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Sally Oey

Sources:

https://dept.astro.lsa.umich.edu/~msoey/

Sally Oey's research group, Feedback Activity in Nearby Galaxies (FANG), focuses on this massive star feedback to the interstellar and intergalactic medium, on local, global, and cosmic scales.

- Radiative feedback: HII regions, Lyman continuum-emitting galaxies - Chemical feedback: Enrichment processes and galactic chemical evolution - Kinematic feedback: Supernova-driven superbubbles and galactic superwinds - Massive stars and clusters


http://search.proquest.com.ezproxy.pvc.maricopa.edu/docview/200406423?pq-origsite=summon

Now Sally Oey of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor and colleagues have strong support for a size limit in a survey of other clusters within our galaxy and in the nearby satellite galaxy, the Magellanic clouds. They found no star bigger than 200 solar masses (Astrophysical Journal Letters, vol 620, p 143). It is not clear whether the size is limited by the physics of star formation or by the size of the parent gas cloud. Larger stars, perhaps of up to 500 solar masses, may have existed in the early universe, Oey says.


https://dept.astro.lsa.umich.edu/~msoey/Oey_CV.pdf

Phone: +1-734-936-7885 Dept: +1-734-764-3440 Fax: +1-734-763-6317 msoey@umich.edu http://dept.astro.lsa.umich.edu/ ̃msoey RESEARCH INTERESTS University of Michigan Department of Astronomy 830 Dennison Building • Massive star populations: Stellar properties, clustering, field stars, initial mass function, star formation • Massive star radiative feedback: H ii ISM and nebulae, Lyman continuum emitters, photoionization Curriculum Vitae Sally Oey • Massive star mechanical feedback: Multi-SN superbubbles and superwinds, multiphase interstellar and intergalactic medium • Massive star chemical feedback: Galactic chemical evolution of the Milky Way and other galaxies, enrichment processes EDUCATION University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ: Ph.D. 1995, Astronomy Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, PA: A.B. 1986, Physics and Latin POSITIONS University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA Professor of Astronomy, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts (LSA). Associate Professor of Astronomy. Assistant Professor of Astronomy. Lowell Observatory, Flagstaff, AZ, USA Associate Astronomer. Assistant Astronomer. Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, MD, USA 1998 STScI Institute Fellow. Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK Institute Postdctoral Research Fellow in Observational Astronomy. Member, International Astronomical Union Member, American Astronomical Society Member, American Association for the Advancement of Science 09/13 – present 09/09 – 08/13 07/04 – 08/09 02/04 – 06/04 02/01 – 02/04 10/98 – 01/01 11/95 – 09/98 Ann Arbor, MI USA 48109-1042 ADJUNCT AND VISITING POSITIONS University of Michigan Member, Michigan Institute for Research in Astrophysics Elsevier B.V. Scientific Editor, New Astronomy Reviews, an International Review Journal. 01/14 – present 02/11 – 08/14 Cornell University / National Atmospheric and Ionospheric Center (NAIC), Ithaca, NY, USA Visiting Scientist. Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK IoA Visiting Scientist. National Optical Astronomy Observatories (NOAO), Tucson, AZ, USA Kitt Peak National Observatory, Visiting Scientist. University of Michigan Affiliated faculty, Museum Studies Program PRIZE FELLOWSHIPS and AWARDS Elected Senior Fellow, Michigan Society of Fellows (declined) Faculty Early Career Development Award (CAREER), National Science Foundation 1999 Annie Jump Cannon Award, American Astronomical Society and American Association of University Women POSTDOCS AND STUDENTS Postdocs and Postbacs: Dr. Jesu ́s Lo ́pez-Hern ́andez Jessica Kellar Dr. Joel Lamb Dr. Eric Pellegrini Dr. Dan Hanish Dr. Carolina Kehrig Dr. Thomas Bensby Greg Walth Dr. Nichole King Ph.D. Students: Anne Jaskot, Ph.D. 2014: Hi Gas Cycles and Lyman Continnum Optical Depth in Low-Redshift Starbursts Jordan Zastrow, Ph.D. 2013: The Effects of Radiative Feedback from Massive Stars: Ionizing Radiation and Its Fate in Starburst Galaxies Joel Lamb, Ph.D. 2012: Massive Star Formation in Sparse Environments 08/11 – 09/11 04/11 – 06/11 01/11 – 03/11 09/10 – 07/13 2011 2003 – 2008 1999 01/14 – present 01/13 – 08/13 09/12 – 06/13 07/09 – 05/12 12/08 – 03/10 02/08 – 06/09 10/04 – 07/07 01/04 – 06/04 11/02 – 05/03 09/09 – 08/14 09/08 – 08/13 09/06 – 08/12 2013 Ralph Baldwin Prize for best UM Ph.D. thesis in physical science and math Sally Oey 2 TEACHING Astronomy 533, “Structure and Content of Galaxies” Astronomy 461, “Ground-Based Observatories” (at Kitt Peak) Astronomy 402, “Stellar Astrophysics” Astronomy 210, “New Discoveries with the Magellan Observatory” Astronomy 160/201, “Introduction to Astrophysics” Astronomy 120, “Frontiers of Astronomy” First-Year Seminar Astronomy 105/188, “The Cosmos Through the Constellations” Astronomy 102 and 112, “Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe” COMMUNITY SERVICE Elected member, Council of the American Astronomical Society, 2015 – 2018. US National Committee for the International Astronomical Union, 2015 – 2018 AAS Council Representative to National Research Council committee. Elected member, AURA Observatory Council, 2012 – 2015. Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, oversight committee for the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO). STScI Financial Review Committee, Hubble Space Telescope proposals, 2008 – 2010. Committee of Visitors, NSF Division of Antarctic Sciences, 2009. AURA Search Committee for Director of NOAO, 2007. Board of Directors, International Gemini Observatory, USA representative, 2006 – 2009. Committee of Visitors, NSF Division of Astronomical Sciences, 2005. NASA Science Archives Working Group, 2002 – 2004. Scientific review panels: NOAO Time Allocation Committee, 2012 – 2015. AAS Annie Jump Cannon Award, 2009 - 2011. NASA Hubble Space Telescope proposals, 2005, 2001. Panel Co-Chair, 2010 Gemini Board Representative to CONICYT Chile Gemini Fund, Chile, 2007 – 2009. NASA Chandra X-ray Observatory proposals, Panel Deputy Chair, 2006. NASA Chandra Fellowship program, 2004. NSF AST Astronomy and Astrophysics Research Grant program, 2003. NASA Astrophysics Theory Program, 1999, Panel Chair, 2002. DEPARTMENT AND INSTITUTIONAL SERVICE Department Curriculum Committee, 2006–present; Chair, 2009–2010 and 2012–2014 Graduate Preliminary Examinations Committee, 2005, 2006; Chair, 2007, 2014 Department Graduate Recruiting Committee, 2010, 2013, 2014 Lead for Department Long-Range Plan on Undergraduate Program; and Galactic Astronomy Telescope Time Allocation Committee, 2004–06; 2008–09 2009–2011 Sally Oey 3 Academic Affairs Advisory Committee, 2015–2016 Senate Assembly committee to advise the Provost Elected member, Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA), 2012–2015 Executive committee of the Faculty Senate; Elected Vice Chair, 2014–2015 General Counsel Advisory Committee, SACUA representative 2013–2015 Senate Assembly committee to advise the Vice President and General Counsel Development Advisory Committee, SACUA representative 2014–2015 Senate Assembly committee to advise the Vice President of Development Government Relations Advisory Committee, SACUA representative 2012–2014 Senate Assembly committee to advise the Vice President for Government Relations Secretary of the University Advisory Committee, 2010–2012, SACUA representative 2012–2013 Senate Assembly committee to advise the Vice President and Secretary of the University Board of Advisors, UM Museum of Natural History, 2010–present Steering Committee, UM Museum Studies Program, 2010–2013 Elected member, LSA Curriculum Committee, 2009–2012 (on sabbatical 2011) PUBLIC OUTREACH Lead organizer, Winter 2009 Theme Semester, The Universe: Yours to Discover, $50k project co-sponsored with UM Exhibit Museum of Natural History, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, http://www.lsa.umich.edu/universe 2007–2009 Lecturer, Frontiers of Astronomy public lecture series, Cleveland Museum of Natural History Organizer, UM Astronomy / Exhibit Museum of Natural History / Student Astronomical Society 2008 Distinguished speaker series Navajo/Hopi Teacher Outreach Program, Lowell Observatory Three-term lecturer for public course “Introduction to Astronomy,” IoA, Cambridge University of Arizona Astronomy Camps Counselor and Assistant Director. SELECTED RECENT BIBLIOGRAPHY 2005, 2007, 2009 2001 – 2004 1997 – 1998 1991 – 1997 2016 Golden-Marx, J. B., Oey, M. S., Lamb, J. B., Graus, A. S., & White, A. S., “Classical Oe Stars in the Field of the Small Magellanic Cloud,” ApJ, in press; astro-ph/1601.03405 2016 Lamb, J. B., Oey, M. S., Segura-Cox, D. M., Graus, A. S., Kiminki, D. C., Golden-Marx, J. B., Parker, J. Wm., “The Runaways and Isolated O-Type Star Spectroscopic Survey of the SMC (RIOTS4),” ApJ, in press; astro-ph/1512.01233 2015 M. S. Oey, E. W. Pellegrini, P. F. Winkler, S. D. Points, R. C. Smith, A. E. Jaskot, & J. Zas- trow, “H ii Radiative Transfer Revealed by Ionization Parameter Mapping” (Invited), Highlights of Astron. 16, 587 2015 Garmany, C. D., Glaspey, J. W., Braganc ̧a, G. A., Daflon, S., Borges Fernandes, M., Oey, M. S., Bensby, T., & Cunha, K., “Projected Rotational Velocities of 136 Early B-type Stars in the Outer Galactic Disk,” AJ 150, 41 Sally Oey 4 2015 A. E. Jaskot, M. S. Oey, Salzer, J. J., Van Sistine, A., Bell, E. F., Haynes, M. P., “From H I to Stars: H I Depletion in Starbursts and Star-forming Galaxies in the ALFALFA Hα Survey,” ApJ 808, 66 2014 A. E. Jaskot & M. S. Oey, “Linking Lyα and Low-ionization Transitions at Low Optical Depth,” ApJ, 791, L19 2014 Bensby, T., Feltzing, S., & Oey, M. S., “Exploring the Milky Way Stellar Disk: A Detailed Elemental Abundance Study of 714 F and G Dwarf Stars in the Solar Neighbourhood,” A&A, 562 2013 J. Zastrow, M. S. Oey, S. Veilleux, & M. McDonald, “New Constraints on the Escape of Ionizing Photons in Starburst Galaxies from Ionization-Parameter Mapping,” ApJ, 779, 76 2013 J. Zastrow, M. S. Oey, & E. W. Pellegrini, “Single-Star H ii Regions as a Probe of Massive Star Spectral Energy Distributions,” ApJ, 769, 94 2013 M. S. Oey, J. B. Lamb, C. T. Kushner, E. W. Pellegrini, & A. S. Graus, “A Sample of OB Stars that Formed in the Field,” ApJ 768, 66 2013 A. E. Jaskot & M. S. Oey, “The Origin and Escape of Ionizing Radiation in the ‘Green Pea’ Galaxies,” ApJ, 766, 91 2013 J. B. Lamb, M. S. Oey, A. S. Graus, F. C. Adams, & D. M. Segura-Cox, “The Initial Mass Function of Field OB Stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud,” ApJ, 763, 101 2012 A. S. Graus, J. B. Lamb, & M. S. Oey, “Discovery of New, Dust-Poor B[e] Supergiants in the Small Magellanic Cloud,” ApJ, 759, 10 2012 E. W. Pellegrini, M. S. Oey, P. F. Winkler, S. D. Points, & R. C. Smith, “The Optical Depth of H ii Regions in the Magellanic Clouds,” ApJ, 766, 138; astro-ph/1202.3334 2011 ⋆M.S. Oey & J.B. Lamb, “Completing the Massive Star Population: Striking into the Field” (Invited Review), in Four Decades of Research on Massive Stars, eds. L. Drissen, C. Robert, & N. St-Louis, (San Francisco: ASP), 431 2011 J. Zastrow, M. S. Oey, S. Veilleux, M. McDonald, & C. L. Martin, “An Ionization Cone in the Dwarf Starburst Galaxy NGC 5253,” ApJL, 741, L17 2011 M. S. Oey, “On the Origin of the Salpeter Slope for the Initial Mass Function,” ApJL, 739, L46 2011 T. Bensby, A. Alves-Brito, M. S. Oey, D. Yong, & J. Mel ́endez, “A First Constraint on the Thick Disk Scale Length: Differential Radial Abundances in K Giants at Galactocentric Radii 4, 8, and 12 kpc,” ApJ 735, L46 2010 ⋆M.S. Oey & E. Pellegrini, “The High-Mass Stellar Population and Resulting Feedback Effects” (Invited Review), in Stellar Populations in the Cosmological Context, STScI May Symposium, Baltimore, MD, May 3 - 6, 2010, http://www.stsci.edu/institute/conference/spring2010 Sally Oey 5 Revised: January 15, 2016




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