
Megan Marshall
Miami senior awarded $10,000 astronaut scholarship
Sep 03, 2010Miami University student Megan Marshall, a senior physics and mathematics double major from New Madison, has been awarded $10,000 from the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation.
She is one of 20 students nationwide receiving a scholarship. Miami
is one of 19 schools nationwide eligible for nominating students for
this award.
Marshall was also recently named one of Miami’s 11 Provost’s Student Academic Achievement Award winners.
She has been conducting undergraduate research with faculty mentor
Samir Bali, associate professor of physics, for the past year on a laser
cooling and trapping project, and with faculty mentor Stephen
Alexander, associate professor of physics, for the past three semesters
on a theoretical astrophysics and planetary formation project. She was
also a 2009 summer undergraduate research fellow at the National
Institute of Standards and Technology.
She is a member of Miami’s honors program, has been president of the
Astronomy Club, is currently president of the Society of Physics
Students and is a physics tutor.
Marshall will be presented with her award by a member of the Astronaut Hall of Fame at a public ceremony on Nov. 22.
The Astronaut Scholarship Foundation (ASF) bestows the largest
monetary award given in the United States to engineering and science
undergraduates and postgraduate students based solely on merit.
ASF was founded in 1984 by the six surviving members of America’s
original Mercury astronauts. Since then, more than 80 other astronauts
have lent their support to the program. Its mission is to aid the
United States in retaining its world leadership in science and
technology by providing scholarships for college students who exhibit
motivation, imagination and exceptional performance in the science or
engineering field of their major.
For more information on ASF, go to www.astronautscholarship.org.

