Two ASE Women Receive Amelia Earhart Fellowship
Two women in the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics have been honored as recipients of the prestigious Amelia Earhart Fellowship.

Divya Thakur (left) and Sonia Hernandez (right) show their research work in the Texas Advanced Computing Center’s ACES Visualization Lab. Both women are winners of the 2012 Amelia Earhart Fellowship.
Two women in the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics have been honored as recipients of the prestigious Amelia Earhart Fellowship. Sonia Hernandez and Divya Thakur were honored at a ceremony at the AT&T Executive Conference Center at The University of Texas at Austin on October 27, 2012.
The Amelia Earhart fellowship was established in 1983 in honor of famed pilot and Zontian, Amelia Earhart The fellowship of $10,000 is awarded annually to women pursuing doctoral degrees in aerospace related fields. It is awarded to 35 fellows around the globe each year and is given by the Zonta Foundation, a global organization of executives and professionals working together to advance the status of women worldwide through service and advocacy.
Sonia Hernandez
During the summers, Hernandez works in a co-op position at NASA. After graduating in spring 2014, she plans to return to NASA to work full time to gain industrial experience. Ultimately, she plans to return to academia to teach and do research.
Divya Thakur
Divya Thakur has spent the last ten years on the forty acres – both as an undergraduate and graduate student, receiving her BS and MS in aerospace engineering. She is currently pursuing a PhD in the same field and credits UT and the ASE/EM department with shaping her into who she is today.
Thakur has worked on a variety of research projects during her time at UT. As an undergraduate, she spent two years working as a research assistant at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC).
“TACC helped in shaping my undergraduate career,” Thakur said. “It gave me a lot of research experience and helped push me in the direction of graduate school. The people are great and have supported me in my education.”
When she began pursuing her master’s degree, she worked with Dr. Belinda Marchand on developing optimal drug therapies for the management of acute HIV infection.
“That was a very interesting project because it was different from the typical aerospace problem,” Thakur said. “Yet the tools I was using all originated from the aerospace field.”
Thakur is working towards her PhD under the direction of Dr. Maruthi Akella. Her current research focuses on cooperative control – fleets of multiple autonomous vehicles that work in a coordinated manner to complete a task that is too difficult or too expensive to do with a single larger vehicle.
“One of the biggest benefits of replacing a large spacecraft with a multiple vehicle system is that you get better performance efficiency and build robustness into your mission,” Thakur said. “When you work with one vehicle, if it fails, the mission is over. But if one vehicle fails when you are using multiple vehicles, your mission can continue.”
Thakur plans to graduate in December 2013. During her time at UT, she found her passion for teaching and plans to return to that after graduation.
“When I started grad school, I was really inspired by the teaching element of academia,” Thakur said. “Because I’ve been a teaching assistant for so long, I have realized how gratifying teaching is. But I also enjoy research, so I’m keeping my options open.”