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Mary Ann Sweeney

Mary Ann Sweeney (born 1945)[1] is an American physicist at Sandia National Laboratories. Although her doctoral research concerned astronomy, her work at Sandia has largely concerned inertial confinement fusion and pulsed power.[2]

Education and career

Sweeney is originally from Mercersburg, Pennsylvania; her parents moved to Baltimore when she was a teenager to improve their children's educational prospects. She majored in physics at Mount Holyoke College,[2] graduating in 1967[3] with a bachelor's thesis concerning white dwarf stars. She went to Columbia University for doctoral study but, unable to find a faculty member at Columbia who would take a female student for the topics that interested her, finished her doctorate at Columbia with an outside advisor from Princeton University.[2]

She married a fellow Columbia astronomy student and followed him to Albuquerque, where he had been assigned for his service in the United States Air Force. Seeking a science job nearby, Sweeney applied to work at Sandia National Laboratories, in "anything but secretarial work", and started her career in pulsed power physics there in 1974.[2]

Sweeney chaired the IEEE Plasma Science and Applications Committee from 1989 to 1990,[4] as its first female chair.[2] She also chaired the Committee on Women in Plasma Physics of the American Physical Society from 2010 to 2012.[5]

Contributions and recognition

In 1992, Sweeney was named a Fellow of the IEEE "for contributions to the understanding of plasma opening switches and beam interactions with matter in particle beam accelerators".[6] In 2007, Mount Holyoke College gave her their Alumnae Achievement Award.[3]

Sweeney won the 2013 National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) Defense Programs Award of Excellence for her work as editor-in-chief of the NNSA Stockpile Stewardship and Management Plan.[7] She is one of four coauthors of the book Impactful Times: Memories of 60 Years of Shock Wave Research at Sandia National Laboratories (2017).[8][9]

Selected publications

References

  1. ^ Birth year from Library of Congress catalog entry, retrieved 2021-06-05
  2. ^ a b c d e Aboytes, Iris (16 December 2011), "Mary Ann Sweeney is one of Sandia's woman pioneers" (PDF), Sandia Lab News, p. 12
  3. ^ a b Award Recipients Past and Present, Mount Holyoke Alumnae Association, retrieved 2021-06-05
  4. ^ History of NPSS Committee Membership (PDF), IEEE Nuclear and Plasma Sciences Society, 7 April 2004, p. 63, retrieved 2021-06-04
  5. ^ Committee on Women in Plasma Physics, American Physical Society, retrieved 2021-06-04
  6. ^ IEEE Fellows directory, IEEE, retrieved 2021-06-04
  7. ^ "NNSA Defense Programs Awards of Excellence" (PDF), Sandia Lab News, p. 8, 20 September 2013
  8. ^ Impactful Times tells story of decades of Sandia shock physics research, Sandia National Laboratories, 17 October 2017, retrieved 2021-06-05
  9. ^ Remarkable story of shock wave physics in post-World War II America, American Physical Society, 21 October 2019, retrieved 2021-06-05 – via ScienceDaily