Space Science
B.A. Physics and Computing, The Open University, U.K.
M.Sc. (by research) Meteoritics, University of Dublin (Trinity College)
Ph.D. Astronomy, Institut d’Astrophysique Spatiale/CNRS, Orsay, and Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris
Formerly
National Academy of Sciences Resident Research Associate, Laboratory for Extraterrestrial Physics, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Maryland, U.S.A. (1999-2002)
Associate Lecturer (Astronomy and Planetary Science) and Adviser for The Open University (1995-1998)
Visiting Researcher, Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris (1994)
Staff member, Armagh Planetarium, Ireland (1986-1994)
Research and Teaching Interests
- Laboratory Astrophysics especially synthesizing and characterizing interstellar dust grain analogs
- Nebular and protoplanetary physics and chemistry especially relating to Herbig Ae/Be stars
- Solid-state physics especially nanophysics of diamond, silicates, and oxides
- Astrobiology including panspermia theory, prebiotic chemistry and the origin of life
- Meteoritics including presolar grains, interplanetary dust particles and cometary chemistry
- Experimental microgravity
- Educational outreach and long-distance learning development.
Publications Include
- Dai, Z. R., Bradley, J. P., Joswiak, D. J., Brownlee, D. E., Hill, H. G. M. and Genge, M. M. (2002). Possible in situ formation of meteoritic nanodiamonds in the early solar system. Nature, 418, 157-159.
- Nuth, J. A., Rietmeijer, F. J. M. and Hill, H.G.M. (2002) Condensation Processes in Astrophysical Environments: The Composition and Structure of Cometary Grains. Meteoritics and Planetary Science, 37, 1579-1590.
- Hill, H.G.M. and Nuth, J.A. (2003). The catalytic potential of cosmic dust: Implications for prebiotic chemistry in the solar nebula and other protoplanetary systems, Astrobiology, 3, 2, 291-304.
- Jones, A.T., d’Hendecourt, L.B., Sheu, S.-Y., Chang, H.-C., Cheng, C.-L and Hill H.G.M. (2004). Surface C-H stretching features on meteoritic nanodiamonds. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 416, 235-241.
- Nuth, J.A. and Hill, H.G.M. (2004). Planetary accretion, oxygen isotopes and the central limit theorem. Meteoritics and Planetary Science, 39, 1-9.
- Hadamcik, E, Renard, J.-B., Rietmeijer, F.J.M., Levasseur-Regourd, A.C., Hill, H.G.M., Karner, J.M. and Nuth, J.A. (2007). Light scattering by fluffy Mg-Fe-SiO and C mixtures as cometary analogs (PROGRA2 experiment). Icarus (accepted for publication).
- Gale, J., Wandel, A. & Hill. H. (2019). A midsummer-night’s dream (nightmare?): Do rapid advances in Computation and AI portend an imminent Singularity, the end of Humanity and a paradigm change in SETI? Abstract for European Astrobiology Network Association (EANA) 19th Astrobiology Conference, Orleans.
- Gale, J., Wandel, A. & Hill. H. Will recent advances in AI result in a paradigm shift in Astrobiology and SETI? International Journal of Astrobiology (Cambridge University Press). Accepted for publication, August 2019.
- Surendra, V. S.; Jayaram, V.; Muruganantham, M.; Vijay, T.; Vijayan, S.; Samarth, P.; Hill, H.; Bhardwaj, A.; Mason, N.J.; Sivaraman, B.: Complex structures synthesized in shock processing of nucleobases – implications to the origins of life. International Journal of Astrobiology, 2022, Cambridge University Press, 20(4), DOI: 10.1017/S1473550421000136
- Thombre, R.; Gupta, D.; Pavithraa, S.; Lo, J.-I.; Chou, S.-L.; Wu, Y.-J.; Ramachandran, R.; Rahul, K.K.; Cheng, B.-M.; Hill, H.; Bhardwaj, A.; Rajasekhar, B.N.; Mason, N.J.; Sivaraman, B.: Vacuum ultraviolet photoabsorption spectra of an in-situ synthesized peptide precursor: hydroxylamine on a cold astrochemical dust analogue.
- Roy, A.; Surendra, V.S.; Ambresh, M.; Sahu, D.; Meka, J.K.; Ramachandran, R.; Samarth, P.; Pavithraa, S.; Jayaram, V.; Hill, H.; Cami, J.; Rajasekhar, B.N.; Janardhan, P.; Bhardwaj, A.; Mason, N.J.; Sivaraman, B.: Shock Processing of Amorphous Carbon Nanodust. Accepted for publication in Advances in Space Research (June 27, 2022)
Other Activities
Evaluator for various NASA-funded proposals, e.g. NASA’s Astrobiology Institute (NAI). Referee for eight peer-reviewed journals including Astronomy & Astrophysics, Astrobiology, and Nature.
Member of several scholarly organizations including the Meteoritical Society and the European Astrobiology Network Association.