In this thread we celebrate lesser known women who have actually contributed to science and not memes like Lovelace, Lamarr or Curie.
>wavelets, when will they learn?
bell
md5: 377a19727ceaea40a28eca3a3a3fbd5c
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Jocelyn Bell discovered pulsars as a graduate student.
Ok so if anon for any reason dwelve into the humanities the first and obvious filter is taboos
They get taboo focused and lost the race for social estructuration what lands them in am irrelevant on my field territory
Marlene Rosenberg is a pretty big contributor to plasma physics over the last 50 years; did a ton of work on space plasmas, plasma waves, dusty plasmas, and her work with Laroussi and Mendis helped lay the groundwork for the development of plasma medicine. Got to meet her at a DPP confrence some years ago and she was also one of the most overtly nice researchers I've ever met; like just a genuinely very pleasant person to know and talk to.