Jane Greaves

Jane Greaves is a Professor of Astronomy based at Cardiff University. While at the University of St Andrews she led the team which discovered a protoplanet within the protoplanetary disk around the young star HL Tauri.[1]

Jane Greaves
OccupationAstronomer
Academic background
EducationUniversity of Oxford,
Queen Mary University of London
Academic work
InstitutionsUniversity of St Andrews
Cardiff University (2015-)

In 2017, she was awarded the Fred Hoyle Medal and Prize of the Institute of Physics for her "significant contribution to our understanding of planet formation and exoplanet habitability through her seminal imaging of debris discs around Sun-like stars and solar system bodies using far-infrared telescopes".[2]

In 2018, she announced preliminary results from studies of the presence of phosphorus in supernova remnants, indicating that the level of phosphorus in the Crab Nebula is much lower than in Cassiopeia A, leading to speculations that a paucity of phosphorus might limit the formation of alien life.[3]

On September 14th 2020, her team announced the discovery of phosphine in the atmosphere of Venus.[4]

References


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