Long began her research within environmental science while still a student at RPI, serving as an undergraduate research assistant from 1998 to 2000. After that, she was a graduate research and teaching assistant at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2000-2006). She then became a postdoctoral associate before becoming a visiting investigator within the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism (DTM) at the Carnegie Institution for Science. She spent three years there while transitioning back into education as a professor within the Department of Geology and Geophysics at Yale University.[3] Long continues to teach at Yale University while at the same time maintaining a strong continuation of personal research.[2]
Long's focuses of research include observational seismology and mantle dynamics; imaging of seismic anisotropy, subduction zone dynamics and processes; subduction and the mantle flow field, structure and dynamics of the lowermost mantle and the core-mantle boundary region, and structure, evolution, and deformation of the continental lithosphere.[4][5]
Awards and recognition
2000, Joseph L. Rosenholtz Prize for outstanding work in earth sciences, RPI