Dr Frank J. Masci – Senior Staff Scientist, Caltech
Frank Masci
was born and raised in Melbourne, a port-side city located
in Australia's south-east. He received a PhD in Astrophysics
from The University of Melbourne
in 1997 under the supervision of Professor Rachel Webster.
Frank was hired as a post-doc at Caltech
in 1998 to support the Wide-field Infra-Red Explorer
(WIRE) mission. He then joined
the Spitzer Science Center
at Caltech in 2000 where he served
as Cognizant Scientist for data processing
and astrometric calibration. He later became
the Deputy Downlink System Engineer. After a brief stint as Assistant
Director at the
Australian Bureau of Statistics in 2005/2006, he was lured back to
Caltech in 2007 to serve as a Cognizant Scientist for the Wide-field
Infrared Survey Explorer
(WISE) project.
From 2015 to 2021 he was the Science Data System Lead for the
Zwicky Transient Facility
(ZTF).
Currently, he is System Architect for the Near-Earth Object Surveyor (NEOS) Science Data System at Caltech.
Frank's professional interests are in astronomical image processing;
calibration; methodologies for detecting and characterizing flux variables, transients
and asteroids; machine learning, and
improving statistical methodologies for astronomical research in general.
In his spare time, Frank enjoys skiing, skeet and trap shooting, cooking,
playing guitar, writing music, and pondering the intricate
patterns of nature.
Asteroid (438973) Masci is named in his honor.