Sue Nelson
Susan Nelson (born 5 June 1961)[1] is a science writer and broadcaster. She is a former BBC science correspondent. Early life and educationNelson studied physics at University College Cardiff.[2][3] She won a Knight-Wallace Fellowship at the University of Michigan in 2004.[4] CareerNelson was presenter of Formula Five on BBC Radio 5 from 1990 to 1994. In 1997 she presented Right Stuff, Wrong Sex : Female Astronauts.[5] From 1997 to 2005 she was a science and technology correspondent for BBC News 24 and the science correspondent for the BBC Television News.[6][7] She was a presenter of The Material World on BBC Radio 4.[8] Nelson has also presented a number of science series on Radio 4, including Britain's Modern Brunels and Citizen Scientist in 2006. She produced Women with the Right Stuff on the BBC World Service.[9] She began to present the Planet Earth podcasts in 2008.[2] In 2010 she was made editor of The Biologist.[10] Nelson makes films for the European Space Agency.[11] She hosts the podcast Space Boffins through her media company Boffin Media, which has welcomed guests such as Buzz Aldrin, Eileen Collins, Helen Sharman and Tim Peake.[12][13] She presented the 2017 BBC World Service documentary Before I Go.[14][15] In 2018 she was taken to SAI International School with the British Council.[16] BooksIn 2004 she wrote How to Clone the Perfect Blonde.[17] In 2011 she published How to Live Forever: Lives Less Ordinary.[18] The rights to Nelson's third book,Wally Funk's Race for Space: On the Road with a Forgotten Pioneer of Aviation, were acquired by The Westbourne Press in November 2017.[19][12] Wally Funk was one of the Mercury 13. It will be released in October 2018.[20] Personal lifeAt age 60 Nelson was diagnosed with autism.[21] Awards
References
External links
|