Presidential honoree Jennifer Miksis-Olds joins Marine School

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Asking for time off on your first day at a new job can be awkward.

Research professor Jennifer Miksis-OldsNew research professor Jennifer Miksis-Olds received the prestigious Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) just days after joining 易胜博官网's School of Marine Science and Ocean Engineering.

But accepting an award from President Obama significantly mitigates that unease, Jennifer Miksis-Olds found recently.

Just days after arriving at 易胜博官网鈥檚 S in late April, research professor Miksis-Olds traveled to the White House to collect the prestigious Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) from Obama. Miksis-Olds, a marine acoustician, was among just over 100 federally funded scientists and engineers from around the world to receive the honor, which carries $1 million in research funding.

鈥淛ennifer brings a remarkable scientific background and years of experience that combine a deep understanding of marine mammals and underwater acoustics,鈥 says Larry Mayer, director of the SMSOE and the Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping (CCOM). 鈥淭he impact of sound on marine mammals is an area of great concern and Jennifer鈥檚 expertise will help bring the School of Marine Science and Ocean Engineering to the forefront of research in this area.鈥

Miksis-Olds joins the SMSOE after nearly a decade at Penn State, where she held appointments in colleges of engineering and agriculture as well as the intercollege ecology program and was the founding director of its Center for Marine Science and Technology.

鈥淚 use acoustic technology to study life in the ocean,鈥 she says. Her work has one foot in biology, specifically marine mammal behavior, and the other in using acoustics as a tool for better understanding the ocean and the life within it. It鈥檚 a technology that goes far beyond whale songs.

鈥淚 use acoustic technology to study life in the ocean.鈥

鈥淵ou can learn a lot from listening,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou can derive wind speed, you can get an idea of the surface conditions 鈥 whether it鈥檚 rough or ice covered 鈥 you can get an idea of the animals in an area by the vocalizations they make.鈥

Using hydrophones 鈥 underwater microphones 鈥 as well as sonar and echosounders mounted on moorings, she鈥檚 eavesdropped on oceans around the globe. Here at 易胜博官网, she鈥檒l continue that research and work with acousticians and ocean mappers in the to explore the potential effects of sound, particularly the multibeam sonar used in mapping the seafloor, on marine mammals.

Awardees of Presidential honor, including 易胜博官网 research professor Jennifer Miksis-Olds
Jennifer Miksis-Olds (second from right) was among six researchers sponsored by the to receive the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE). U.S. Navy photo by John F. Williams.

鈥淪ound is a big issue for marine life, because a lot of human use of the ocean produces sound,鈥 she says. She notes that 易胜博官网 has significant expertise in acoustics, naming her Chase Ocean Engineering Lab neighbors Tom Weber, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, and research professor Anthony Lyons.

With a co-appointment to CCOM and SMSOE and an academic 鈥渉ome department鈥 still to be determined, Miksis-Olds is among the first hires of the interdisciplinary SMSOE, most of whose 70-plus faculty have been engaged with marine and ocean engineering research at 易胜博官网 since before the school鈥檚 founding in 2013.

鈥淚鈥檓 looking forward to being part of the Marine School as it grows,鈥 she says. 鈥溡资げ┕偻 is on an upward trajectory when it comes to marine science. It鈥檚 an exciting time to be here.鈥