Lucinda " Lucie" Green (born 1975) is a British science communicator and solar physics.
Green is a Professor of Physics and a Royal Society University Research Fellow (previously the Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellow) at Mullard Space Science Laboratory (MSSL) of the University College London (UCL). Green runs MSSL's public engagement programme and sits on the board of the European Solar Physics Division (ESPD) of the European Physical Society and the advisory board of the Science Museum.
In 2013, Green became the first ever female presenter of The Sky at Night following the death of Patrick Moore.
Green's research focuses primarily on the atmospheric activities of the Sun, particularly coronal mass ejections and the changes in the Sun's magnetic field which triggers them.
She returns to her school to discuss her research. Fiona Clements, Green's former physics teacher at the school, has said, “She is a great advocate for young women in science and we are proud that she continues to remember the school by returning to talk about her research to pupils."
"I always liked physics from an early age while I was at school. That was my passion: problem-solving or asking questions and then finding out ways of answering those questions. But I never had a burning ambition of being a space scientist, and I wasn’t even into amateur astronomy at."
Green is a Professor of Physics and a Leverhulme Trust Research Fellow (previously the Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellow), at MSSL. Her current work focuses on the pattern of magnetic fields in the Sun's atmosphere, which sporadically erupt to form a coronal mass ejection; how these relate to geomagnetic activity and what this means for those living on the Earth.
From 2006 to 2012, she was a member of the Royal Society's Education Committee and was part of their State of the Nation reports Working Group during 2007–2009. She is member of UCL's Steering Committee for the Beacon for Public Engagement. She also runs MSSL's public engagement programme.
Between 2004 and 2005 Green co-presented several programmes in the BBC/Open University series Stardate. Episodes include "Stardate: Mission To Titan" which she co-presented with Adam Hart-Davis, covering the European Space Agency successfully landing the Huygens probe on Saturn's largest moon, Titan, and "Stardate: Deep Impact" which she co-presented with Brian Cox, covering NASA successfully colliding a probe into the side of comet Tempel 1 in an effort to learn more about the origins of the Solar System.
Since 2010, Green has appeared on and co-presented several episodes of Stargazing Live and has appeared on several episodes of the BBC Radio 4 show The Infinite Monkey Cage, discussing topics such as the end of the world and Multiverse.
In 2013, Green hosted her own radio programme, Solar Max on BBC Radio 4 on the topic of space weather. The programme explained how emissions from the sun can cause changes in the Earth's magnetic field and upper atmosphere, and what the implications of these are for the UK.
In 2014, Green married stand-up comedian and maths communicator Matt Parker. The couple used wedding rings made of meteoric iron.
Green has won awards for her contribution to public engagement with science. In 2009, she was awarded the Royal Society's Kohn Award for Excellence in Engaging the Public with Science, for her work engaging a diverse audience with science, and more specifically, for creating a culture of public engagement within her department.
In 2010, she was named, in The Times October science supplement, Eureka, as one of the UK top ten best science educators under 40.
In 2015, Green had a bust unveiled at the Royal Society in London, whilst being honoured at an event exploring the history of women and science writing. The bust was created and gifted to the Royal Society by Marcus Cornish. That year, Green was also awarded an Engineering and Physical Sciences Suffrage Science Award.
In 2017, Green won the Lise Meitner Medal and Prize of the Institute of Physics.
In 2025, the main belt asteroid was named in her honour.
Personal life
Awards and honours
Publications
External links
|
|