Adding Multiple Categories in Posts

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Category : jekyll   guides   sample_category


Adding Multiple Categories in Posts

To add categories in blog posts all you have to do is add a category key with category values in frontmatter of the post :

---
category: ['jekyll', 'guides', 'sample_category']
---

Then to render this category using link and pages. All we need to do is,

  1. Create a new file with [your_category_name].md inside categories folder.

  2. Copy categories/sample_category.md file and replace the content in [your_category_name].md in that. (Please don’t copy the code below its just sample, since it renders the jekyll syntax dynamically)

---
layout: page
title: Guides
permalink: /blog/categories/your_category_name/
---

<h5> Posts by Category : Adding Multiple Categories in Posts </h5>

<div class="card">

</div>

Using the category, all the posts associated with the category will be listed on http://localhost:4000/blog/categories/your_category_name


About Crisel Suarez

¡Hola! My name is Crisel Suarez. I am a Physics PhD candidate at Vanderbilt University and Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Predoctoral Fellow . I grew up in Mexico City, Mexico and Austin, TX, USA. I am fully bilingual in both Spanish and English. I earned my Bachelor’s of Science and majored in Mathematics and minored in Global Studies and Physics at a small liberal arts school called St. Edward’s University . I was a McNair Scholar at St. Edward’s University and pursued all types of research; from Computer Science looking at the expected values of properties in the game of Monopoly (with Dr. Michael Kart ), Mathematics looking at the tetrominoes ( TETRIS pieces) and how they form gaps and make you lose at TETRIS (with Dr. Jason Callahan ), and Science Education in quantifying science literacy in undergraduates students (with Dr. Paul Walter . I also took a graduate Nanotechnologies and Nanofabrication certification from the Nanomanufacturing Systems Center (NASCENT) at University of Texas at Austin.

After graduating from St. Edward’s University, I went to pursue my Masters of Science in Physics at Fisk University as part of the Fisk-Vanderbilt Masters to PhD program . At Fisk, I was part of Dr. Arnold Burger’s Materials Science and Applications Group (MSAG) where I studied the chemical composition of high energy crystal scintillators using Vanderbilt’s University high performance computing ACCRE facilities.

During the summers as a Masters student, I had the opportunity to work with Dr. Christopher S. Moore at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian in the Solar Stellar X-ray Group as part of the Fisk-Vanderbilt-CfA Latino Initiative Program (now CfA Research Experiences in Astronomy, Technology, & Engineering (CREATE) program. I worked on analyzing beautiful high energy events in the Sun called solar flares . As part of PhD work at Vanderbilt University, I continued to examined ~30 soft x-ray (SXR) flares observed with the Miniature X-ray Solar Spectrometer (MinXSS-1) and derived changes in temperature, volume emission measure and elemental abundances as a function of time with parametric spectral fits. I continue to research solar flares and look for Quasi-Periodic Pulsations (QPPs) in flares with different instruments including Hinode/X-ray Telescope (Hinode/XRT) , Solar Dynamic Observatory/Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (SDO/AIA) , Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) , Miniature X-ray Solar Spectrometer- 1 and 2 (MinXSS-1&2) and Dual Aperture X-ray Solar Spectrometer (DAXSS). I have also used the Hydrodynamic Radiation (HYDRAD) model to synthesize Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) and soft x-ray (SXR) emission in solar flares.

I also enjoy engaging in science outreach events, promoting research, curiosity, creativity and mentoring the next generation of scientists!

When I have some rare free time, I like going to museums, shows, trying new foods, and traveling!

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