Ria Carlo (née Ria Persad) was born on June 18, 1974, in Trinidad and Tobago, is of East Indian descent, and moved to the United States as a small child. She is both a mathematician and a classical musician[1] and was a child prodigy.
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Despite humble beginnings as an immigrant,[2] at the age of 12, Ria started doing research under mentor Eleanor F. Helin at Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, in Asteroid Discovery, Origin, and Motion, and at the age of 13, she was a research assistant at the High-temperature Superconductivity Lab at Boston University. At the age of 14, she developed new methods of numerical integration including the "Method of Polygonal Partitions", "Vector Approximation Method", and "Inversion Method". Carlo's research in calculus won her the 1st Award for 2 years in a row at the M.I.T. State Science Fair.[3]
From the age of 14, Carlo took mathematics coursework at Harvard University. At the age of 16,[4] she graduated valedictorian of the Class of 1991 at Boston Latin School, an examination school and the oldest high school in the United States.[5] She was subsequently recruited by Princeton University, where she worked as research assistant under Prof. John N. Bahcall at the Institute for Advanced Study on Hubble Space Telescope Data Analysis of Quasar Spectrum Emission. She was a presenter at the Harvard AAVSO.[6]
Carlo later studied Mathematics and Physics at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom on a Commonwealth Scholarship. She entered the Ph.D. mathematics program at Rice University in 1995, but did not complete the program, instead taking a job at NASA's Johnson Space Center as a Martian Meteoroid Analyst during the Mars Pathfinder Mission.
Carlo received a Highest Honor Award from the Society of Women Engineers.[7] She was honored in the Presidential Scholars Program under President George H. W. Bush. She was awarded citations by Ted Kennedy of the United States Senate and Hazel R. O'Leary of the U.S. Department of Energy.
Her mathematical and scientific areas of interest have been in Space Physics and Defense Systems, Orbital Dynamics, Geospace and Climatology, Computational Modeling, and Predictive Analytics. She is regarded as a programming expert in Aerospace Guidance Systems, and she currently works on Classified Projects supported by the United States Department of Defense.[8]
In November 2011, O, The Oprah Magazine profiled Carlo's life as a pianist. At the age of 6, she heard the sound of a piano for the first time when her teacher in the 1st Grade played "When the Saints Go Marching In." From this point onwards, Carlo decided to teach herself to play the piano by ear, by staying behind during recess and playing on the classroom piano. She eventually received piano lessons at the age of 9, and, at the age of 11, she was considering becoming a concert pianist. She was told that the only way she could survive as a concert pianist was to become the one-in-a-million who wins the International Tchaikovsky Competition. Discouraged, Carlo pursued mathematics as a more viable career option.[9] Throughout high school, she continued piano lessons at the New England Conservatory under Alice Canaday, scoring "high honors" on her piano examinations. She became the youngest member and piano accompanist of Princeton University's Glee Club. She also studied pipe organ, early instruments, and voice while in high school and college[10]
For nearly 20 years, as Carlo continued in her career as a mathematician, she did not pursue classical piano.[11] In 2008, she decided to again take up her hobby of classical piano in the Tampa Bay area of Florida while still working as a mathematician, and she progressed rapidly while taking lessons under Dr. Linda Pointer and Russian virtuoso Eleonora Lvov.
Carlo won a series of local and state piano competitions and then became a prizewinner of the 2010 Bradshaw and Buono International Piano Competition[12] and was Artist of the Month.[13] She has given numerous piano performances in Italy and throughout the United States, she performs nationally for charities and benefits,[14] and made her Carnegie Hall debut in April 2011.[15]
Carlo has been featured in Nancy Williams' piano magazine, Reflections on a Grand Passion, and also appears on Oprah Winfrey's website in a feature on "Turning Dreams Into Reality."
Carlo has released an all-Yamaha CD Solace (2011), a historical journey through 250 years of lyrical classical music, featuring 8 composers (Handel, Bach, Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt, Debussy, Bartok, and Barber) with some recordings from rare manuscripts never before commercially available.[16]
Carlo's style of playing has been described as "full of vitality and joie-de-vivre" (Sophie Yates), "taking you to a place of peace and calm" (Thomas Osuga), "radiant and deeply expressive with superior interpretive skill and individuality" (Cosmo Buono), "truly inspiring" (Deirdre McArdle-Manning), and "enchanting" (Victoria Lee). Her music is being promoted for national radio in the United States and Canada by Phoenix Classical.[17]
Ria is married to Mark Christopher Carlo, a chief information officer and chemical and process engineer. Their interests include traveling and charitable service, and they are the founders of the Freedom Scholars of America Scholarship Fund.[18]