UH Hilo’s ʻImiloa Astronomy Center has a new astronomer-in-residence; Devin Chu’s first visit to the center was as a middle schooler

Hilo-born Devin Chu’s first visit to ʻImiloa was as a middle schooler; now with a PhD, he’s the center’s astronomer-in-residence, immersed in developing the curriculum and outreach.

Two photos: ʻImiloa with its conical structures, and Devin Chu opening the front glass doors of the center.
Devin Chu is the new astronomer-in-residence at UH Hilo ʻImiloa Astronomy Center. (Photo of Devin Chu by Ethan Tweedie)

University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo new astronomer-in-residence at the ʻImiloa Astronomy Center has a life and career literally written in the stars.

Devin Chu grew up in Hilo and would often visit the library on weekends with his mother. While in the third grade, one of the books he discovered was Our Solar System, which got him fascinated with the neighboring planets and their differences from Earth.

The discovery was a life-changing moment for Chu and first set him on a course into the field of astronomy, then later on a return trajectory to his hometown to become astronomer-in-residence at ʻImiloa in March of this year.

He first visited ʻImiloa when he was in middle school.

“We learned about the Polynesian voyages in elementary school, and I remember thinking that traveling on the open ocean and settling on islands was one of the greatest feats of human ingenuity,” says Chu. “When ʻImiloa opened in middle school, it was great to learn about the connections between the stars and the constellations that I knew from Western science and how they played a major role in Polynesian wayfinding.”

Devin as a young boy and his teacher.
Devin Chu displays his astronomer timeline with his third-grade teacher at E.B. deSilva Elementary School in Hilo. (Courtesy photo)

As a child, Chu participated in as many opportunities as he could find, including the popular Journey Through the Universe astronomy education and outreach program and Future Flight Hawaiʻi. Chu often reached out to astronomers to gain their insight and advice on his high school research projects.

Doug Simons, director of University of Hawaiʻi’s Institute for Astronomy, fondly recalls Chu and how he indirectly helped to inspire the creation of the Maunakea Scholars (MKS) program years later.

“Before Maunakea Scholars, high school student access to the observatories was ad-hoc, mainly based on knowing someone who worked at the observatories or just cold-calling astronomers for advice on their science projects,” says Simons, who was director of the Gemini Observatory when he first met Chu. “We flipped things around five or six years later with the launch of the MKS program that went to the schools looking for students like Devin who wanted to do research using the most powerful collection of telescopes in the world.”

After graduating from Hilo High School in 2010, Chu’s journey took him to Dartmouth College. In his second year, Chu was selected to participate in the Akamai Internship Program, which allowed him to return home for the summer to assist astronomers at the Gemini-North Observatory. The following summer, Chu received additional experience as an undergraduate research fellow at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Kaʻiu and Devin stand outside one of the large conical structures at the astronomy center.
Standing outside UH Hilo ʻImiloa Astronomy Center are from left, Kaʻiu Kimura, executive director of the center, and Devin Chu, astronomer-in-residence. (Courtesy photo)

He earned his bachelor of arts in physics and astronomy in 2014, then attended UCLA, where he earned his master of science and doctor of philosophy in astronomy and astrophysics in 2016 and 2020, respectively. For his doctoral degree, he studied stars around a supermassive black hole, specializing in adaptive optics-fed spectroscopy. “My research involves data reduction and analysis, Bayesian statistics, modeling, and simulations,” he notes on his LinkedIn page.

Immersing himself in the development of ʻImiloa’s curriculum

As UH Hilo’s astronomer-in-residence at ʻImiloa, Chu is looking forward to immersing himself in the development of ʻImiloa’s curriculum, expansion of educational outreach programs, and further development of place-based partnerships with the community to get Hawaiʻi Island students interested in astronomy or other STEM-related fields.

Chu will also play a significant role in UH’s new Space Science and Engineering Initiative.

For more on Chu, see this Noelo story. Noelo is UH’s research magazine from the Office of the Vice President for Research and Innovation.

—Via UH System News

ʻImiloa Astronomy Center

ʻImiloa Astronomy Center is an educational facility of the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo with a mission to share the legacy of Hawaiʻi exploration in many fields through a wide range of exhibits, community outreach, programs, and other forms of informal science education.

The center’s architecture has conical-shaped buildings for its welcoming lobby, exhibit hall, full-dome planetarium, café, and gift shop. There are nine acres of native gardens surrounding the buildings.

ʻImiloa is located at UH Hilo’s University Park of Science and Technology, 600 ʻImiloa Place, off Komohana and Nowelo streets.

ʻImiloa Astronomy Center exterior and gardens.
ʻImiloa Astronomy Center (File photo)

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