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Katsuko Saruhashi: Why Google honours her today


TRIBUNNEWS.COM - Ada yang menarik dari tampilan Google pada hari ini.

Untuk hari Kamis tanggal 22 Maret 2018 ini, Google Doodle ,menghadirkan tampilan halaman muka dengan tema sosok Katsuko Saruhashi .

Bagi warga Indonesia, sosok Katsuko Saruhashi adalah nama yang terdengar sangat asing di telinga bukan? Meski begitu, ada cerita menarik dibalik sosok Katsuko Saruhashi sehingga sosoknya dijadikan tokoh pada Google Doodle hari ini.

Sosoknya dipandang begitu spesial di mata warga dunia karena menjadi salah satu tokoh wanita di dunia dalam bidang ilmu bumi terutama bidang geochemist.

Untuk mengupas sosoknya lebih dalam, mari kita simak salah satu  quote  dari sosoknya yang begitu terkenal.

Ada banyak wanita yang memiliki kemampuan untuk menjadi ilmuwan hebat. Saya ingin melihat hari ketika wanita dapat berkontribusi pada sains dan teknologi yang setara dengan pria.

Ya, sosok Katsuko Saruhashi adalah salah satu tokoh ilmuan wanita yang mencoba mendobrak kerangka sains dan teknologi yang sebelumnya selalu didominasi oleh kaum pria.

Langkah besarnya dalam bidang ilmu pengetahuan ini dimulai dengan sebuah kisah sederhana.

Semua bermula saat Saruhashi muda tengah duduk di ruang kelas di mana ia menempuh pendidikan Sekolah Dasar.

Sama seperti bocah SD pada umumnya, Saruhashi kadang melamun di dalam kelas mengabaikan pelajaran dari gurunya.




Katsuko Saruhashi ( 猿橋 勝子 , Saruhashi Katsuko ? , 22 Maret 1920 – 29 September 2007) adalah geokimiawan yang pertama kali mengukur kandungan karbon dioksida (CO 2 ) di air laut dan memaparkan bukti bahaya luruhan radioaktif di air laut dan atmosfer .

Saruhashi lahir di Tokyo dan lulus dari Perguruan Tinggi Sains Wanita Kekaisaran Jepang (pendahulu Universitas Toho ) tahun 1943, lalu bergabung dengan Institut Penelitian Meteorologi milik Observatorium Meteorologi Pusat (kelak menjadi Badan Meteorologi Jepang ) dan bekerja di laboratorium geokimia di sana. Pada tahun 1950, ia mulai meneliti kandungan CO 2 di air laut. Waktu itu, kandungan CO 2 tidak dianggap penting sehingga Saruhashi harus mengembangkan metode pengukuran sendiri. [1]

Ia mendapat gelar S2 kimia pada tahun 1957 dari Universitas Tokyo dan menjadi salah satu perempuan pertama yang mendapat gelar tersebut. [2]

Usai uji nuklir Bikini Atoll tahun 1954, pemerintah Jepang meminta Laboratorium Geokimia menganalisis dan mengawasi radioaktivitas air laut dan hujan. [2] Sebuah kapal nelayan Jepang berada di arah angin saat uji nuklir dilakukan, kemudian semua awak kapal jatuh sakit. Saruhashi menemukan bahwa radioaktivitas memakan waktu satu setengah tahun untuk mencapai perairan Jepang . [2]

Tahun 1964, tingkat radioaktivitas menunjukkan bahwa perairan Pasifik Utara bagian barat dan timur telah bercampur sepenuhnya. Tahun 1969, jejak-jejak radioaktivitas telah tersebar ke seluruh Pasifik. [ butuh rujukan ] Ini merupakan salah satu penelitian pertama yang menunjukkan cara luruhan nuklir menyebar ke seluruh dunia, bukan hanya di perairan sekitar. [ butuh rujukan ] Pada tahun 1970-an dan 1980-an, ia mulai meneliti hujan asam dan dampaknya.

Saruhashi meninggal dunia tanggal 29 September 2007 akibat pneumonia di rumahnya di Tokyo pada usia 87 tahun.

1958 - Pendiri Perkumpulan Ilmuwan Perempuan Jepang untuk memperkenalkan perempuan dalam ilmu pengetahuan dan membantu menjaga perdamaian dunia. [3]

1980 - Perempuan pertama yang menjadi anggota Dewan Ilmu Pengetahuan Jepang.

1981 - Avon Special Prize for Women atas penelitiannya tentang penggunaan tenaga nuklir secara damai dan menaikkan status status ilmuwan perempuan.

1981 - Perintis Saruhashi Prize , penghargaan tahunan untuk ilmuwan perempuan yang menjadi panutan bagi ilmuwan perempuan muda.

1985 - Perempuan pertama yang dianugerahi Miyake Prize untuk geokimia.

1993 - Tanaka Prize dari Society of Sea Water Sciences.

Saruhashi adalah anggota kehormatan Perkumpulan Geokimia Jepang dan Perkumpulan Oseanografi Jepang. [4]

Pada tanggal 22 Maret 2018, Google menampilkan Doodle berwajah Katsuko Saruhashi bertepatan dengan ulang tahun ke-98. [5] [6]

"Ada banyak perempuan yang mampu menjadi ilmuwan besar. Saya menunggu-nunggu masa ketika perempuan bisa ikut memperkaya sains dan teknologi, sejajar dengan laki-laki." [7]

^ Yount, Lisa (1996) Twentieth-Century Women Scientists , Facts On File, Inc., p. 53, ISBN 0-8160-3173-8

^ a b c Yount, Lisa (2008). A to Z of women in science and math (edisi ke-Rev.). New York: Facts On File. hlmn. 263–264. ISBN   978-0-8160-6695-7 .

^ Robertson, Jennifer, editor (2008) A Companion to the Anthropology of Japan , John Wiley & Sons, p. 477, ISBN 140514145X

^ https://www.google.com/doodles/katsuko-saruhashis-98th-birthday

Yount, Lisa (1996). Twentieth Century Women Scientists. New York: Facts on File. ISBN 0-8160-3173-8 .

Morell, Virginia et al. (April 16, 1993). Called 'Trimates,' three bold women shaped their field. Science , v260 n5106 p420(6).




Described as one of the greatest Japanese geochemists and hailed as an "iron scientist", Katsuko Saruhashi would have been 98 years old on March 21.

In her honour, Google is changing its logo in 15 countries to an illustration of her.

But in her lifetime, she was not always recognised for her achievements and discrimination was an everyday affair.

This is her story:

World War II experience

Saruhashi was born in Tokyo in 1920 to Kuniharu and Kuno Saruhashi . As a child, she was often described as a shy and introverted little girl.

. As a child, she was often described as a shy and introverted little girl. A young Saruhashi sat in primary school watching raindrops slide down a window and wondered what made it rain.

Saruhashi had a passion for education that was also supported by her mother after their shared experience of the Second World War. She was convinced that women needed to acquire technical knowledge to gain independence.

She attended Toho University (then known as the Imperial Women's College of Science) and graduated in 1943.

First doctorate

While studying, Saruhashi met someone who would become her future mentor. Miyake Yasuo offered her a position at the Meteorological Research Institute.

During her time there she had the opportunity to study the CO2 levels in seawater.

"Now everyone is concerned about carbon dioxide, but at the time nobody was," she said, when she started she had to design her own techniques for measuring the gas.

She showed that the Pacific Oceans releases about twice as much carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere as it absorbs, meaning it could not help combat climate change.

For her work, she became the first woman to be awarded a doctorate in chemistry from the University of Tokyo in 1957.

Nuclear bombs

Saruhashi and her team were also recognised for being part of the first group in the world to look into the effects of bombs tested by the US and the Soviet Union in the world's atmosphere.

She discovered that radioactivity reached the cost of Japan. She was one the firsts to research on the issues of nuclear testing; her evidence was later used to stop those governments from performing nuclear tests.

Despite her pioneering work, Saruhashi is almost never cited in Western debates on climate change or the dangers of radiation testing.

She died on September 29, 2007, at the age of 87.

Recognition

Saruhashi was the first woman to be awarded a doctoral degree in chemistry from the University of Tokyo in 1957.

She was the first woman to be elected as the member of the Science Council of Japan, the country’s parliament of science in 1980.

She was the first woman to receive the Miyake Prize for geochemistry in 1985, and she established her own prize as well known as the Suruhashi prize which recognises female scientists who act as mentors and role models for younger female scientists.

"I wanted to highlight the capabilities of women scientists. Until now, those capabilities have been secret, under the surface," she was quoted saying.

In 1993, she won the Tanaka Prize from the Society of Sea Water Sciences.


Today’s Google Doodle celebrates Japanese geochemist Katsuko Saruhashi, whose research helped reveal the insidious spread of radioactive fallout from the US nuclear testing ground in the Pacific. If she were still alive, today would have been her 98th birthday.

In 1957, Saruhashi became the first woman to receive a PhD in chemistry in Japan. Her work focused on measuring the molecules in seawater, like carbon dioxide, oxygen, and also radioactive molecules like cesium-137. Just 12 years before she received her PhD, the United States dropped atomic bombs that devastated the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the US continued to unleash a torrent of radioactive fallout in the Pacific as it tested bigger and bigger bombs. By 1958, the US had exploded 67 nuclear devices around the Marshall Islands — leaving a long legacy of contamination behind.

Saruhashi worked at the Central Meteorological Observatory in Tokyo to develop more sensitive methods of measuring radioactive fallout. It was a challenging task, says Toshihiro Higuchi, a historian at Georgetown University and expert on Cold War science. “The amount of fallout that we are talking about is really tiny, and then we are talking about the vast ocean,” he says.

Saruhashi and her colleagues discovered that fallout didn’t disperse evenly in the ocean. The concentrations of radioactive cesium near Japan, for example, were much higher than the concentrations along the West Coast of the US. The team proposed that the high levels were because Japan is downstream of the Pacific nuclear testing ground. But others suspected that the measurements might be off, Higuchi says. “There was a controversy over her argument that the radioactive fallout in seawater was more than what they used to think.”

To settle the dispute, the US Atomic Energy Commission funded a lab swap. Saruhashi took a six-month leave of absence from her work at the Central Meteorological Observatory in Japan and visited Scripps Institute of Oceanography. There, she and oceanographer Ted Folsom compared their methods and discovered that Saruhashi’s technique was spot-on: the two teams’ methods produced almost identical results.

Saruhashi worked to support female scientists, and in 1958 she co-founded the Society of Japanese Women Scientists, which pushed for nuclear disarmament and peace. “She was very conscious of the social responsibility of scientists in general,” Higuchi says. Saruhashi died in 2007. But she left behind a legacy of scientific research, including an award called the Saruhashi Prize for top natural scientists who are women. “She was a trailblazer,” Higuchi says.

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