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Dr. Kenneth G. Carpenter


Astrophysics Science Division
NASA/GSFC
Code 667, Exoplanets and Stellar Astrophysics
Greenbelt, MD 20771

tel: 301-286-3453
fax: 301-286-1753
e-mail: Kenneth.G.Carpenter @ nasa.gov


Present Position

Astrophysicist,
Project Scientist for Hubble Space Telescope Operations, and
Principal Investigator for Stellar Imager (SI) Vision Mission.

Brief Bio

Dr. Kenneth Carpenter is currently the Hubble Space Telescope Operations Project Scientist and splits his time between those duties, leading the Stellar Imager Vision Mission concept development, and scientific research. His scientific interests include studies of the chromospheres, transition regions, winds and circumstellar shells of cool stars, as well as the calculation of model atmospheres and synthetic spectra and investigations of line fluorescence processes; hardware interests include development and operations of UV spectroscopic instruments and large baseline space interferometers. He is currently a member of the "Exoplanets and Stellar Astrophysics Laboratory" at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.

Educational Background

B.A. (Astronomy) Wesleyan University - 1976 Cum laude
M.A. (Astronomy) Wesleyan university - 1977
Ph.D. (Astronomy) Ohio State University - 1983
Ph.D. Thesis: "A Study of Magnetic, Line-Blanketed, Model Atmospheres"

Research Interests

Ultraviolet spectroscopy. Chromospheres, transition regions and winds of cool stars. Stellar activity. Model atmospheres and synthetic spectra. Line fluorescence processes. Chemically peculiar stars. Instrument development, in particular development and calibration of UV spectrographs. Long-Baseline Imaging Interferometry.

Carpenter is the lead scientist/architect for a long-term study of the outer atmospheres and winds of stars cooler than the sun, utilizing IUE, HST, ground-based and other space-based facilities. Core HST/GHRS results, based on combined GTO and GO programs, have been published in an ApJ series: ``GHRS Observations of Cool, Low-Gravity Stars. I-V''. He has collaborated in studies of stellar activity/chromospheric heating in Hyades F stars and of the origin of Ba-star abundances anomalies with E. Bohm-Vitense (U. Washington) and shared leadership (with H. Johnson/Univ. of Indiana) of large, international consortium study of carbon stars with HST. He has been involved in a multiple-cycle HST program to determine masses of Cepheid variables, published frequently-cited UV reference spectra for cool stars, obtained first measurements of turbulence and plasma downflows in the chromosphere of a cool giant star, and published a definitive summary of fluorescence in cool giant atmospheres (in collaboration with C. Jordan/Oxford U., England and S. Johansson/U. Lund, Sweden). He has also computed detailed, line-blanketed model atmospheres, including magnetic pressure, for upper main sequence stars to study effect of magnetic-field on structure and emergent spectrum and the degree to which line strength peculiarities in chemically peculiar stars can be explained without recourse to anomalous abundances.

Further details on Dr. Carpenter's research can be found here.

Current Projects

Carpenter is currently the Operations Project Scientist for Hubble Space Telescope and provides scientific leadership, advice, guidance, and oversight to the Operations Project Manager and Staff, monitors budgeting activities as related to HST mission scientific requirements and participates in tradeoff decisions, monitors in-orbit performance of flight instruments & other spacecraft systems, provides scientific guidance in the assessment and resolution of spacecraft anomalies, supports preparations for and execution of HST Servicing Missions, supports the development of future science instruments operations, and oversees current STScI science operations. For further information, see the HST Project Science Office Homepage.

He is the Principal Investigator of the Stellar Imager (SI) Vision Mission Study - a concept for a large, space-based UV-optical interferometer designed to image the surfaces of nearby stars, probe their subsurface layers through asteroseismology (acoustic imaging), and improve our understanding of solar and stellar dynamos and thus our ability to predict solar/stellar activity and its effect on the habitability of planets, planetary climates, and life.

Carpenter also leads the Fizeau Interferometer Testbed (FIT) experiment, a ground-based laboratory testbed located in the GSFC Instrument Development Lab. This testbed is developing and testing algorithms for closed-loop control of actuated multi-element (7-20) sparse aperture systems, using feedback from Phase Diversity analysis of the combined beams - a critical technology for future long-baseline Fizeau Interferometers and Sparse Aperture Telescopes.

Prior to this, Carpenter was GHRS Investigation Team Co-Investigator for Science Operations and guided GHRS Operations Development, Science Verification/Guaranteed Time Observer science program implementation, and helped ensure the high science productivity of the Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph.

Selected Publications

Publications: 63 Refereed papers, 57 Other Major Publications and Review Talks, and 68 abstracts of meeting presentations. Selected publications include:

  • Carpenter, K.G., Robinson, R.D. Wahlgren, G.W., Ake, T.R., Ebbets, D.C., Linsky, J.L., Brown, A and Walter,
    F.M. 1991,”First Results from the GHRS: The Chromosphere of Alpha Tau”, ApJ (Letters), 377, L45.

  • Carpenter, K.G., Robinson, R.D., Wahlgren, G.M., Linsky, J.L. and Brown,A.,1994,”GHRS Observations of Cool,
    Low-Gravity Stars. I. The Far-UV Spectrum of alpha Ori (M2 Iab)”, Ap.J., 428, 329.

  • Carpenter, K.G., Robinson, R.D., and Judge, P.G. 1995 “GHRS Observations of Cool, Low-Gravity Stars. II
    Flow and Turbulent Velocities in the Outer Atmosphere of gamma Cru (M3.4 III)”, Ap.J., 444, 424.

  • Carpenter, K.G. and Robinson, R.D. 1996, “GHRS Observations of Cool, Low-Gravity Stars. III. Plasma Flows
    and Turbulence in the Outer Atmosphere of Alpha Ori (M2 Iab)”, Ap.J., 479, 970.

  • Carpenter, K.G., Robinson, R.D., Johnson, H.R., Eriksson, K., Gustafsson, B., Pijpers, F., Querci, F and
    Querci, M, 1997, ‘HST Spectroscopy of the Carbon Star TX Psc’, ApJ, 486, 457.

  • Carpenter, K.G., Robinson, R.D., Harper, G.M., Bennett, P.D., Brown, A., and Mullan, D.J. 1999, “GHRS
    Observations of Cool, Low-Gravity Stars. V. The Outer Atmosphere and Wind of the Nearby K-Supergiant Lambda Velorum”, ApJ, 521, 382.

  • Carpenter, K.G., Schrijver, C.J., Lyon, R.G., Mundy, L.G., Allen, R.J., Armstrong, J.T., Danchi, W.C., Karovska, M., Marzouk, J., Mazzuca, L.M., Mozurkewich, D., Neff, S., Pauls, T.A., Rajagopal, J., Solyar, G., and Zhang, X., 2003 “The Stellar Imager (SI ) Mission Concept”, in “Future EUV/UV and Visible Space Astrophysics Missions and Instrumentation,” eds. J.Chris Blades, Oswald H.W. Siegmund, Proceedings of SPIE, vol. 4854, p. 293.

  • Carpenter, K.G., Schrijver, C.J., Allen, R.J., Brown, A., Chenette, D., Danchi, W.C., Karovska, M., Kilston, S., Lyon, R.G., Marzouk, J., Mazzuca, L.M., Moe, R.V., Walter, F., and Murphy, N., 2004, "The Stellar Imager (SI): A Revolutionary Large-Baseline Imaging Interferometer at the Sun-Earth L2 Point", in "New Frontiers in Stellar Interferometry", Edited by Wesley A. Traub., Proceedings of SPIE, vol. 5491, p. 243.

  • Evans, N.R., Carpenter, K.G., Robinson, R., Kienzle, F., and Dekas, A.E., 2005, "High-Mass Triple Systems: The Classical Cepheid Y Carinae", AJ, 130, 789.

    Publications at the ADS website.