Theo O’Neill will continue exploring space as an Astronaut Scholar.
“I think astronomy is fascinating because of the sheer scope of topics involved,” said O’Neill, a rising fourth-year astronomy-physics and statistics major at the University of Virginia. “The enormous range of physical and energetic scales encompassed in this one field, from the behavior of individual grains of dust to the dynamics of interacting galaxies, is incredibly awe-inspiring.”
The Astronaut Scholarship Foundation was created in 1984 by astronauts from the Mercury 7 program to encourage university students pursuing science. The scholarships are valued at around $15,000 each and they provide an opportunity to develop relationships with astronauts and scholars.
O’Neill studies star formation and applies statistics to astronomy, focusing on the relationship between young stars and the clouds of molecular gas that they form within.
“My research currently involves studying the progression of star formation in nearby dwarf galaxies, which are interesting because their chemical compositions are similar to the conditions of the early universe,” O’Neill said. “By studying molecular cloud structure in these areas, we can improve our understanding of how stars form in extreme environments.”
Jonathan Tan, research professor in the astronomy department, recruited O’Neill as a first-year student to work on the Virginia Initiative on Cosmic Origins, a summer research position at Chalmers University, Gothenburg, Sweden, where Tan has a joint appointment.
“It was already notable that Theo had extensive research experience, even though still only a first-year student,” Tan said. “As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, travel to Sweden was not possible, so the project was conducted remotely, with Theo working from home in California.”

