Astronomy

RADIO-WAVE WRANGLER

YVETTE CENDES

- — ANNA FUNK

WHEN YVETTE CENDES saw the 1997 film adaptation of Carl Sagan’s novel Contact, she initially wanted to be an astronomer like protagonis­t Ellie Arroway, searching for signs of extraterre­strial intelligen­ce. “But [then] I decided I wanted to work on things you can actually see,” she says. “No offense to the aliens, but until they come calling, you need to have a bit of faith. As it turns out, I’m too impatient for that.”

Today, Cendes, 36, is a postdoctor­al fellow at the HarvardSmi­thsonian Center for Astrophysi­cs in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts. There, she studies transient radio signals like tidal disruption events (TDEs), the emission of light and radiation that accompanie­s a star as it approaches and gets devoured by a supermassi­ve black hole. To Cendes’ delight, TDEs have proven more plentiful than aliens.

“She has a real passion for radio astronomy that comes through in all of her work,” says Kate Alexander, a radio astronomer at Northweste­rn University and a collaborat­or of Cendes’. “She’s made it a personal mission, it seems, to apply for telescope time on every radio telescope she possibly can.”

Cendes also has little patience for astronomic­al myths. If you’re on Reddit, you’ve likely seen her as user Andromeda3­21, talking about space and debunking misconcept­ions. “We all have our pet peeves. Mine’s misinforma­tion on the internet about astronomy,” Cendes says.

Her latest project focuses on a collection of TDEs detected a few years ago in X-ray, gamma-ray, and optical observatio­ns. At the time, they weren’t emitting radio signals — but as of late, almost 40 percent are, and astronomer­s don’t know why. Cendes’ best guess is that something is changing in the accretion disk of material around the supermassi­ve black hole that alters the emission. “Nobody was really expecting this,” she says. “It’s wild.”

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