Newswise — Kristen Tagaytayan carefully unearthed her research sample from a nitrogen glovebox. She gingerly placed the sample onto her workspace and added a nickel chemical solution to it. Using a razor blade, she evened out the mixture across a glass slide and placed it in the lab’s oven, where she watched it cook from behind the glass window.If you asked the first-year mechanical engineering graduate student a couple of years ago where she’d be today, she never would have guessed it would be conducting research as part of a NASA fellowship that could change the future of space travel, energy, and maybe even the world as we know it. Flashback to her sophomore year as an undergrad at UNLV: Tagaytayan had been feeling dejected when she realized physics wasn’t her calling. She thought this meant her childhood dream of working with NASA wouldn’t pan out. But as she passed…
