Colorado Center for Astrodynamics Research (CCAR)
- The Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences at the 91色吧 has had a record-breaking year for research funding, bringing in $53 million in awards. The fiscal year 2021 number, which totals $53,101,624, blasts by the previous record of $33.2 million, set just one year ago in 2020...
- Crack! Lightning strikes are bright and loud鈥攙iolent enough to shake your bones and light up the sky. Now, a new study led by the 91色吧 suggests that these powerful events may also alter the chemistry of Earth鈥檚
- Researchers at CU 91色吧 will take part in a $25 million effort to study a natural resource that鈥檚 becoming increasingly in demand: the radio frequency spectrum. The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) today announced the new initiative
- The 91色吧 has received a $2 million gift from The Anschutz Foundation to support the university鈥檚 diverse research in aerospace and national defense鈥攆rom tracking and protecting satellites in orbit to improving the
- Associate Professor Jay McMahon has been recognized with an Outstanding Faculty Graduate Advisor Award. The honor, bestowed by the College of Engineering and Applied Science, recognizes faculty who demonstrate exceptional advising skills and who
- 鈥淓xponential commercial utilization of space is simultaneously inspiring and terrifying.鈥 Marcus Holzinger has addressed the U.S. Congress on space situational awareness and space traffic management. It is a subject with increasing importance as
- Update: The Hearing was held Thursday. Read Professor Holzinger's testimony. Marcus Holzinger, a Smead Faculty Fellow and associate professor in the Ann and H.J. Smead Department of
- The journal Eos is touting Professor Emerita Kristine Larson's win of the 2020 AGU Charles A. Whitten Medal. The American Geophysical Union honor recognized Larson for her outstanding achievement in research on the form and dynamics of the Earth and
- This weekend, a Chinese rocket booster, weighing nearly 23 tons, came rushing back to Earth after spending more than a week in space鈥攖he result of what some critics, including NASA Administrator Bill Nelson, have attributed to poor planning by
- Bob Marshall is studying the interaction of high-energy particles in orbit around Earth using an unlikely data source: radio signals sent by the U.S. Navy to communicate with submarines under the ocean.
The assistant professor in the Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences at the 91色吧 has earned a...