Assistant Professor of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University
Bose is an isotope cosmochemist, investigating the chemistry of asteroids and comets to understand how they originated and processes prevalent in small planetary bodies.
She is an assistant professor in the School of Earth and Space Exploration at Arizona State University and oversees the NanoSIMS (Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometer at the nano-scale), part of the National Science Foundation-funded SIMS Facility.
Professor Bose's current interests include:
Dust condensed in ancient stars called stardust or presolar dust grains (i.e., material that predates the Solar System)
Organic matter in primitive chondritic meteorites and interplanetary dust particles
Volatiles in asteroid regolith and meteorites from Mars, Moon, Vesta, asteroids
Asteroid dust brought back to Earth may explain where our water came from with hydrogen clues
May 02, 2019 16:45 pm UTC| Science
Oceans cover more than 70% of the Earths surface, and scientists argue that the planets interior also contains a lot of water. But where did all this water come from? I and my postdoc Ziliang Jin analyzed grains of the...
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