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2025 Klumpke-Roberts Award is given to Dr. Kimberly Arcand

For Release: September 10, 2025

ASP

Image of Kimberly Arcand
Credit: NASA/CXC/Kim Arcand

2025 Klumpke-Roberts Award is given to Dr. Kimberly Arcand for her contributions to the public understanding and appreciation of astronomy as a popular science communicator and a leading expert in astronomy communications and data visualization

San Francisco, California- September 10, 2025 - Awarded to an individual or individuals who have made outstanding contributions to the public understanding and appreciation of astronomy, the Klumpke-Roberts Award for 2025 goes to Dr. Kimberly Arcand, for over 26 years of bringing astrophysics discoveries to broad and diverse audiences through innovative astronomy communication methodologies.

Arcand’s extraordinary contribution as the visualization scientist and emerging technology lead for the Chandra X-ray Center has, as one nominator professed, “played an essential role in bringing discoveries like Chandra’s to the world in a way that is both accessible and inspiring.”

Arcand began her career in molecular biology and public health before she moved into the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory to work for NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory in 1998. She currently serves as the communications and public engagement lead for the Chandra X-ray Center which is located at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and as co-investigator for NASA’s Universe of Learning. The cutting-edge contributions took Arcand into a world where she created a new approach to science communication. Her method of storytelling included a series that integrated traditional, high-end, science-driven technology products with accessible, hands-on, low-tech versions of key activities she and her team developed.

During her groundbreaking work Arcand has collaborated with organizations of all types both domestically and internationally including NASA, the Smithsonian Institution, the International Astronomy Union, UNOOSA, UNESCO, the U.S. Department of State, the U.S. Library of Congress, the National Park Service, Girls Who Code, Black Girls Code, and the National Federation of the Blind, to name only a few.

Accessibility has been one of the tenets of Arcand’s career. This is reflected in her research which led her to projects that conveyed the dimensional nature of objects in space using low-tech skills such as Legos, origami and paper circuits as well as emerging technology such as 3D printing, VR experiences, and sonifications. Her collaboration with Brown University included mentoring student interns to develop code for immersive experiences with such cosmic sources as supernovas and the Galactic Center. Her curated sets of 3D models were used by blind and low-vision (BLV) audiences and her viral program of sonifications opened a new genre of public interaction for both the sighted and BLV audiences.

Arcand has also developed innovative “public science” projects that placed scientific content in free public spaces such as parks, metro stations, town squares and more. These projects include the award-winning exhibit “From Earth to the Universe” giving open access to astronomy images and captions (and translations) shared in hundreds of communities around the world as well as “Light Beyond the Bulb” reaching 35 countries, over a dozen language translations, and providing Braille/tactile options.

Arcand, throughout her career, has mentored dozens of high school, undergraduate and graduate students, and early-career researchers, setting them on the path to become science communicators by involving them in communications strategies, data visualization projects, and public engagement initiatives.

Capping off her incredible accomplishments, was the impact she made with a massive public engagement and communications campaign celebrating Chandra’s 25th anniversary in 2024, reaching millions of people from Washington D.C. to Las Vegas. A documentary, “Listen to the Universe” and a Chandra sonification project, “Where Parallel Lines Converge” earned prestigious accolades. Arcand is also an author of popular science books with a ninth book coming out in February 2026. One nominator simply said, “She exemplifies the very best of what it means to be a science communicator in the 21st century, harnessing cutting-edge technology and creative storytelling to make the universe accessible to all.”

Join us in celebration of Kimberly Arcand’s achievements at the in-person ASP Awards Gala on Saturday, November 8, 2025 at the Hilton San Francisco Airport Bayfront, Burlingame, CA.

About the ASP

The Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP), established in 1889, is a 501c3 nonprofit organization whose mission is to use astronomy to increase the understanding and appreciation of science and to advance science and science literacy. The ASP connects scientists, educators, amateur astronomers and the public together to learn about astronomical research, improve astronomy education, and share resources that engage learners of all kinds in the excitement and adventure of scientific discovery. Current ASP programs and initiatives support college faculty, K-12 science teachers, amateur astronomy clubs, science museums, libraries, park rangers, and Girl Scouts to name a few.

Through its annual awards, ASP recognizes achievement in research, technology, education, and public outreach. The awards include the ASP’s highest honor, the Catherine Wolfe Bruce Gold Medal awarded since 1898 for a lifetime of outstanding research in astronomy. The Bruce Medal has gone to some of the greatest astronomers of the past century, including Arthur Eddington, Edwin P. Hubble, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, and Vera Rubin. The ASP also presents the Klumpke-Roberts Award for outstanding contributions to the public understanding and appreciation of astronomy. Awardees include Carl Sagan, Isaac Asimov, and the Hubble Heritage Project.


Media Contacts:

Joycelin Craig
Director, Community & Communications
Astronomical Society of the Pacific
390 Ashton Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94112
www.astrosociety.org
jcraig@astrosociety.org