Monica Mary Grady, CBE[2] (born 15 July 1958 in Leeds, West Yorkshire, UK),[3] is a British space scientist, primarily known for her work on meteorites.[2] She is currently Professor of Planetary and Space Science at the Open University[4] and is also the Chancellor of Liverpool Hope University.[5]
Early life
Monica Grady is the oldest of eight children and the daughter of teachers.[2] She attended Notre Dame Collegiate School for Girls in Leeds, prior to it becoming Notre Dame Grammar School and then later Notre Dame Catholic Sixth Form College, as a pupil of Form Sherwin.
Grady has formerly been based at the Natural History Museum, where she curated the UK's national collection of meteorites. She has built up an international reputation in meteoritics, publishing many papers on the carbon and nitrogen isotope geochemistry of primitive meteorites, on Martian meteorites, and on interstellar components of meteorites.
In 2010, Grady returned to Durham, spending 3 months at St Mary's College as a Fellow of the Institute of Advanced Study[7]
Grady was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2012 Birthday Honours for services to space sciences.[8]
In 2014, Grady spoke to BBC News about the aims and the significance of the spacecraft Rosetta. Grady said: "The biggest question that we are trying to get an answer to is: where did life on Earth come from?"[9] A video of her highly enthusiastic reaction when Philae successfully landed on the comet was published widely around the internet on many media sources.[10]
On 31 July 2015 she appeared on Radio 4's Desert Island Discs.[2]
Grady is one of the members of Euro-Cares,[11] an EU-funded Horizon2020 project which has the aim of developing a roadmap for a European Sample Curation Facility, designed to curate precious samples returned from Solar System exploration missions to asteroids, Mars, the Moon and comets.
Personal life
Grady is a practising Catholic. Her youngest sister, Dr Ruth Grady, is a Senior Lecturer in microbiology at the University of Manchester.[12] Grady's husband, Professor Ian Wright, is also a planetary scientist at the Open University.[13] Ian was Principal Investigator of the Ptolemy instrument on the Philae lander, part of ESA's Rosetta spacecraft. Ian and Monica have one son, Jack Wright, who works in the film industry.[14]
Selected bibliography
Grady, Monica (2022), "Meteorites", Catalogue of Meteorites, Natural History Museum, doi:10.5519/TQFUWLE7, retrieved 21 November 2022
Grady, M. M.; Natural History Museum (2001). Search for life. London: Natural History Museum. ISBN0-565-09157-3. OCLC45580827.
Grady, M. M. (2001). Astrobiology. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN1-56098-849-5. OCLC44969486.
Grady, M. M.; Pratesi, Giovanni; Cecchi, Vanni Moggi (2014). Atlas of meteorites. Cambridge, United Kingdom. ISBN978-0-521-84035-4. OCLC899233185.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)