
Cinematica de dos CMEs observadas en diferentes longitudes de onda en la baja corona.Noticias Universia Argentina (in Spanish). "Astrónomas: cuando ellas son las estrellas". ^ a b c "Marta Rovira: La primera mujer que preside el CONICET en 50 años".Ruth Hedeman, and Marta Rovira de Miceli. Lopez Fuentes, Marcelo Claudio, Cristina Hemilse Mandrini, Marta Graciela Rovira, and Pascal Démoulin.Paissan, Gabriel Hernan, Marta Graciela Rovira, and Guillermo Stenborg, "Cinematica de dos CMEs observadas en diferentes longitudes de onda en la baja corona." Asociacion Argentina de Astronomıa (2005): 97."A solar burst submillimeter only spectral component during a GOES M class flare." cosp 37 (2008): 604. Machado, Igor de Benedetto e Silva, Pierre Kaufmann, and Marta Graciela Rovira.

Cristiani, Germán, Carlos Guillermo Giménez de Castro, Cristina H."Asymmetric precipitation in a coronal loop as explanation of a singular observed spectrum." Advances in space research 44, no. Cristiani, Germán, CG Giménez de Castro, Cristina Hemilse Mandrini, Marcos Emilio Machado, and Marta Graciela Rovira.Rovira has authored more than 120 scientific articles.

She won a special mention by the Konex Awards, 2008.

CONICET is the primary science and technology organization for the country. Since I started at the National Observatory of Cosmic Physics in San Miguel, my research area was always solar physics." CONICET īeginning in 1979, Rovira worked at Argentina's National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET) and was appointed its president in 2008. In an interview, she said her original research has been focused on "our closest star, the Sun. After graduation she was offered a position at Observatory of Cosmic Physics, near Buenos Aires, which cemented her ambitions in astronomy. Rovira went on to earn her degree in physics and a PhD in Physical Sciences from the Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences ( University of Buenos Aires). By the time the family received the vocational test results, however, she had "already enrolled in math and science courses." In those days, though, students in Argentina were encouraged to pursue vocational training so her parents had her tested. Rovira anticipated a scientific career when she was still in high school because she had more interest in physics and math than for social subjects.
