Deborah J. Jackson is an American physicist and Program Manager at the National Science Foundation, and a Fellow of the National Society of Black Physicists. She was the first African American woman to receive a Ph.D. in physics from Stanford University.[1] She is an expert on "electromagnetic phenomena" with a research and development career that spans the full range of the electromagnetic spectrum from materials studies using hard x-ray wavelengths, to nonlinear optics and spectroscopy in the near-infrared, to the fielding of radio frequency instrumentation on deep space missions such as Cassini and Mars Observer.
Early life and education
Jackson was born in Topeka, Kansas to a military family.[2] She attended 13 different schools, earning her high school diploma at an international school in Brunssum, Netherlands.[3]
In 1992 she joined Jet Propulsion Laboratory, where she was initially based in the Spacecraft Telecommunications group.[2][6] She contributed to the Mars Global Surveyor Ultra Stable Oscillator and the Cassini–Huygens Ultra Stable Oscillator.[4] These oscillators were like onboard clocks, and allowed the spacecraft to synchronize their communication frequencies with earth through the use of vibrating crystals.[2] She attended the launch of Cassini–Huygens at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station . Eventually, she joined JPL's Quantum Technologies Group to work on quantum networks and learn about quantum computing.[4] She worked on single photon detectors for use in cryptography.[2] In 1994 she was appointed to the National Research Council committee on women in science and engineering.[3]
She joined the National Science Foundation in 2006. As a Program Director in the Engineering Research Center (ERC) Program Office, she leads the Microelectronics, Sensors, and Information Technologies Cluster.[5] She is an Engineering Research Center Program Director and manages the Engineering Research Center's industrial liaison officer's group.[8][9][10] The ERCs in her management portfolio include:[1]
Current Portfolio:
● TANMS ERC (Translational Applications of Nanoscale Multiferroic Systems), UCLA
● QoLT ERC (Quality of Life Technologies Engineering Research Center), Carnegie Mellon Univ.
● MIRTHE ERC (Mid-Infrared Technologies for Health and the Environment), Princeton Univ.
She has also represented the National Science Foundation at the Korean Science and Engineering Foundation Forum, the African Laser Center and the National Science Teacher's Association.[11] In 2014, she joined the founding editor board of the Translational Materials Research (TMR) Journal.[12]
^ abJackson, D.J.; Franson, J.D.; Gilbert, G.; Milburn, G. (2003). "Introduction to the issue on quantum internet technologies". IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics. 9 (6): 1453–1454. Bibcode:2003IJSTQ...9.1453J. doi:10.1109/jstqe.2003.820942. ISSN1077-260X.