By Nick16 and Liz14
Researcher Vedran Lekic receives Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering for Future Research on Earth's Inner Structure
(18- Important News) 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.

(12- Explanation) “EarthScope is kind of like our Apollo
mission, but not as costly,” Lekic said
Lekic Receives Grant to Continue Research on the Earth and its Inner Contents
(1- Important News) In recognition of his efforts to
integrate computer science and geological studies, 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- Important News) 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.
(15- Explanation) 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.
(2- Background) Lekic has already used the seismic
information to investigate why and how the crust moves over the Earth’s mantle.
As of now, the deepest any machine has been able to dig was about 12 kilometers
into the Earth’s crust, a minuscle fracture of the roughly 6,730 kilometers it
takes to get to the Earth’s core. Using the seismic information helps
geologists see the shapes and sizes of the Earth’s layers.
Lekic seeks to provide greater insight and information on the build of the Earth
(5- Important News) From
this data, Lekic is creating a map that will not only cover all 48 contiguous
states, Alaska and Puerto Rico, but also dive deep into the Earth’s crust and
core.
(13- Explanation) “What we do is comparable to how an
ultrasound let’s us see through our bodies,” Lekic said. “But this lets us see
through the Earth.”
(17- Explanation) Lekic and McDonough are attempting to
harness that energy to create another way to build a model of the Earth.
(16- Explanation) “We are both interested in the energy that
moves the tectonic plates and creates the magnetic shield around the planet,”
geology professor William McDonough said.
(7- Background) Nearly 2 million data lines fill the screen
of Vedran 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.
(6- Background) 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- Explanation) “It sounds magical; it’s like a particle
that exists but you can’t really see,” Lekic said of neutrinos.
Lekic is not new to Fellowships, as this is not his first Award
(9- Background) “The great thing about this fellowship is
its flexibility to go chase a really good idea to wherever it leads,” said Orr,
a Stanford University professor. “It is an incredibly valuable fund and gives
the researchers an opportunity to take off with a good idea instead of waiting
a year or more for federal money.”
(8- Explanation) “If you look at the field of those who get
it and try to figure out from their research summaries and letters which are
the strongest candidate, it’s a difficult task,” said Franklin Orr, chairman of
the Packard Fellowship panel. “We always run out of fellowships before we run
out of wonderful people to give them too.”
(14- Kick Out) Lekic has received several other early career
awards besides the Packard Fellowship.
(3- Kick Out) Other than his seismology research
contributions, Lekic is also a forerunner in the new geological field of
neutrino geoscience.
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