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HBCU Scientist Behind NOAA Total Eclipse Imagery

Jamese Sims: Jackson State University, Howard University Graduate

Photo Courtesy of NASA: Photo of the total solar eclipse taken by the GOES-16, using technology developed by NOAA scientist Jamese Sims and other NOAA scientist

WASHINGTON — Well before the nation’s first total solar eclipse dominated the headlines of every news organization in America, it was affixed to the mind of Jamese Sims.

Photo Courtesy of NOAA: Depicts Jamese Sims meterologist, engineer, and scientist for
NOAA and the Goes-16

Sims, a native of Meridian, Miss., graduate of two historically black universities and one of the few African-American women in the field of scientific engineering and meteorology, is part of the reason you and millions of Americans could see the stunning images of the eclipse on broadcast news stations, web pages, Facebook and Twitter feeds.

A graduate of Jackson State University in Jackson, Miss., and Howard University in Washington, D.C., Sims is the product manager for the groundbreaking GOES-16 Satellite that provided the images of the eclipse millions of Americans saw.

She supports the development and implementation of Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite, commonly referred to as GOES, R-Series satellite weather products by overseeing GOES-R Series Product Systems Development and Implementation projects and funding. 

For samples of the extraordinary images her work produced, visit http://www.noaa.gov/

Sims came to the world of weather and satellites almost by happenstance.  She recalls how growing up as a young girl in Mississippi, her grandmother would predict the weather based on how she felt.  Meanwhile, Sims marveled at how the weather was so different from her hometown when she visited her family in Indiana.  Initially, however, weather and science was not a career choice.

Sims began college with plans of becoming an accountant, but a persistent algebra teacher at Jackson State, “Ms. Brookins,” started her into the lane that would essentially set her life on a different track.

“One day, she called me up to her desk and she said, ‘Sims, what’s you major again?’   And so, I said, ‘Ms. Brookins, my major is accounting.’ She said, ‘No, you need to go across the hall to the physics department, because I can tell by the way that you think, and the way that you answer your questions, that you are a scientist, and that’s what your major needs to be.’”

It wasn’t long afterwards that Sims worked as an intern at NOAA during her undergraduate years as part of a NOAA’s scholarship program. Later, while working on her doctorate degree at Howard, Sims did another NOAA internship, this time in Miami, Fla., at the Hurricane Research Division. Her internship led to a fulltime position at NOAA studying the Gulf Stream that runs through Atlantic from Caribbean past Africa.  She also studied hurricane patterns.

In 2016, she joined the GOES team.

Sims was recently named a NOAA 2017 employee of the quarter. According to NOAA, she “champions and supports the development and implementation of weather satellite products to meet customer needs within cost and schedule of project plans.”        

Sims said her education at historically black universities was important to her success.

“I have two HBCUs under my belt, and I am definitely a promoter of HBCUs,” she said. “I gained not just academic expertise, but HBCUs go the extra mile in teaching our students about professional development and pushing the students to pursue internships.”