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Dr. Jim Lochner: Stories and Science
Biography
Jim Lochner first got interested in astronomy when he came across "The
Golden Book of Astronomy" in the 2nd grade. His father explained to him a
picture illustrating Newton's Third Law and on subsequent nights he and his
father went out with a 1.4 inch refractor telescope. Looking upon the rings of Saturn and the Orion
Nebula convinced Jim he had found a career.
Jim received his undergraduate degree in astronomy at Villanova University.
During the summers, he did research at Dartmouth College and at Villanova.
He entered the physics department at the University of Maryland
for graduate work. He did his thesis at NASA/Goddard under Dr. Jean Swank on the aperiodic X-ray variability
from the black hole candidate Cygnus X-1.
For his post-doctoral work, Jim escaped the big city and went to the Space
Astronomy and Astrophysics Group at Los Alamos National Lab. There he
studied long-term variability of X-ray sources using data from the Vela 5B
All Sky Monitor. He also studied the timing properties of gamma-ray bursts
using data from the gamma-ray burst detector on board the
Pioneer Venus Orbiter spacecraft.
Jim joined the HEASARC in
1991 and became part of the
Guest Observer
Facility for the Rossi X-ray Timing
Explorer (RXTE) in 1992. Since then he has
participated in many aspects of the development of the services astronomers
use to carry out and analyze their RXTE observations. In particular, he
oversees the distribution of calibration data and of data from RXTE's All
Sky Monitor. He also assists astronomers in analyzing data
from RXTE when they visit our Laboratory.
Research Interests
Jim's scientific interests revolve around questions of "how and why things
change?" Jim is most interested in understanding the long-term variability and the
timing properties of sources. "Long-term variability" generally refers to
changes which occur over the course of weeks, months, or years and "timing
properties" refers to whether the variability is regular and periodic, or
random (or apparently so). Some questions he ponders include: What causes
the long-term periods that we see in X-ray binaries? Is it a third body in
the system? Does the accretion disk precess? Can we tell the difference?
On a Typical Day at Work
Jim writes for his job just about every day. He writes documentation and
help files for software he has written, feasibility reports for submitted
observing proposals, and responses to e-mailed questions about software and
analysis techniques for the GOF. Jim answers a lot of email. And we do
mean a LOT of email.
In addition to this more technical writing, Jim writes web pages for the Imagine the Universe! and the RXTE
Learning Center web sites. These web sites are meant for the general
public,
from middle school aged kids to college undergraduates, to
introduce them to astronomy and the phenomena studied at the Laboratory for
High-Energy Astrophysics. It can be even more difficult to write for this
kind of audience than to write for other scientists.
On a Typical Weekend Day...
During his free time, Jim enjoys woodworking (his favorite tool is his
router - and Norm Abram is his hero !) and baseball. Jim is also a
storyteller, particularly stories of the
stars and of heroes. Jim is often "homesick" for the Southwest - he
liked the small town life, the open spaces, and dark night skies while he
was at Los Alamos. Jim still enjoys hikes in the woods on sunny days.
Questions and Answers
Q: You mention "summer research" at Dartmouth College and
Villanova while you were an undergraduate. What kind of research WAS it?
Had you already found high energy (X-rays) to be the scientific love of
your life or were you using this time to explore different areas of
astronomy?
A: It was primarily to explore different areas of astronomy.
During the Dartmouth College summer, I did get to go out for a two week
observing run at the McGraw-Hill Observatory on Kitt Peak. That was fun !
So I had not yet found X-rays during those summer stints. However, this
does lead to a more interesting story. Back in my earth science class in
ninth grade, we had to do a research project on some area covered during
the course of the year. Since astronomy was covered, I of course did mine
on a topic in astronomy. I chose the topics of black holes, likely because
this was when there was just beginning to be some observational evidence
for them. About a year before I had to do this project, there was an
article in Scientific American about black holes in low mass X-ray binary
systems, and the evolution of such systems. Cyg X-1 was mentioned in
particular as the prime black hole candidate. So I based my project
primarily on that article. We had to do an oral presentation of our topic
to the class. Mine was scheduled for the Friday before Memorial Day
weekend, as the last talk during our class period, which was at the end of
the day. When I got done going through my explanation of X-ray binary
evolution, the kids did something they hadn't done for any other talk -
they applauded ! (Of course, they may have applauded because school was
out for the long weekend !). But more importantly, my earth science
teacher (for whom I had a lot of respect) said I'd done an excellent job
and that "you should be a teacher - you have the knack for it." It was one
of those moments in which you get validation for your abilities and
aspirations.
Oh, such memories !!
Anyway, jump ahead 11 years or so (during which time I don't give X-ray
binaries or Cyg X-1 any serious thought at all), and what do I find my
thesis project to be on - Cyg X-1 !! When did I realize the connection ?
Not until I finished - 15 years after my presentation in the ninth grade.
Q: What were the results of your post-doc research at Los Alamos
(studying timing properties of gamma-ray bursts)? Did you solve any
mysteries of gamma-ray bursts and what causes them to occur? Your thesis
research seems to have been so successful! Is science always like that?
You set out with a couple of hypotheses and after some number of years of
hard work (blood, sweat, and tears...) you can conclude that one is ...
A: No, I solved no mysteries of gamma-ray bursts. I studied a
phenomenology of bursts which seemed to consist of distinct multiple
events. Since then, a few people have tried to follow through using the
more complete and better data afforded by BATSE, but I'm not familiar with
those results.
Hmm, how does one consider one's research a "success" ? I suppose you have
to consider it a success in terms of coming to a conclusion about a
hypothesis. Even if the conclusion is "That was wrong !" In my thesis,
the chaos analysis was an interesting idea that was hampered by a
methodology that at the time was not fully worked out (and has since been
replaced by more robust methods) and by noisy data. The shot noise
analysis was a necessary extension of ideas that had been discussed. I
consider my analysis "successful" in that I was able to get definite
answers, but somehow the idea embodied in the work just hasn't caught on.
Publication Date: October, 1996
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