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Solar Physics Division Plenary: Karen Harvey Prize Lecture: Building Connections in Heliophysics with Surface Flux Transport Modeling, Lisa Upton (by Kerry Hensley)
The 2025 Karen Harvey Prize, “awarded in recognition of a significant contribution to the study of the Sun early in a person’s professional career,” went to Lisa Upton (Southwest Research Institute) for her work on large-scale solar flows and magnetic flux transport. Upton began by honoring Karen Harvey, with whom she shares many scientific interests. Harvey’s interest in solar physics began as a teenager observing sunspots with a small telescope, which led to her first scientific paper. She is remembered for her service to the solar physics community, her spirit of collaboration, and her education and public outreach efforts.
Upton began by studying coronal loops — arches of plasma confined by magnetic fields and suspended within the Sun’s outer atmosphere, or corona — before transitioning to her current work on the solar activity cycle. The Sun’s 11-year activity cycle, which manifests as periodic changes in the frequency of sunspots, solar flares, and coronal mass ejections, is intimately related to the Sun’s complex magnetic field. The Sun’s interior acts like a fluid, allowing the magnetic field to be frozen into the plasma, meaning that the motion and evolution of the magnetic field is largely dictated by the behavior of the plasma. As Upton noted, this is unlike anything we see on Earth…