(1) In recognition of his efforts to integrate computer science and geological studies, Vedran Lekic joined the ranks of 17 other early career U.S. scientists and engineers who were awarded a Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering last week.
(4) Lekic is now one of five alumni faculty members who have received the award while at this university, and he will be given access to unrestricted funds of $875,000 over a five-year period to support his extensive research on Earth’s inner structure.
(14) Lekic has received several other early career awards besides the Packard Fellowship.
(15) But now that a large fund has been granted to his work, he hopes to spend more time plotting the seismic information in graphs and models so that he may better understand the Earth, Lekic said.
Past Work Analyzes Movement and Evolution of Continental Plates
(18) As a doctoral student at the University of California, Berkley, Lekic formulated higher-resolution images of the Earth’s mantle structure, stemming from his creation of a global seismic velocity model. Not only is the model able to give geologists a better understanding of plate tectonics, but it also helps explain the movement of continental plates and their evolution, Lekic said.
(10) Lekic’s research is based on ground vibration recordings, which he and his students use to detect the scattering of seismic waves across the North American tectonic plate. In conjunction with the National Science Foundation’s EarthScope Facility network, the data is collected from the 49 states and Puerto Rico and makes up about 3.8 million square miles, Lekic said.
With McDonough, Lekic Hopes to Construct a New, Deeper Model of the Earth's Plates
(7) Nearly 2 million data lines fill the screen of Lekic’s computer every day, each representing seismic waves that are detected from of the more than 1,700 seismic stations around the U.S.
(17) Lekic and McDonough are attempting to harness that energy to create another way to build a model of the Earth.
(17) Lekic and McDonough are attempting to harness that energy to create another way to build a model of the Earth.
(13) “What we do is comparable to how an ultrasound lets us see through our bodies,” Lekic said. “But this lets us see through the Earth.”
Beyond Plate Tectonics, Lekic Works with Subatomic "Neutrino" Particles
(6) Neutrinos are a type of electrically neutral subatomic particle that are created during radioactive decay or some kinds of nuclear reactions. The particle, which was only discovered geologically in 2005 and physically detected for the first time last year, moves through every kind of object, McDonough said.
(11) “It sounds magical; it’s like a particle that exists but you can’t really see,” Lekic said of neutrinos.
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