senior physics major, has been awarded a $10,000 scholarship from the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation (ASF).

NASA astronaut Joe Tanner will present with the award during a ceremony at 1:15 p.m. Friday, Sept. 28, in Andrews Hall. Tanner is an instructor at CU «Ƶ. The event is free and open to the public. Simmerman is the 22nd CU «Ƶ recipient.

Simmerman learned she had won the scholarship when she got a call from her mom, who texted a photo of the ASF envelope. Too excited to wait, Simmerman had her mom open the envelope and read the news to her on the phone.

Emma Simmerman

“I was like, ‘Open it, open it,’” Simmerman said. “My mom was crying on the phone. The scholarship means so much to me that ASFbelieves in my potential and capabilities.”

Simmerman is a research assistant at JILA working in the Ralph Jimenez Lab studying fluorescent proteins used in biological imaging. Research there spans experimental studies of protein dynamics and photophysicsand development of optical tools to explore biological function.

JILA is a physical science research institute, jointly operated by CU «Ƶ and the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

“When you shine light on a fluorescent protein, it can absorb the light and re-emit a photon of a different wavelength ,” Simmerman said. “Different fluorescent proteins undergo different energy transitions.We’re interested in characterizing what those energy transitions look like in order to make better and brighter fluorescent proteins. These proteins are used in biological sciences and medicine for visualizing complex microscopic dynamics. I really like the idea of making new things that have a medical application.”

Last summer, Simmerman worked on a Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) project studying optical materials at the University of Chicago. REU projectsare funded by the National Science Foundation. The project involved trapping bouncing nanoparticles withlaser light. She recorded movies of the nanoparticles and tracked their motion, to better understand the energy landscape in the trap and the interactions of the particles with each other.

Curious and imaginative, Simmerman grew up climbing trees, rambling on dirt roads and playing in irrigation ditches on a 150-acre ranch outside the small town of Penrose in southern Colorado.

When she wasn't playing outside, Simmerman read books. She was such a voracious reader her dad nicknamed her Nose-in-a-Book. She gave the lizards, toads, tarantulas and bugs she caught names from the books she read. After reading a book about a fish species thought to be extinct but discovered living deep in the ocean, Simmerman named her first beta fish Coelacanth in honor of the long-lived species.

Simmerman never thought she would be a scientist because she had never met a scientist. However, she enjoyed biology and considered a medical career—until she came to CU «Ƶ and discovered physics.

Through her research opportunities at CU «Ƶ, she is on a path that combines her passion for science with her humanitarian interests. As a first-generation college student, Simmerman thinks it’s important to extend opportunities in science to historically underrepresented students, so she volunteers with I Have a Dream, tutoring low-income high school students. I want to continue being involved in similar efforts to make nonscientists feel like they understand how science works,” she said. At CU, Simmerman is a peer tutor in physics and math with the Miramontes Arts and Sciences Program (MASP) and is a Norlin Scholar.

After graduating in May, Simmerman plans to continue studying physics in graduate school.

“I want to learn about everything,” Simmerman said. “That’s important for me in how I define myself. I try to be a curious person who is trying to ask really good questions and to not be afraid to ask questions.”

This year ASF has awarded 50 scholarships to students from 36 different universities across the nation.The merit-based ASF scholarship is the largest known monetary award of its kind given in the United States to science and engineering undergraduate students. The Mercury 7 astronauts, including «Ƶ native Scott Carpenter, who died in 2013, created the foundation in 1984. The purpose was to aid the United States in retaining its world leadership in science and technology by providing scholarships to the brightest college students pursuing these degrees.

The Mercury 7 astronauts have since been joined by more than 100 astronauts from the Gemini, Apollo, Skylab and space shuttle programs who use their joint credibility to encourage students to pursue scientific endeavors to keep the U.S. a leader in technology.

CU «Ƶ sophomores and juniors engaged in research and majoring in math, science or engineering and seeking nomination for an ASF scholarship should email Deborah Viles at topscholarships@colorado.edu.