Stefanie Milam – Project Scientist for Policy and Science Community, NASA
Project Scientist for Policy and Science Community, NASA
Dr. Stefanie Milam is a Planetary Scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland and serves as the James Webb Space Telescope Project Scientist for Policy and Science Community.
Milam is from Houston, Texas, where she first fell in love with Science, Astronomy, and NASA through multiple visits to NASA's Johnson Space Center. She obtained her B.S. in Chemistry from Kansas Wesleyan University in Salina, Kansas in 2002, and completed her Ph.D. in Chemistry at the University of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona in 2007. She then pursued a postdoctoral position at NASA Ames Research Center to conduct laboratory studies of interstellar ice analogs with applications to astrobiology. Milam first started at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in 2010 as a research scientist.
Milam works in the Astrochemistry Laboratory at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. She is an expert in rotational spectroscopy, observations, and laboratory astrophysics of the interstellar medium, star formation regions, protoplanetary disks, and small bodies in the solar system (namely comets) with an emphasis on isotopic fractionation and astrobiology of primitive materials.
Milam maintains a renowned observational program with telescopes around the world, and with space-based observatories, to routinely observe and characterize comets as part of an international collaboration. She also has a laboratory dedicated to simulate interstellar/cometary/planetary ices and detect trace species employing the same techniques used for remote observations to help constrain the chemical complexity of the ices, the amount of processing that occurs, and interpret past, present, and future data from missions that observe ice features, including Webb.
In March of 2012, Milam was selected as the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Planetary Science Liaison. Under this role she helped establish the next generation space telescope as a planetary science resource, engaged the community in future observations and preparations, and assisted the project to ensure the capabilities of the observatory were suitable for solar system observations. This role transitioned in July 2014, when Milam was appointed as the Webb Deputy Project Scientist for Planetary Science to continue this effort through launch. She worked through the Project Science Team as an in-house, planetary science expert to evaluate science and operations trades and design decisions that were required to finalize Webb's solar system observing capabilities.
In May 2024, Milam was selected as the JWST Project Scientist for Policy and Science Community where she will be developing and improving policies for selecting and executing JWST observations, and seeking feedback from the JWST user community.
Milam enjoys sampling local foods all over the world during travel, hiking, and spending time with her three dogs.