Swank graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in physics from Bryn Mawr College in 1961. Two of her physics professors at Bryn Mawr were alumni of Caltech. They influenced her decision to attend graduate school at the California Institute of Technology. Under the supervision of Steve Frautschi, she was awarded her PhD in physics in 1967.[1] Her thesis was "Radiative Corrections to Neutrino-Electron Interactions".[2]
In 1971, Swank and her husband moved to Ankara, Turkey, to join the faculty of the Middle East Technical University as assistant professors. There she met Hakkı Boran Ögelman, a high-energy astrophysics researcher and head of the physics department at that time who had been involved in the gamma-ray astronomy group at the Goddard Space Flight Center. Through him, Swank learned of experiments under development for the eighth Orbiting Solar Observatory (OSO-8) to be launched in 1975. After she returned to the United States, Swank applied for and received a postdoctoral fellowship at Goddard.[1]
Throughout her career at the Goddard Space Flight Center, Swank focused her research on observing and analyzing X-ray emissions from black holes and neutron stars.[1] She was elected a fellow in the American Physical Society in 1993.[7] She wrote or co-authored over 300 scientific papers published in scientific journals or by NASA during her career.[8] In June 2013, Swank was awarded the NASA Distinguished Service Medal.[9]
Swank retired in 2013. The Goddard Space Flight Center lists her as an emeritus scientist in her biographical sketch.[2]
While participating in a summer research program at the University of Maryland, she met Lowell James Swank, another physicist. They married in 1969 after he took a position at the National Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois.[1]
^"Dr. Jean H. Swank". NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. Retrieved 7 July 2013. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^"HEAD AAS Rossi Prize Winners". American Astronomical Society (AAS) High Energy Astrophysics Division (HEAD). Archived from the original on 6 April 2008. Retrieved 7 July 2013.