American Institute of Physics
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Press Release

Inaugural Marian Rose Research Scholarship Awarded to Brianna Hauke

FEB 05, 2025
Wyoming University master’s student awarded $15,000 grant for her outstanding initiative and passion for environmental research
Brianna Hauke_headshot.jpg

Brianna Hauke, winner of the inaugural Marian H. Rose Research Scholarship

Hauke

WASHINGTON, Feb. 5, 2025 – Brianna Hauke has been awarded the inaugural Marian H. Rose Research Scholarship from the Society of Physics Students (SPS), an organization of the American Institute of Physics.

“We are pleased to partner with the Heineman Foundation to offer this new scholarship to support and uplift graduate researchers in the physical sciences,” said Michael Moloney, CEO of AIP.

The Marian Rose Research Scholarship honors Marian H. Rose, a career plasma physicist, author, and environmental activist, by providing one graduate student with $15,000 in grant funding.

“As the first recipient of the Marian Rose Research Scholarship, Brianna Hauke has demonstrated exceptional leadership and community engagement despite limited resources,” said SPS director Alejandro de la Puente. “Her dedication and vision position her to make significant contributions to the field of physics and environmental change.”

Hauke is a master’s student studying atmospheric science at the University of Wyoming. She is actively involved with the AIP community as a member of SPS, the American Meteorological Society, and the American Geophysical Union.

“I’ve always been interested in the physical sciences, but I feel like meteorology spoke to me,” Hauke said. “Everyone experiences the weather — it affects so much of our everyday lives, but not a lot of people understand it.”

Hauke graduated from Northland College with a Bachelor of Science in climate science in 2024, with minors in mathematical sciences, physics, and geographic information systems.

“My current research is in satellite remote sensing and cloud physics, and I am interested in going into satellite meteorology using geostationary satellites like the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES),” Hauke said.

Geostationary satellites orbit the Earth at the same rate the Earth rotates, allowing them to always point at the same location. There are two GOES satellites, both trained over the equator looking at North and South America, and they can take images every few minutes, helping meteorologists make predictions.

Because the satellites are far from the Earth, technology needs to make certain assumptions while analyzing images. One of these assumptions flattens the images, presenting all pixels — whether it be land, clouds, or sea — at the same level.

Hauke is working to create a correction factor that adjusts the values to take that into account, such as the height of clouds.

“I’m using deep neural networks to make that correction method, which will help forecasters and climate modelers make better observations,” Hauke said.

According to Hauke, winning the award has validated her choice of study and strengthened her resolve to give back to the climatology community.

“I hope to use my degree and knowledge to help solve problems in satellite meteorology and to help better prepare forecasters and climate modelers to help save lives and be informed on climate change,” Hauke said.

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About the Marian H. Rose Research Scholarship

The Marian H. Rose Research Scholarship of $15,000 supports graduate research in the physical sciences, with a focus on environmental sciences. This scholarship honors Dr. Marian H. Rose, a career plasma physicist, author and environmental activist. Dr. Rose graduated from Barnard College and received her doctoral degree from Columbia University. The scholarship is funded by the Heineman Foundation and administered by SPS. For more information about this prestigious scholarship, please visit https://www.spsnational.org/marian-h-rose-research-scholarship .

ABOUT AIP

As a 501(c)(3) non-profit, AIP is a federation that advances the success of our Member Societies and an institute that engages in research and analysis to empower positive change in the physical sciences. The mission of AIP (s) is to advance, promote, and serve the physical sciences for the benefit of humanity.

ABOUT SPS

The Society of Physics Students (SPS) is a professional association explicitly designed for students and their advisers. Membership, through collegiate chapters, is open to anyone interested in physics and astronomy. Within SPS is housed Sigma Pi Sigma, the national physics and astronomy honor society, which elects members on the basis of outstanding academic achievement.

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