Patricia Ann Straat | |
Birth Date: | 28 March 1936 |
Fields: | Astrochemistry |
Workplaces: | National Institutes of Health |
Alma Mater: | Oberlin College Johns Hopkins University |
Thesis Title: | Characterization of a nitrate reductase from the chemoautotroph Nitrobacter agilis |
Thesis Url: | http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30849331 |
Thesis Year: | 1964 |
Patricia Ann Straat (March 28, 1936 – October 23, 2020) was an American space scientist. She was part of the labeled release experiment of Viking program and part of the infrared interferometer spectrometer and radiometer on the Mariner 9 mission. In 2019 Straat wrote the book To Mars With Love, which documented the 1976 Viking Mission to Mars.
P. Straat was born in Rochester, New York.[1] She attended Irondequoit High School.[2] Her parents were Marcelline and Harold Straat, and her father was an optical engineer.[3] [4] She has said that she became interested in space as a child, and could name all of the constellations in her night sky by the age of 12.[5] Straat earned her undergraduate degree at Oberlin College, a liberal arts school in Ohio. She moved to Johns Hopkins University for her graduate studies, where she specialised in biochemistry.[6]
Straat worked as a postdoctoral fellow at Johns Hopkins University and was promoted to Assistant Professor in 1968. Straat worked on molecular biology and enzymes. She said that the Moon landing reminded her of her childhood love for space, and began to consider changing career.
A few months later, Straat was headhunted by Gilbert Levin, who had recently been successful in proposing an experiment for a NASA mission to Mars. Straat was involved with the Viking Mission, and worked alongside Levin on the Labeled Release (LR) experiment.[7] In 1970 Straat joined Biospherics Inc, a spin-out company owned by Levin, where she worked as a biochemist.[8] Together they searched for organic gases in the Martian atmosphere. She spent her first few years at Biospherics Inc developing science and hardware. The Viking Mission landed on Mars in 1976, with the landed release mission starting ten days after Viking landed. The mission mixed small samples of soil from Mars with drops of water that contained nutrients tagged with Carbon-14 in a chamber. Measurements were then made of the atmosphere of the internal chamber: if they detected the evolution of radioactive 14CO2, microorganisms in the soil must have metabolised the nutrients. When the soil sample showed positive results, and a heat-sterilised control sample returned negative results, the scientific community was surprised. Straat and Levin believed that their labeled release results showed indications of microbial life on Mars.[9] [10] [11]
After a decade at Biospherics Inc, Straat joined the National Institutes of Health, where she held various leadership positions, including overseeing the referral section.
In 2019 Straat wrote the book To Mars With Love, which documented the 1976 Viking Mission to Mars.[12] The journal Astrobiology described To Mars With Love as a “remarkable book, by a remarkable woman, about a remarkable instrument on the most remarkable mission ever to go to Mars,”.[13]
Straat suffered from lung cancer. She died in October 2020, and was survived by her partner Mary Grande.