Taylor Lonner
- Ph.D. Candidate in Aerospace Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder
Taylor started as a PhD student in Aerospace Engineering Sciences at CU Boulder in 2021 with a focus in Bioastronautics. She is advised by Dr. Torin Clark, and her research involves using ground-based paradigms to determine countermeasures for motion sickness in astronauts having undergone gravity transitions.
Taylor received a B.S. in Geophysics and a B.S. in Astrophysics from the University of California, Los Angeles in 2020. Her research at UCLA was focused on developing a laboratory experiment to simulate the fluid dynamics of the outer core of the Earth and other planets using rotating tanks of water. Her love of space exploration and applied physics led her down the path of Aerospace Engineering and Bioastronautics. Her skills working with rapidly rotating tanks of water has transferred well to working with the Human Eccentric Rotator Device (HERD), CU Boulder's human centrifuge.
In her free time, Taylor enjoys knitting, cooking, video games, horseback riding, and spending time with her dog Ruby Tuesday.
Experience- –present Ph.D. Candidate in Aerospace Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder
- 2023 M.S. in Aerospace Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder
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