Alumnus Douglas Arion Points to Mountains of Stars
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- Published: Tuesday, September 08 2020 00:03
Ever since he completed his Ph.D. at the University of Maryland, Douglas Arion (M.S. β80, Ph.D. β84, physics) has been an innovator. He has always enjoyed the challenge of building things from the ground upβhouses (he designed two), groundbreaking technology, unique academic programs and even college sports teams.
βI think Iβm inventive and creative and have always wanted to build and make things that arenβt whatβs expected,β Arion said. βIβve always been somebody who wants to make stuff happen.β
Douglas Arion. Photo by Rebecca SteevesAnd for 35-plus years, heβs been doing just that, thanks to his strong foundation in physics.
βIf you understand physics you understand everything, because everything fundamentally is based on physics,β Arion said. βI donβt think thereβs been a discipline Iβve worked in or a technology that Iβve worked on or used or a field that you canβt apply it to. If you understand physics, you can do anything.β
At UMD, Arionβs Ph.D. research was a complex blend of plasma physics, quantum mechanics and astrophysics.
βI found a way to quickly determine when a magnetic field can rapidly change shape and breakβsuch as when thereβs a flare on the sun,β Arion said.
Arion had plenty of inspiration. His friends and study partners included Penrose βParneyβ Albright (M.S. β82, Ph.D. β85, physics), who went on to become assistant secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and David Douglas (M.S. β82, Ph.D. β82, physics), who spent 35 years exploring the nature of matter as a senior scientist at Jefferson Lab in Virginia.
βThe folks who graduated with me have gone on to do some really amazing things,β Arion said. βWe were good friends. I still stay in touch with many of them today.β
Arion would begin making his own mark as an innovator soon after he left Maryland, when a connection he made on campus led to a job at Science Applications Incorporated (SAI), a Virginia-based defense contractor.
βI was first involved in modeling and analysis of radiation effects on spacecraft and missile systems, that was the first big project we worked on,β Arion said. βI ended up working on a whole bunch of different defense-related projects in radiation areas.β
Climbing through the ranks at SAI to assistant vice president, Arion led the design and testing of systems including space-qualified optics and high-precision structural measuring systems for more than a decade.
Then in 1994, he moved on to a completely different kind of challenge, inspired by an ad he saw for a unique position in academiaβan endowed chair in science and technology entrepreneurship at Carthage College in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
βCarthage had received a donation from an alum, a former chem major, who said, βYou need to start a program to teach science students how to launch ventures and how to run things,ββ Arion explained. βSo, I put in a resume and got hired. I built the countryβs first program for undergraduates in science and technology entrepreneurship. And that was before it was sexyβyou know, everybody has a program now. β
For Arion, it was another opportunity to build something from the ground upβthis time, a program to teach science students the things they werenβt learning in the traditional college curriculum.
βWhen I created it, I started out saying in my head and then on paper, whatβs all the stuff I wish someone had told me before I became a corporate exec, because there was a lot of stuff I had to learn on the fly,β Arion recalled.
Soon, Arion was teaching his students everything from personal finance and retirement planning to accounting, intellectual property and regulatory issues for businessβall while coaching the collegeβs hockey team. His groundbreaking science entrepreneur program was so successful that it became a model for similar programs at colleges and universities around the country.
In 2015, Arionβs efforts were recognized by his peers. Elected as a Fellow of the American Physical Society, he was honored for βgroundbreaking work towards improving the educational impact of the physics degree by promoting the widespread adoption of entrepreneurship training and mindset within the discipline.β
Arion enjoyed academic life in Wisconsin, but as time went on, he missed the wild beauty of the New Hampshire mountains, where he spent summers hiking and biking as a boy. Arion never lost his love for the outdoorsβor his passion for protecting the environment. And after more than a decade at Carthage College, he saw an opportunity to take his innovative energyβand science educationβin a new direction.
βIβve always been very unhappy with the general understanding of science in this country, and in particular when it comes to the environment,β Arion explained. βI wanted to do something different.β
His plan was to reinvent environmental education and change the way people see their place in the world around them.
βFrom my perspective, most people in western culture think that human beings are more important than everything else,β he said. βWe look at every resource as something we can just take. If weβre more aware of our place in the universe we will become more protective of the resources that are all around us.β
That idea was the inspiration for Mountains of Stars, a program Arion launched in 2012 with a simple mission.
βWe call it environmental awareness from a cosmic perspective,β he said.
Funded by the National Science Foundation and other supporters, Mountains of Stars began as a partnership between Carthage College and the Appalachian Mountain Club, the oldest outdoor recreation, conservation and education organization in the U.S. The mission: use high-quality, hands-on astronomy experiences to change peopleβs attitudes and actions toward the environment.
Why astronomy?
βTwo things. One: Itβs actually the only science. Because everything is part of it,β Arion explained. βYou can address and integrate and incorporate everything thatβs out there, all of the processes that have brought us to this point cosmically. Itβs all one systemβgeological processes, natural biology, itβs everything. The second aspect is that people like it. If you have a telescope, people want to look through it. That gives you an opportunity to talk about something.β
Through the Mountains of Stars program, college physics and astronomy students train to be better science communicators and can then become part of the programβs environmental outreach, which includes hands-on astronomy and nature activities designed to engage the public and raise environmental awareness, one person at a time. Over nine years, the program has reached more than 65,000 people.
βI hope, over the long term, that we're planting enough seeds that people will actually change what they do and thus change the course of human behavior,β Arion explained. βI know it takes time, but you have to start somewhere.β
Arion is technically retired now, living on the doorstep of a national forest in a New Hampshire home he designed and taking full advantage of the outdoor lifestyle that goes with it. He still does research and leads entrepreneurship workshops around the world, and he is also involved in environmental initiatives like the international Dark-Sky Association. But itβs Mountains of Stars, the mission closest to Arionβs heart, that continues to get most of his time and energy. He hopes over time, the program can make the kind of difference that matters.
βThis is the thing thatβs most important to me right now,β Arion said. βI hope in the future, someone looks back at it and says we did something good here.β
Written by Leslie Miller