Heidi N. Becker is an American planetary scientist who studies Jupiter as radiation monitoring investigation lead for NASA's Juno space mission. She works at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.[1]

Becker came to science late; she was a dance and theater student at the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts and the New York University Tisch School of the Arts,[1] and graduated from NYU with a bachelor of fine arts in 1990.[2] After working in theater in New York, she became interested in science through hospital volunteer work, and returned to college in her mid-20s, initially in New York and then transferring to California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. She joined the Jet Propulsion Lab while still working towards a second bachelor's degree in physics at Cal Poly Pomona.[1] She completed her degree in 2001,[2] and became a full-time researcher at JPL.[1]

Becker's research on Jupiter has involved taking close-up images of Jupiter's moon Ganymede,[3] discovering lightning unexpectedly high in Jupiter's atmosphere,[4] finding a possible explanation for the lightning through antifreeze-like interactions between water and ammonia,[4][5][6][7] and studying ammonia-water hailstorms as a mechanism for ammonia depletion from the upper atmosphere.[4][8][6][7]

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