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Philip L Massey
Lowell Observatory
$3,034,009
Attributed
$3,894,009
Total exposure
8
Grants
8
Lead (contact PI)
Attributed= this PI's even-split share of every grant they're on (the fair, additive number). Exposure = full size of all those grants.
Funding over time
peak $1.9M · FY2005–23$2M$1.5M$1M$500K$0
'05
'06
'07
'08
'09
'10
'11
'12
'13
'14
'15
'16
'17
'18
'19
'20
'21
'22
'23
Funding mix
By agency
NSF$3,894,009 · 8
By mechanism
—$3,894,009 · 8
Top collaborators
- David G Schleicher1 shared
- Deidre A Hunter1 shared
- Edward W Dunham1 shared
- Thomas A Bida1 shared
Grant awards (8)
Collaborative Research: The Importance of Binarity on the Origin of Wolf-Rayet Stars$596,774
· FY2023 · MPS · contact PI
Collaborative Research: The Weirdest Stars in the Universe: Illuminating the Origins and Evolution of Thorne-Zytkow Objects$168,673
· FY2023 · MPS · contact PI
Massive Star Birth, Life and Death: Closing the Loop in the Local Group of Galaxies$579,519
· FY2016 · MPS · contact PI
An Advanced, Large Monolithic Imager for the Lowell Observatory 4.2-meter Discovery Channel Telescope$1,075,000
· FY2010 · MPS · contact PI
The Evolution of Massive Stars as a Function of Metallicity: Closing the Loop in the Local Group$807,583
· FY2010 · MPS · contact PI
The Physical Properties of Hot and Cool Massive Stars as a Function of Metallicity in the Local Group$221,662
· FY2006 · MPS · contact PI
Collaborative Research Using High Mass Binaries to Resolve the Mass Discrepancy: Taking Things to the Extreme$183,519
· FY2005 · MPS · contact PI
The Evolution of Massive Stars as a Function of Metallicity: Closing the Loop Observationally in the Local Group$261,279
· FY2001 · MPS · contact PI