Science
The librarian who became Palomar’s first female telescope operator, and who discovered her own comets
More times than she can remember, Jean Mueller stood on the catwalk of the 200-inch Hale Telescope at the Palomar Observatory scanning the night sky, trying to time the exact moment to close the dome.
An hour and a half northeast of San Diego, the Palomar Observatory is owned and operated by Caltech, and as telescope operator, Mueller was responsible for protecting its instruments from the weather. Inside the structure, a 200-inch mirror captured light from distant stars in a time window crucial to the observing astronomer’s research. But when a fog bank rolled closer, Mueller had to make the call.
“I would get the dome closed within a minute or two of the fog actually hitting it,” said Mueller. “We are vigilant for anything that might damage the mirror. You don’t want acid rain on the mirror because that’s going to eat the aluminum coating. Ash, combined with humidity, can be caustic.”
Mueller, a telescope operator at Palomar from 1985 to 2014, called her path to astronomy “nonstandard.” She had a graduate degree in library science and had worked as a librarian for USC for 10 years when she learned about a job opening at a different Southern California observatory: Mt. Wilson, near Pasadena, run by the Carnegie Institution of Washington. The role: collecting data and operating the 60-inch telescope.
Mueller had begun exploring astronomy by taking a four-week evening class at Griffith Observatory. Drawn to know more, she continued taking classes at USC and Rio Hondo College. As Mueller’s astronomy community grew, her friend Howard Lanning, an astronomer and telescope operator, encouraged her to apply for a position at Mt. Wilson Observatory.
“That was probably when my life changed,” Mueller said. “It had never occurred to me to leave my library job and pursue astronomy. I didn’t have an astronomy degree; I had just taken a handful of classes.”
Jean Mueller sits in front of the control panel of the 200-inch Hale Telescope at the Palomar Observatory.
(Kajsa Peffer)
For as long as she can recall, Mueller has loved the stars. She remembers one specific day in 1958, when she was just 8 years old:
“My brother and I were jumping on the bed, and he told me Halley’s Comet would be visible in 1985.”
Mueller was born in an era when major research telescopes throughout the country still excluded women. Since the early 1900s, although the Carnegie Institution employed women as “computers,” with few exceptions, they were not permitted to use its telescopes. Both Mt. Wilson and Palomar had named their astronomers’ quarters “The Monastery,” male retreats where women were barred from scientific conversations. The male-only housing later became a justification to routinely deny women access to these telescopes.
By the 1950s, women were only beginning to overcome gender barriers to gain access to the telescopes at the Mt. Wilson and Palomar observatories. From Margaret Burbidge to Vera Rubin to Nobel Prize winner Andrea Ghez, pioneering women astronomers built an intergenerational legacy of research and discoveries at Palomar that would transform understanding of the universe forever.
As the first female telescope operator on Palomar, Mueller supported their work, and generations of astronomers. With the expertise and technical training she gained on Palomar, she also began to make her own discoveries.
When Mueller was offered the Mt. Wilson job, she initially worried about the financial risk of changing careers and leaving 10 years of previous experience at USC. But during this time, she chanced to attend a lecture by author Ray Bradbury.
Mueller still remembers the words that led her to take the leap into astronomy. “Whatever you do,” Bradbury advised, “be sure it makes you happy.”
After operating the 60-inch telescope on Mt. Wilson for two and a half years and becoming the first woman to operate the observatory’s 100-inch Hooker Telescope, Mueller interviewed for a new job at Palomar. In 1985, she became the operator for the Samuel Oschin 48-inch telescope, making her the first female telescope operator at the Palomar Observatory. She would stay for 29 years.
“During her first year at Palomar, Mueller worked with Caltech staff astronomer Charles Kowal, who had successfully searched for solar system objects and supernovae. An expert in taking images and scanning the fragile 14-by-14-inch plates that captured data from Palomar’s telescopes during those years, Kowal taught Mueller critical techniques in the complex process.
“Charlie Kowal was the first person to tell me that transient objects like comets and asteroids needed to be identified in a timely manner,” Mueller said. She also learned from Alain J. Maury, a French photographic scientist for the Palomar Observatory Second Sky Survey (POSSII), who taught her astrometry techniques to record the location of celestial objects.
With the encouragement of Kowal and Maury, Mueller began scanning POSSII’s plates, looking for comets, asteroids and supernovae. Scanning involved moving the plate by hand beneath a stationary eyepiece.
“There was something unbelievably exciting about discovering a new comet in the sky,” Mueller said. “A real adrenaline rush.
Mueller learned to operate all three large telescopes on Palomar: the 200-inch Hale Telescope, where she was the senior operator for 15 years; the 60-inch telescope, and the 48-inch Samuel Oschin Telescope.
Over the course of her observational career, Mueller made significant discoveries of her own. Using the Samuel Oschin Telescope, she discovered 15 comets, 13 asteroids — seven of which are near-Earth objects — and 107 supernovae.
And when Comet Halley appeared in the skies in December 1985, Mueller was operating the 200-inch telescope on Palomar. At the time, it was the most powerful telescope in the world.
Science
Video: NASA’s Artemis II Crew Prepares for Lunar Flyby on Monday
new video loaded: NASA’s Artemis II Crew Prepares for Lunar Flyby on Monday
transcript
transcript
NASA’s Artemis II Crew Prepares for Lunar Flyby on Monday
The Artemis II crew sent an Easter message as they readied to travel around the moon.
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“Happy Easter to everyone down there on Earth.” “We did want to send a special Easter message on this day.” “We did hide a few eggs around the cabin. They were the dehydrated scrambled egg variety, but we’re all pretty happy with them.” “We’re going to pass the Apollo 13 distance record by humans, and that record is 248,655 statute miles. That’s when we break the record.” “And in space, you really just eat all of your food out of bags of some kind. This is actually shrimp cocktail. And those are green beans. So we do have to eat our vegetables even in space. But don’t worry, they do give us mac and cheese.”
By Nailah Morgan
April 6, 2026
Science
Microplastics are everywhere — even in the labs studying them. That’s a problem for research
As the science of detecting microplastics matures, so too does consensus about their ubiquity. Everywhere researchers have looked to find them, there they’ve been: In human brains and lungs; in breast milk and semen; in alpine snow and deep-sea sediment; in corn plants and beer.
And that, say researchers, is the rub: Scientists are not just finding them in our livers, arteries and ovaries. They are also everywhere else: in research laboratories, pipettes, refrigerators, solvents, bottles, goggles and the very lab coats investigators are wearing to find them.
So how do we know if those particles seen under the lens of a microscope are inherent in the sample, or contamination from plastic fibers floating in the air? Or from tiny particles that sloughed off from the inside of a bottle of solvent?
Microplastics scientists are keenly aware of the problem and urgently studying it, because the credibility of the research is on the line.
Their research suddenly skyrocketed in importance with the federal government’s announcement Thursday that it will begin actively investigating the wayward, potentially toxic particles in people and drinking water.
“We cannot regulate what we don’t understand,” Robert F. Kennedy Jr., secretary of Health and Human Services, said at a news conference.
Nicolas Leeper, head of vascular medicine at Stanford University, said he is “absolutely” concerned that “at least some part of what has been reported [in the scientific literature] may be spurious or artifactual.”
For instance, a 2024 headline-stealing study showed a relationship between microplastics found in the arterial plaque of patients undergoing heart surgery, and a higher risk of heart attack and stroke. Several medical researchers, including Leeper, questioned the findings. They argued the authors hadn’t accounted for the introduction of microplastics during surgery.
Like most scientists in this new relatively new field, Leeper didn’t set out to study tiny, broken bits of plastic. But that study caught his attention.
“I take care of people that have atherosclerosis,” he said in an interview. “We’ve known for a while that genetics only explains about half of our lifetime risk.”
He now wonders if microplastics could be that X factor he’s been looking for, and is investigating the issue in his laboratory. But he’s aware the particles are everywhere.
“Think about it: Every time we work with a human bio specimen, we’re wearing plastic gloves and using plastic needles and plastic petri dishes,” he said.
Leeper is pretty sure microplastics can lead to ill health. He just wants his — and everyone’s — research to be beyond reproach.
“Given the potential public health impact of these ubiquitous … products, it is essential we know exactly what we are dealing with, how to quantify it, and how to be certain we aren’t chasing a signal that may be driven, in part, by contamination artifact,” he said.
It’s not a new concern. In fact, it’s a relatively old one.
Claire Gwinnett, a forensic scientist at the University of Staffordshire, in England, said she’s been fretting about microplastic contamination in her research for decades.
She’s spent most of her career inspecting dead bodies for signs of foul play. Her work requires painstaking quality control. When examining a cadaver for DNA, fibers or other chemicals and materials that could help identify a murderer, or information about a struggle, she needs complete confidence that the evidence she gathered came from the body, or perpetrator, and not from her own body, clothing or equipment.
“My entire career has been based around these teeny, tiny particulates you can’t see with the naked eye, but that I’m trying to confidently convince the courts were present on that victim in that crime scene, and not due to procedural contamination,” Gwinnett said.
About 10 years ago, she read a headline saying that researchers had found microplastic contamination in samples of deep ocean sediment — more than two miles below the surface.
“And the question for me was: Is that real? Were they actually using methods that would confidently allow them to say they actually found these microplastics at these depths, and that it wasn’t procedural contamination?”
She started working with environmental scientists at her university and then across the world to get them to start thinking like a forensic scientist: How can you reduce plastic in your lab or account for microplastics that are there? Are they using plastic when they could be using glass or metal? What are they wearing in the lab? Are they creating “blanks” — faux samples that go through the same preparation, in the same places, with the same researchers, using the same chemicals and materials — to account for microplastic background “noise”?
It was around this same time that Susanne Brander, director of scientific advancement efforts for the Pew Charitable Trust’s safer chemicals project, said she and other environmental scientists started asking similar questions, and establishing protocols to address contamination.
By the late 2010s, she and colleagues started replacing plastic with glass and metal, used HEPA filtration, and instituted special cleaning procedures for their equipment.
But, as often happens in science, knowledge in one research discipline doesn’t necessarily bleed into another.
There’s a silo effect, Brander said. So when people who study human health started asking questions about microplastics, they didn’t necessarily look to the water, fish and forensic folks for advice.
She doesn’t fault them for not reading her papers; “it’s a different research space,” she said. But it meant some of the early work on microplastics and human health didn’t use the quality controls that forensic and environmental scientists had adopted.
“Some of us have even talked about bringing these two research fields together, she said. “Maybe we should reconvene and talk about how we’ve already kind of done this.”
The human work is drawing a lot more scrutiny than the earlier work ever did.
It’s one thing to find microplastics in plants, snow and other animals. When we see it in our brains, placentas, testicles and blood — that’s different.
And as the federal government jumps into the fray, looking not only for the particles but also the potential effects on human health, the risk to the multibillion-dollar chemical and fossil fuel companies that manufacture and distribute these products grows.
So could scrutiny on the way we live: from food packaging, carpet manufacturing and water filtration, to medical supplies, car tires and clothing.
Plastic never goes away; it just breaks down into smaller and smaller pieces. According to the United Nations Environmental Programme, the world has produced more than 9.2 billion tons of plastic since 1950, with half of that amount produced in the last 13 years alone.
Matthew Campen, professor of pharmaceutical research at the University of New Mexico, has done some of the most well-known microplastic research on human tissue. He found it in placentas, livers, kidneys, lungs and brains.
He said the issue of contamination is real, but wonders if it’s over-hyped.
Campen was at the panel Thursday with Kennedy and Lee Zeldin, the administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, as they announced their intention to make microplastics a research priority.
Although his work has also been challenged, he said that’s to be expected: The whole field of microplastic research is new, and there will be kinks that get ironed out as it matures.
“We knew that cigarettes caused cancer in the 1930s and the surgeon general didn’t say anything about it until 1966,” he said. “Ultimately, I think we’re going to move pretty fast. We’re going to invest in science in the coming years, and over the next five years, we’ll have much more confidence as to how this is getting into our bodies and what it could be doing.”
Science
Next to Joshua Tree National Park, a mining company is staking its claim for rare earth minerals
An Australian company has launched a rare earths mining project just outside Joshua Tree National Park in critical desert tortoise habitat, an area the company’s director refers to as an “emerging heavy rare earth district.”
The company, Dateline Resources Ltd., says that historical sampling of the area in the Pinto Mountains south of Twentynine Palms found enrichment in elements key to powering electric vehicles, wind turbines and defense systems.
The United States depends heavily on China for its supply of these critical minerals, a major national security vulnerability the Trump administration has sought to address through a series of regulatory changes and financial incentives aimed at shoring up domestic production.
The desert tortoise, as seen in Music Valley in the Pinto Mountains, is listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act due to habitat loss and predation.
(Gary Coronado / For The Times)
The project is in its early stages, and it’s unclear whether further testing will confirm the presence of rare earth elements across a broad enough area to warrant extracting them. The site is roughly 100 miles southwest of the nation’s only fully functional rare earths mine — Mountain Pass operated by MP Materials, in which the U.S. Department of Defense holds a 15% stake.
It’s also steps from Joshua Tree National Park, one of the nation’s most beloved desert getaways where about 3 million people visit annually. The 1,200-square-mile park and the public lands that surround it are home to sensitive plants and wildlife that environmentalists say would be harmed by a major mining project that could deplete water supplies, draw traffic and generate toxic waste.
“This is truly one of the most iconic landscapes in America,” said Chance Wilcox, California desert program manager for the National Parks Conservation Assn., as he stood atop a rocky slope within the project footprint on Friday.
Beside him, a wooden stake marked the corner of a mining claim. About 100 feet away, a metal post denoted the park’s boundary. In the valley below sat the fee booth for the east entrance.
If mining were to go ahead here, visitors would likely be able to see the activity while driving into the park, Wilcox pointed out. “It just emphasizes this company’s blatant disregard for our nation’s crown jewels,” he said.
Dateline did not return messages seeking comment on the project. The company also operates the Colosseum Mine in the nearby Mojave National Preserve, which the Trump administration has touted as pivotal to its efforts to develop a homegrown critical minerals supply chain.
Dateline first announced the venture — the Music Valley heavy rare earths project — late last month, saying it had acquired 57 claims totaling 1,140 acres and had also invested $1 million in Fermi Critical Minerals Inc., an American company that holds uranium and rare-earths projects in multiple western states. Dateline later broadened the footprint by staking an additional 969 claims covering 19,380 acres, a subsequent release states.
Twentynine Palms Highway looking west runs through downtown on Friday in Twentynine Palms, Calif.
(Gary Coronado / For The Times)
The company now holds claims over a roughly 32-square-mile area, the vast majority within the Bureau of Land Management’s jurisdiction.
U.S. Geological Survey geologists first identified rare earth mineralization in the Music Valley area in 1954, with sampling reporting enrichment in dysprosium, terbium, yttrium and ytterbium, Dateline Resources said in a press release. The company is now training modern exploration techniques on outcroppings of a 1.8-billion-year-old type of metamorphic rock called Pinto gneiss.
While rare earths will be the primary focus, exploration will also assess the potential for gold mining — the area is dotted with old, small-scale adits and shafts.
The project is located in what’s known as an area of critical environmental concern. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has deemed the sweeping landscape to be crucial to the survival of the Mojave desert tortoise, which is endangered in California thanks to a stew of threats including development, disease, raven predation and climate change.
The land abutting the Pinto Mountains Wilderness is also home to badgers, bighorn sheep and Mojave fringe-toed lizards. Massive yuccas and barrel cacti stud its steep slopes.
A chuckwalla lizard suns itself on a rock in the Pinto Mountains.
(Gary Coronado/For The Times)
On Friday, desert iguanas and whiptails scampered across an access road, portions of which wind through the national park. A chuckwalla sunned itself on a boulder. Nearby, a desert tortoise had emerged from its burrow to munch on some grass — a rare sight that elicited a whoop of joy from Wilcox. “This is a really special place,” he said.
If the area proves to be a valuable source of heavy rare earth elements, it would be significant as the U.S. has none, said Daniel O’Connor, co-founder and chief executive of Rare Earth Exchanges, a website that covers the global rare earths market. Mountain Pass primarily produces light rare earth elements, which are typically more abundant.
“Our entire war machinery — missiles, radar, fighter jets — all need these heavy rare earths,” O’Connor said.
Still, he said, even if the U.S. were to start producing heavy rare earths, the country would likely remain reliant on China to process them — a complex, multi-stage undertaking that involves chemically separating the elements from ore. Companies controlled by the Chinese treasury currently separate and refine an estimated 90% of the world’s supply of rare earth elements, and about 90% of the specialized magnets they are used to create are also manufactured in China, he said.
A mural illustrating miners in the Dirty Sock Camp is painted on a wall in downtown Twentynine Palms, Calif.
(Gary Coronado / For The Times)
O’Connor described the Music Valley project as early-stage and speculative, pointing to a mining tradition dating back to the Wild West in which prospectors tout samples that show heavy concentrations of minerals in a bid to loosen investors’ wallets. There’s no way to know how widespread or systematic those concentrations are without technical reports disclosing a project’s mineral contents and quality, he said. Dateline does not yet appear to have released any such report, which are industry standard, he said.
Rare earths mining typically involves pulling out ore with jackhammers or dynamite and grinding it down before chemically treating it — processes that consume a lot of energy, generate toxic waste and can unleash radiation that’s often present in the ore, he said.
“It’s hard to think of a worse place for a massive industrial project than sensitive desert tortoise habitat on the very edge of Joshua Tree National Park,” wrote Brendan Cummings, conservation director for the Center for Biological Diversity, in an email.
A buildout of the claims could end public access to the area and permanently scar the landscape, drawing traffic and light pollution and harming springs and groundwater stores, he said. Given those potential impacts, he is skeptical that the developers could lawfully be granted the necessary federal, state, and local approvals to proceed.
Conservationists also point to Dateline’s history operating the Colosseum Mine as a source of concern, saying the company flouted National Park Service rules and damaged the surrounding landscape.
“They don’t respect public lands, national parks or the law, so there’s every reason to be deeply concerned about this proposal,” said Rep. Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael), the ranking member on the House natural resource committee who said the project “has red flags waving in every way.”
“We do need domestic and critical minerals sourced from friendly countries and responsible actors,” he added, “but it doesn’t mean we need them everywhere or at any cost.”
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