Some people enter the swimming pool with caution, dipping their toes to gauge the temperature before slowly immersing themselves. Others, like Stephanie Flynn, prefer to jump right in.
Ms. Flynn, a competitive swimmer with ±«ÓătvĂs AUS championship womenĂs team, brings that same philosophy to her work here at ±«Óătv. Going into the final year of her physics undergrad, sheĂs spent her summer helping atmospheric scientist James Drummond set up his new laboratory here at Dal almost from scratch. The pinnacle of the experience, though, has been the chance to travel to the top of the world.
Eureka, Nunavut sits at 80ÂĄN and 86ÂĄW, on Slidre Fjord on Ellesmere Island. ItĂs home to CanadaĂs first High Arctic weather station, established in 1947 in a joint project between the United States Weather Bureau and what would eventually become the Meteorological Service of Canada. The station is staffed year-round by researchers scanning the skies for vital scientific insight into global warming, stratospheric dynamics and ozone depletion.
ĂItĂs pretty remote up here Ă weĂre only about 1,100 km from the North Pole,â says Ms. Flynn, writing via email from the arctic outpost. ĂItĂs not too cold up here at this time of year, about 7 or 8 degrees and sunny, but you do feel the chill when the wind picks up. ItĂs actually 24 hours daylight here right now, which is pretty neat but pretty confusing when itĂs time to go to bed.â
Dr. DrummondĂs team flew into Yellowknife on August 11 and took a small charter plane over the arctic glaciers to reach their destination. They spent their first day visiting the three labs that make up the weather station Ă PEARL, 0PAL and SAFIRE Ă but since then have spent most of their time at PEARL collecting data and doing computer maintenance. The data collected measures absorption of various chemical in our atmosphere that play an important role in understanding issues like climate change and global warming.
ĂItĂs research for the greater good, as Dr. Drummond puts it,â says Ms. Flynn. ĂItĂs getting important knowledge about whatĂs happening in our atmosphere and in the skies around the earth.â She returns to Nova Scotia on Wednesday.
This is Ms. FlynnĂs second summer doing lab work here at ±«Óătv; last summer she worked with materials science professor Jeffrey Dahn.
ĂI think itĂs important to try out different things at university to see what you like and what youĂre good at,â she explains. ĂTravelling to Eureka has let me see what physics is like out in the field, and how different it is from the lab. I think experiences like these are something to be highly valued, and I feel really lucky to here.â