{"id":13189,"date":"2025-03-04T00:02:01","date_gmt":"2025-03-04T04:02:01","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/zobi.alcowep.com\/bourtagshdrevxnls658739\/interview-with-sean-colgan\/"},"modified":"2025-03-04T00:02:01","modified_gmt":"2025-03-04T04:02:01","slug":"interview-with-sean-colgan","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/zobi.alcowep.com\/bourtagshdrevxnls658739\/interview-with-sean-colgan\/","title":{"rendered":"Interview with Sean Colgan"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2 style=\"text-align: center;\">Interview with Sean Colgan<\/h2>\n<p><!-- no image --><\/p>\n<p><strong>I\u2019m really pleased that you agreed to take advantage of this opportunity.\u00a0 I don\u2019t recall if I have actually met you personally,\u00a0 but if so, then I apologize for not remembering.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I don\u2019t think so, although you\u2019ve certainly signed things for me.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Well, I guess I have because I do remember seeing your name from time to time on various things. You\u2019ve been at Ames a long time and we\u2019ll have you talk about that in a little bit. The focus of these interviews is not specifically on your work. In fact, it was intended to broaden people\u2019s understanding of who you are and what you do when you\u2019re not at work, because we get compartmentalized and mostly get to know people through our work interactions, so we\u2019ll be touching on your other interests. As you\u2019ve seen if you\u2019ve read some of these, we generally start with your childhood. I try to look up bios and things like that ahead of time to see what I can glean before these interviews but you don\u2019t have a very substantial presence on the web.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m not a very public person.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I did find that out (laughs).<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I did not volunteer for these and I tried to lay low until you hunted me down! (laughs)<\/p>\n<p><strong>Well, I think you\u2019ll be pleased and as I said, you can stay as private as you want during this whole interview.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Sounds good.<\/p>\n<p><strong>We like to start with where you were born, your family at the time, what your parents did, if you have siblings, and then we ask when became aware of or developed an interest in what you have pursued as a career.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>OK, and I\u2019m going to be looking sideways at my notes because I printed out your list of questions and thought about them. Hopefully I won\u2019t mess it up too much. I\u2019m a big believer in the written word. I was born in Oakland, just up the Bay.<\/p>\n<p><strong>So was I, so we have a connection right there!<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Up through my preteen years I grew up split between Oakland and North Lake Tahoe. My dad was a masonry contractor. When school got out in June we would go up to Tahoe where there was lots of work for him, building foundations for homes and so forth. When Christmas break came in school, we came back down to Oakland. We had a home in both places and dad could get work in the winter in the Bay Area. In the middle of every year during my preteen years, I switched between two schools. It was usually a bit of a jolt because the Oakland schools were ahead of the Tahoe schools, so there were a couple weeks of flailing about in January trying to catch up. They all used the same textbooks, but we were a couple of chapters behind at that point and had to catch up.<\/p>\n<p>When I was 12, Dad had established his business well enough at Tahoe that my parents sold both of the houses, built a somewhat bigger one, and we moved to Tahoe permanently. So from seventh grade through high school it was all at the northern end of Lake Tahoe.<\/p>\n<p>I have one sibling, a brother.<\/p>\n<p>And when did I start thinking about becoming an astronomer? I can\u2019t remember exactly, to be perfectly honest. I do remember my parents showing me the constellations. I can remember specifically which constellations my dad showed me and which ones my mom showed me. I can\u2019t remember a time when I wasn\u2019t interested primarily in being an astronomer, but I probably went through an astronaut phase because it was the \u201860\u2019s!\u00a0 I got an astronomy book for my birthday one year and I know it was before I could really read and understand it. I remember looking at the pictures. In thinking about this interview, I went back and looked.\u00a0 That book was published when I was five, so probably by the time I was five I was talking about it enough that I got this book for my birthday. I don\u2019t have any similar books on other topics from that time. All the other books I have from back then are astronomy books for kids.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Well, you were living in Lake Tahoe, which by the elevation and the clarity and lack of ambient lights around you would have had a really good view of the stars and constellations.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Right. It was great. Although before we moved up there full time we were mostly there in the summer, so it didn\u2019t get dark until after my bedtime.\u00a0 When we moved up there full time, then I could go out in the winter and yeah, we had a spectacular view of the southern sky. There were woods but we could see over the trees. We could see the center of the Milky Way, and so forth. I had binoculars and a couple of small telescopes that I\u2019d use, along with a star atlas to point me toward interesting things to look at.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Did you say what your mother did? Did she work outside the home?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Mom was a writer.\u00a0 We traveled each year when we were growing up. She would write travelogues of those trips and try to get them published. She also wrote haiku poetry, and she tried her hand at writing other things. She was published a bit, but not a whole lot. Mom did get one of her travelogues published in the Christian Science Monitor. That was a highlight for her.<\/p>\n<p><strong>And was your brother older or younger?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>My brother is two years younger, and we had somewhat similar trajectories.\u00a0 We\u2019ll get to education later but he majored in physics as well. He followed me in similar universities, but ended up going into material sciences. He is now on the East Coast working for IBM.<\/p>\n<p><strong>That\u2019s great.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>He was named a Master Inventor in 2018.<\/p>\n<p><strong>A what?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A Master Inventor. He has over 200 patents, so IBM honored him with this title.<\/p>\n<p><strong>That\u2019s quite an honor!\u00a0 Your education was interesting because of the split between the two schools.\u00a0 But then at some point, when you went to college, you had to declare a major. You said you had already developed an interest in astronomy, so did you pursue that science discipline right off the bat?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I went to UC Riverside for two years, and then I transferred to Caltech. My freshman year\u00a0 I really nailed down my choice for astronomy. I remember going to the Career Center and taking an interest survey, which has nothing to do with what you\u2019re able to do. It just asks what you\u2019re interested in doing, and it came up as physicist or musician.\u00a0 I have no musical skills so that pointed me in the other direction. I thought briefly about geology, since my dad had been a geology major, but I really settled on astronomy at that point, which is why I transferred. Riverside didn\u2019t have an astronomy major,\u00a0 they only had a physics major. I really wanted to get an astronomy background and start on it early.<\/p>\n<p>My time at Caltech was probably the toughest two years I\u2019ve ever had. I was behind because I had gone to Riverside for two years and the Caltech student body was extremely competitive. Caltech was not generous with their transfer credits. I ended up taking a very heavy course load, but I did make it out in two years. From there I applied to a number of grad schools. I settled on Cornell for a couple reasons: First of all because they had groups working in the areas\u00a0 of astronomy I thought I was interested in, which were radio and infrared. Second of all, after four years in southern California I really wanted to go to a more rural setting to continue my education.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I have to ask this because when we\u2019ve interviewed others who have gone to Cornell, most of them have mentioned the influence of Carl Sagan and I just wondered if that figured into your choice, or was he gone by the time you went there?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Well, I\u00a0 did meet Carl, at a second year reception he threw for the grad students.\u00a0 He was gone most of my first year working on Cosmos the television show. He had taken a leave of absence and wasn\u2019t around. When he came back he threw a reception for all of us, and I got to shake his hand. He was a planetary scientist, of course, and that was not where I was aiming my trajectory.\u00a0 I didn\u2019t see him a whole lot other than that one reception. Although from time to time the kind of people you really don\u2019t want wandering around the halls would come around the building looking for Carl Sagan. Security would chase them down and get them out. These are really my most distinct memories of Carl.<\/p>\n<p><strong>And your PhD was in astronomy, not physics<\/strong>?<\/p>\n<p>It was in astronomy and my dissertation was on radio astronomy. I did it almost exclusively at Arecibo (<em>Arecibo Observatory, National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center, Arecibo, Puerto Rico<\/em>) with a little bit at the VLA (<em>Very Large Array Radio Telescope facility, near Socorro, New Mexico<\/em>). I got to work with some really smart people at Cornell, observational and theoretical.<\/p>\n<p><strong>At this point we usually inquire about the connection or the influence, that brought you from your PhD to NASA Ames.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>My degree was in radio astronomy but the other interest I always had along the way, which I hadn\u2019t been able to look into, was infrared astronomy. Getting post docs is very competitive, back then we called them NRC\u2019s. The NRC offer from Ed Erickson\u2019s group at Ames was the best offer, so I came out for that. It wasn\u2019t a sure thing, there was back and forth and the highest rated candidate had to turn down the job before they would make me an offer.\u00a0 But fortunately for me the highest rated candidate was my office mate at Cornell. I knew he was going to turn down the offer as soon as he got another one he wanted, so I was aware a little bit in advance of getting the call from Ed that things had worked out.<\/p>\n<p><strong>And Ed was your advisor?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Ed was my advisor. So I came and did two years as an NRC and then continued working with the group. I had made myself sufficiently useful that when I was ready to apply for other jobs, Ed offered me a raise if I\u2019d stay with the group and continue working. That was a really good time. We flew on the KAO (<em>Kuiper Airborne Observatory<\/em>). They didn\u2019t really have facility instruments, so we had our own instrument, but we did support observers from outside our group. We probably had more flights than any other instrument on the KAO during that period. It was a lot of flights. We had to operate it ourselves. All of us had our own particular jobs on flights. We did everything from prepping for the observations, writing proposals, all the way through to seeing them published. We were a small team: Ed Erickson, Mike Haas; Jan Simpson, and Bob Rubin on the science side helped out. We had a shop guy, Gene Beckstrom, and others after him.\u00a0 We had a lab technician, Jim Baltz. Dave Hollenbach would also work with us, and that was very rewarding. He was a very sharp guy in terms of theory, ideas and projects to do. Here is a photo of some of us with our instrument rack getting ready for a KAO flight:<br \/><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.nasa.gov\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/sean-colgan-1.jpg\" alt=\"Sean Colgan with his family\"><br \/><strong>So you came in on an NRC postdoctoral fellowship in the mid-\u201880\u2019s?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Yes, I started on October 6th, 1986.<\/p>\n<p><strong>And your first work was on the KAO and then probably a decade later you continued on SOFIA (<\/strong><em>Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy<\/em><strong>)?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>It was \u201895 or \u201896 when they shut down the KAO to use the funding for SOFIA development. I remember the meeting still. It was in the upstairs auditorium and they came in and announced they were shutting the KAO down. I think it was Dave Morrison, who was the division chief, who told us not to whine about shutting it down because planetary missions sometimes had years when they didn\u2019t have their facilities. In this case it was only going to be two years and we would be up and flying in 1997. Of course, as we know, it was more like ten years after that before we were even close to flying.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Yes, I thought the same thing, that it was not going to be two years. It always takes longer than that.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Well, I don\u2019t think anybody thought it was going to be as many years as it was.<\/p>\n<p><strong>But you flew on both the KAO and SOFIA?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I had ninety nine flights on the Kuiper (KAO) because I kept track of them, and on SOFIA I had two flights, so I was not a flyer on SOFIA. It was more of a facility observatory, and the people who flew a lot were really part of the observatory. They were operating the telescope or operating a science instrument. My flights on SOFIA were because I had written some software for the GREAT Instrument (<strong><em><u>G<\/u><\/em><\/strong><em>erman <strong><u>Re<\/u><\/strong>ceiver for <strong><u>A<\/u><\/strong>stronomy at <strong><u>T<\/u><\/strong>erahertz Frequencies, a modular dual-color heterodyne instrument for high-resolution far-infrared spectroscopy<\/em>) to help them interface with SOFIA. I was along on\u00a0 those commissioning flights for GREAT in case my software broke. They wanted me on board. Interestingly by the rules at the time, I wouldn\u2019t be allowed to actually fix the software in flight because it was flight software and had to go through all the reviews. None of the people who could do the reviews were on the airplane, but I could see how it broke and maybe I could suggest workarounds. It was not nearly as much fun for me as the KAO. I didn\u2019t really have a job. The software had issues from time to time, but it basically worked. Everybody else had jobs, so for me it was less interesting, which is why I didn\u2019t make a huge effort to keep flying on SOFIA.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Did you stay on the SOFIA project as a somewhat non flying support person?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Yes, from when the Kuiper stopped flying until about, well now, my primary work on SOFIA has been first with the project science team during development \u2013 trying to make sure they met our requirements, helping everybody understand our requirements, trying to make sure they weren\u2019t making any huge mistakes. They made them anyway, especially when they didn\u2019t listen to us, but we did our best. During the early years of SOFIA, I was also on the Ames team developing AIRES \u2013 a facility Science Instrument for SOFIA. I led the software effort, but the development was canceled in 2001. I then got involved with the software that people would use to propose to SOFIA, the proposal software, the software to estimate how long you should be asking for time, the sensitivity of the instruments, pieces of software like that. I worked with Dave Goorvich. We got software from other observatories as starting points and then modified them for SOFIA, software \u201cre-use\u201d they called it. And that was basically my main job throughout SOFIA\u2019s lifetime. Once we developed those, the USRA <em>(Universities Space Research Association<\/em>) folks built their team around maintaining them and I joined that team because I\u2019d been working on this software for so long. I also got into the package I mentioned to help GREAT interface to SOFIA. It basically made SOFIA look like the telescope that the GREAT team had been using for years, an observatory called KOSMA. We called it the translator and it translated KOSMA commands into SOFIA commands; then SOFIA housekeeping back into KOSMA housekeeping, so they didn\u2019t need to change their software to work with SOFIA. As the aircraft started flying, it became quite clear that I was oversubscribed. I was not meeting my deadlines for either of those two efforts, so I gave up the translator. They hired another fellow to maintain that, although I stayed in touch with it for some years, helping him when he had questions and so forth. I then focused my main effort over on SOFIA\u2019s DCS (<em>Data Cycle System<\/em>) side.\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p><strong>What has been your most interesting work here at Ames?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I\u2019d say it was flying on the KAO, but very specifically it was Supernova 1987A which occurred after I had been here for only a couple of months. It went off in February of 1987. Nobody really knew what it would look like in the infrared to an instrument on an observatory like the KAO, so it was obviously a huge deal since it was the closest supernova for hundreds of years.\u00a0 Our team just completely redirected\u00a0 to carry out observations of the supernova.\u00a0 Dave Hollenbach and I worked together to try and figure out what we would see. We wrote up the science portion of the proposal,. For these observations, our instrument \u2013 the CGS (<em>Cooled-Grating-Spectrometer<\/em>) \u2013 had to be fairly substantially reworked in the sense that the grating needed to be changed to go to lower resolution and the detectors needed to be changed to get wider bandwidth and go to shorter wavelengths. Ed and Mike worked long days, weeks, and months to make all of those changes happen. In our proposal we made some predictions about which lines we could see, mostly iron lines, and which ionization states. We put that in the proposal, which was accepted. We then wrote up the proposal as a separate paper. When we went down and did the observations, we actually got some of it right. Surprisingly, iron was indeed bright. We thought we\u2019d be seeing all different ionized states of iron, from singly, doubly, triply ionized iron, when in fact it was very much concentrated in singly ionized iron with a little bit of doubly ionized iron, there was a faint line there. We had gotten the temperatures right, but we didn\u2019t quite get the ionization right. We were in the ballpark, so I think this was really the most interesting work in that when we started nobody had really seen anything like it before. We were starting from very basic principles, and we followed that all the way through to a nice series of papers. We went down for three different epochs because the lines were changing with time as the supernova ejecta expanded. We obtained three sets of measurements, which resulted in three papers.<\/p>\n<p>What I\u2019m currently working on? Well, SOFIA is, of course, shut down and I am working as part of the shutdown process. We\u2019re trying to reprocess a lot of the data to bring it up to standard, especially the older data. We learned more about the instruments as time went on, so we can now do a better job of reducing the data. I\u2019m helping out with reducing the data, getting it into the archive as we shut down, and of course, writing proposals.<\/p>\n<p>What comes next? So far I\u2019ve collaborated mainly with Naseem, whom you have spoken to, Sarah Nickerson, whom you also have spoken to, and Doug Hoffman (whom we\u2019ve also spoken to). So that\u2019s proposals.<\/p>\n<p><strong>How is your work relevant to Ames and the NASA mission?\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Well, I\u2019ve worked on NASA missions almost my entire career, so I think that\u2019s the closest to relevance as you can get.<\/p>\n<p><strong>What is a typical day like for you?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I mostly work, well before the pandemic in my office, but now it\u2019s back and forth. I do like to come into the office although this week is a little different. That\u2019s why we\u2019re doing this interview from home. My wife is out of town and I like to work at home on those weeks just to keep the dog out of trouble. So I\u2019m at a computer. I\u2019m a software guy and a data analysis guy, not a lab guy, so I work at the computer. I actually have several computers on my desk. I look like a real developer (laughs). If you see my desk, I\u2019ve got a couple of big screens and couple of computers underneath hooked up to different things and I can switch them around. So that\u2019s a typical day, but at home it\u2019s a little tougher. I don\u2019t have a desk that can really manage the big screens, so I\u2019ve just got one little laptop screen to work with.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Is home close enough that the pandemic shut down of the Center didn\u2019t really save you a whole lot of commute time?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I live across the Bay in Newark, which physically is not far, but traffic wise is not good. I typically come in later and stay later because that works with my wife\u2019s schedule and also works with the traffic. We\u2019re not so close that it\u2019s easy. I hated during the pandemic having to work at home all the time because of the small screen and with no room to spread out piles of paper or stay organized. That was definitely a challenge. I was very glad to get back on site.<\/p>\n<p><strong>What do you like most and least about your job?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Most would be doing science, but I also enjoy coding. Least is probably the standard sorts of things that most people whine about when given any opportunity.\u00a0 All the stuff that goes with the job that isn\u2019t science or coding, like IT security and paperwork. Right now I\u2019m in the midst of training, taking courses I\u2019ve taken every year for the last ten years, which gets a little old after a while, things like that. But somebody thinks you need to do it, and I hope it makes us a better organization for everybody doing it.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Do you have a favorite memory from your career? Or perhaps a research finding or breakthrough, or an unexpected research result?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>My favorite memory would be the Supernova 1987A work in general. We found some unexpected things there and we got some things right.<\/p>\n<p><strong>If you could have a dream job, what would it be?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>My dream job is pretty close to what I have. Pretty close without all the extra stuff.<\/p>\n<p><strong>What advice would you give to someone who wants a career like yours?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Of course you\u2019ve got to work hard, and you need to have an aptitude for it. It\u2019s a very competitive field, so you\u2019ve also got to realize that luck, or being in the right place at the right time, can be a factor in whether you continue or not.\u00a0 I\u2019ve had colleagues who were very good at what they do, but they just weren\u2019t in the right place at the right time. They ended up leaving the field or doing something less than what they hoped. Some things are just out of your control.<\/p>\n<p>I did get lucky. I was in the right place at the right time. I flew on the Kuiper, and I developed skills. When SOFIA started, those skills were very much in demand.\u00a0 That was my right place, right time moment, which is when I joined the civil service.\u00a0 I had been a contractor\u00a0 after my NRC ended through 1997. I became a civil servant then because there was so much work on SOFIA. I don\u2019t know if that\u2019s\u00a0 helpful advice, but it\u2019s just my take on things.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Well, you\u2019re right. There\u2019s something to being in the right place, at the right time and being prepared, but there\u2019s always the serendipity aspect, which is just part of life. You could have wound up somewhere else and been just as happy, you know.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Oh yes, It doesn\u2019t necessarily relate to happiness, but you\u2019ve got to make the best with what you have.\u00a0 I do feel lucky about that.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Would you like to share anything about your family? Kids, pets, activities? You mentioned a dog?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m going to mix the order up a little bit.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Sure, go ahead.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The accomplishment I\u2019m most proud of that\u2019s not science related would be 40 years of marriage to my fabulous wife. We just celebrated our 40th anniversary about a week and a half ago.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Congratulations! That is indeed an accomplishment.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>So, no children but we do have a dog, a little Welsh Corgi. She\u2019s our second corgi and she is just great. We do enjoy traveling. Typically, we\u2019ll go on vacation in August. often to Europe. We\u2019ve visited the UK five or six times, France a couple of times, Italy a couple of times. My father-in-law was born in Hungary, so we\u2019ve gone there a couple times. Here is a photo of us at Lake Louise in 2019, with our Corgi.<br \/><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.nasa.gov\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/sean-colgan-2.jpg\" alt=\"Sean Colgan and his wife and Corgi at Lake Louise in 2019\"><br \/>What do we do for fun the rest of the time? Besides leisure travel, I enjoy gardening. We also enjoy musical events.\u00a0 We have season tickets to the San Jose Opera, for example, and we\u2019ll go up to San Francisco for concerts a couple of times a year. We probably have an event every other month.\u00a0 During the pandemic, the restaurants and movie theaters were closed, but wineries with outdoor spaces were open.\u00a0 They started serving food during the pandemic, and they allowed dogs, so we got in the habit of doing a lot of wine tasting on weekends just to get out. We still do some of that. To celebrate our 40th, we went up to Napa and tasted a lot of great wines. (laughs)<\/p>\n<p><strong>You mentioned that you\u2019re not particularly musical, so you don\u2019t play an instrument or anything, but you enjoy music and opera.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I enjoy listening to music. I played instruments as a child but had no particular talent for it, so. . . .<\/p>\n<p><strong>Do you like to read? And if so, any particular genre?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I read a fair bit, and it\u2019s sort of divided. For entertainment, I\u2019ll read fantasy and science fiction, but when we go on our trips, I\u2019m always buying books about what we\u2019re doing. For example, if we go to France and visit cathedrals, I\u2019ll buy books about how they built cathedrals; or in England I\u2019ll read about old Stone Age tombs. Everybody\u2019s heard about Stonehenge, but there are stone circles and other stacks of stones, big ones, all over the landscape, so I will buy books and read about them. I have books about Roman battle tactics, etc. Oh yes, and I also have a lot of geology books, depending on where we go. When we went to the Canadian Rockies, I got a lot of geology books about that locale. I bring those home, stack them up, and read them, hopefully before the next trip. So yes, a lot of reading. When my wife travels, sometimes I\u2019ll go hiking. She\u2019s gone up to 15-20 weekends a year\u00a0 She\u2019s a textile artist.She teaches lacemaking, which is the way they used to make lace by hand, before machines. There are groups around the country that enjoy lacemaking, so she travels to\u00a0 teach workshops for them on weekends.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Wow, that\u2019s fascinating<\/strong>!<\/p>\n<p>This week, she\u2019s actually up in Sparks, next to Reno, where the National Convention is going on. It moves around every year, but this year it\u2019s relatively close. She travels a lot for that, which keeps her busy. When she\u2019s away, our dog and I will sometimes go for hikes, if we don\u2019t have too much other stuff to do. Interestingly,\u00a0 we are not the only astronomer-lacemaker couple in the world (laughs). There\u2019s an Australian couple \u2013 Ron and Jay Ekers \u2013 with Jay a lacemaker and Ron an astronomer. We had dinner with them once when they were visiting in the Bay Area because our wives knew each other. My wife had once traveled down to teach in Australia. Normally she just travels around the U.S., but she has done some international trips.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Now, is this manual lacemaking with needles and thread or . . . ?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>There can be needles and thread. That\u2019s one form of it. What my wife teaches is \u201cbobbin lace\u201d, which is made on a pillow usually stuffed with straw. Two bobbins are connected by a thread with many of these pairs used to weave threads together to create the pattern. Photos of Louise\u2019s designs are on her website \u2013 https:\/\/colganlacestudio.com\/. Here\u2019s a photo of what a lace pillow looks like.<br \/><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.nasa.gov\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/sean-colgan-3.jpg\" alt=\"Lace pillow for lacemaking\"><br \/><strong>Interesting. And when did she get interested in this? Was it something she learned as a child, from her mother or grandmother?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>No, it was at Cornell. She was in grad school there, which is where we met.<\/p>\n<p><strong>And what was her course of study?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>She was in a Master\u2019s program for historic preservation, basically how to preserve old buildings, of which there are many in upstate New York and few in the Bay Area. She had finished her class work, and I still had several years to go on my dissertation. She looked around for something to fill her time, and one of her friends \u2013 a colleague in her department \u2013 had already taken this up, and brought her to a meeting. She started taking classes from a local teacher, and by the time we moved west, she was well-versed. Not many people out here knew how to do it, so she started taking on students.<\/p>\n<p><strong>So I\u2019m calculating back, since I\u2019m a numbers guy, that if you just celebrated your 40th anniversary, then you must have married her while you were still in grad school?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Yes, about halfway through grad school, in 1983.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Interesting. So you\u2019re a little bit responsible for her developing this interest in lacemaking?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I wouldn\u2019t claim any of that.<\/p>\n<p><strong>But you\u2019re responsible for giving her the time to develop this interest in lacemaking that she has done so well in.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>It was all her effort. If anything, I made conditions difficult for her, and she found her way out (laughs). That\u2019s probably the way I would phrase it.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Fair enough. But it\u2019s very interesting. I like when we can poke around a little bit and find out interesting things, because then people who read this will say, \u201cWell, I didn\u2019t know that he went there or that his wife does lacemaking or the other things that you\u2019ve talked about. That\u2019s part of the purpose of these interviews.\u00a0 Who or what inspires you?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>That was a real easy one for me: the night sky.\u00a0 It\u2019s not so great in the Bay Area most times, but there\u2019s so much going on up there. I mean, it\u2019s really all laid out for you. Since I studied and read about\u00a0 a lot about the sky as a kid, I know my way around it. a I also know fun little facts, so that\u2019s entertaining to recall as well. When you get up in the mountains, of course it\u2019s just beautiful.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I feel the same way. I don\u2019t see how anyone can look up at and ponder the night sky and not be just fascinated by it. The questions that come up about what it is, how it came to be, what its purpose is, if there is one, and all of that is just fascinating.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Yes, I agree.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Do you have a favorite image, of space or anything that is particularly meaningful to you?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>You know I don\u2019t have one now. I mean, there are a lot of very nice ones out there. A big favorite I remember as a kid was a photo of H and Chi Persei, which is a double cluster of stars, not globular clusters but open clusters. It\u2019s very colorful, with red stars and white stars and blue stars in the image \u2013 and just imagining it so far away, but these particular stars are so close together. I don\u2019t know much about it, but something about it just impressed me. A photo like what I remember is at <a href=\"https:\/\/www.astrobin.com\/337742\/\" rel=\"noopener\">https:\/\/www.astrobin.com\/337742\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The reason we ask about images is because we like to include them in the post, especially about things you\u2019ve talked about.\u00a0 You mentioned for example, the Supernova 1987A. If a picture from SOFIA came out of that it would be a great addition to this interview. And then maybe you have a picture of you and the corgi on a hike, or your wife doing lace work, anything like that would be great.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Well, we\u2019ll work on that.<\/p>\n<p><strong>[Photo thoughts: The three of us from Lake Louise, link to H &#038; Chi Persei photo on the web, Lace Pillow showing bobbins]<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>That would be for when you return it after editing.\u00a0 By the way the transcript is a living document so you can make changes right on it and that\u2019s how it will go in. It isn\u2019t all that formal, we\u2019re not tracking edits or anything like that. We\u2019ll add your pictures and get to a point where it\u2019s set up as it would be when it gets posted and then we\u2019ll send it to you for a final check.\u00a0 We\u2019re also several months out in terms of the queue of those that are going to be posted, so it won\u2019t be immediate.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Good.<\/p>\n<p><strong>We\u2019ve posted about 50 of these, but we\u2019ve done another 20 that are in various stages of being made ready. We\u2019ve sent them out but haven\u2019t gotten them back yet because everybody\u2019s so busy.\u00a0 We do have a last question and that is do you have a favorite quote? One that you find meaningful, or witty, or clever, that kind of thing?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I did think about it. Sometimes you asked the question in the online ones about inspirational quotes and this is definitely not inspirational.<\/p>\n<p><strong>It doesn\u2019t have to be.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I was hoping that because you didn\u2019t say it here. My favorite quote is one my mom said a lot when I was growing up. She always attributed it to her father. I actually looked it up on the web, because I would have thought Mark Twain perhaps said it. It doesn\u2019t seem that anybody famous has said it though. The reference is in a book from just ten years ago. The quote is: \u201cThe reward for good work is more work.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>Ah, I like that. That\u2019s clever and witty and seems to be true.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Right.<\/p>\n<p><strong>One of my favorite quotes which I don\u2019t think I put into my post because there\u2019s so many of them is from Mike Griffin, former NASA Administrator. He was talking with the press, I think about risk management and why we do things that don\u2019t always work out. He was explaining that there\u2019s always a risk, and if you don\u2019t accept the risk, then you don\u2019t make progress, but they kept questioning him and pushing back on that idea. And he said, \u201cI can explain it to you, but I can\u2019t understand it for you.\u201d\u00a0 And I thought, that\u2019s a good line!<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Anyway, you ran the table here on the questions and I appreciate that you prepared ahead of time and wrote some notes down, which made the interview go very well.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>As I said, I prefer the written word. I\u2019m not as good at thinking on my feet.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Is there something that you wish we had asked or had put down as a topic that we didn\u2019t, that you would like to add here? And you can certainly add or change anything when we send this back. There\u2019s a note on the transcript that you have full creative control. So if you wanted to say something but didn\u2019t, you can type in an entire extra paragraph or extra question, or remove and cut out an entire section.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>And\u00a0 with that, I\u2019ll take the recording and start putting it on a paper and within a couple of weeks, I\u2019ll send you the initial draft and then you can do with it as you wish and send any pictures or anything that relate to things that you talked about and then we\u2019ll get it ready and put it in the queue and eventually you\u2019ll get perhaps a few of your entitled 15 minutes of fame when this goes up. I will add that it goes up on the public side of the of the website so that your family or your friends, anybody can access it and read it.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>So if somebody googles names of interviews you\u2019ve done, the links to the interviews come up.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Well, I hope that doesn\u2019t cause you heartburn<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ve thought about that as I was phrasing my answers, and changed some passwords so I can include names in the photo captions<\/p>\n<p><strong>I hadn\u2019t thought of that aspect of it, but you\u2019re probably right.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Yeah.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I never know what\u2019s going to touch someone\u2019s concerns.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Well, just to be careful.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(Mark) There\u2019s another thing that even after we publish, we can still edit them years into the future. Everything on the main sites can be changed at any given moment. Also, Fred, just to note, our interviews rank pretty high on the Google rankings. Usually when you Google someone\u2019s name and then NASA, our interviews are near the top of their results, like on the first screen that comes up.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>(Fred) Oh, really? I didn\u2019t know that.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>(Mark) Yeah. This is a pretty good series, people check it out a lot.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Which means that people googling names are clicking on the interviews and reading them.<br \/><strong>(Mark) People read these a lot.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>(Fred) The other series I do for the website is \u201cInteresting Fact of the Month\u201d.\u00a0 Steve Howell suggested that would be a nice addition as we try to attract traffic to the website, and I heard a year or so ago that it was the top item on the code ST website, it got the most hits.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>(Mark) Yes, you\u2019ve got spots one and two on your side projects!<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>(Fred) Well, Sean, I appreciate that you were able to overcome your initial hesitation and take the time to work with us on this and I think you\u2019ll be pleased with how it comes out. Thank you very much for being so organized.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Thank you for your time.<\/p>\n<p><em>Interview conducted by Fred Van Wert and Mark Vorobets on June 29, 2023<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"wpematico_credit\"><small>Powered by <a href=\"http:\/\/www.wpematico.com\" target=\"_blank\">WPeMatico<\/a><\/small><\/p>\n<p><a  href=\"https:\/\/www.nasa.gov\/general\/interview-with-sean-colgan\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Get The Details&#8230;<\/a><br \/>\nCiara C. Fitzpatrick  <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>I\u2019m really pleased that you agreed to take advantage of this opportunity.\u00a0 I don\u2019t recall if I have actually met you personally,\u00a0 but if so, then I apologize for not remembering. I don\u2019t think so, although you\u2019ve certainly signed things for me. 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