A NOVA-C lander named Odysseus and built by the company Intuitive Machines lands on the surface of the moon.

In new experiment, scientists record Earth’s radio waves from the moon

June 10, 2024

On Feb. 22, a lunar lander named Odysseus touched down near the moon’s South Pole and popped out four antennas to record radio waves around the surface—a moment CU Boulder astrophysicist Jack Burns hails as the “dawn of radio astronomy from the moon.” Burns is co-investigator on the experiment.

CU Boulder students launch hybrid rocket

CU Boulder aerospace students launch hybrid rocket

May 14, 2024

The project saw its genesis more than 20 years ago, when a student approached Matt Rhode (Aerospace Engineering Sciences) about hybrid rockets, which are safer than solid fuel propulsion and not subject to the same U.S. government export restrictions that the turbo pumps necessary for liquid rockets are.

CU Engineering faculty land prestigious multidisciplinary Department of Defense projects

CU Engineering faculty land prestigious multidisciplinary Department of Defense projects

April 18, 2024

Mahmoud Hussein (Aerospace Engineering; Physics), ​Francois Barthelat (Mechanical Engineering) and Scott Diddams (Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering; Physics) are conducting projects awarded through the U.S. Department of Defense’s Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI) Program.

Dream of going to Mars? Pioneering spaceflight kinesiologist to speak April 4 on preserving human health in space

Dream of going to Mars? Pioneering spaceflight kinesiologist to speak April 4 on preserving human health in space

Feb. 28, 2024

Rachael Seidler, professor of applied physiology and kinesiology at the University of Florida, will deliver this year’s Rose M. Litman Memorial Lecture in Science on April 4 at CU Boulder: “Brain and Behavioral Changes with Human Spaceflight: Dysfunction and Adaptive Plasticity.”

Lunar science is entering a new active phase, with commercial launches of landers that will study solar wind and peer into the universe’s dark ages

Lunar science is entering a new active phase, with commercial launches of landers that will study solar wind and peer into the universe’s dark ages

Feb. 8, 2024

Thanks to new technologies and public-private partnerships, Professor Jack Burns (Astrophysical and Planetary Sciences) and a team of scientists will conduct radio astronomy from the south pole and the far side of the Moon in 2024—one of NASA’s first science experiments from the lunar surface in over 50 years.

New instrument to capture stardust as part of NASA mission

New instrument to capture stardust as part of NASA mission

Jan. 11, 2024

Scientists and engineers at CU Boulder will soon take part in an effort to collect stardust—the tiny bits of matter that flow through the Milky Way Galaxy and were once the initial building blocks of our solar system. The pursuit is part of NASA’s Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) mission.

CU Boulder researcher lands NASA grant to advance hypersonics modeling

CU Boulder researcher lands NASA grant to advance hypersonics modeling

Jan. 9, 2024

Assistant Professor Robyn Macdonald (Aerospace Engineering) has been awarded a $600K NASA Early Career award to improve computational modeling of turbulence at hypersonic speeds, using supercomputers such as CU Boulder’s Blanca Condo Cluster and NASA’s Pleiades Supercomputer.

14-inch spacecraft delivers new details about ‘hot Jupiters’

14-inch spacecraft delivers new details about ‘hot Jupiters’

Dec. 11, 2023

A spacecraft the size of a cereal box has collected precise measurements of the atmospheres of large and puffy planets called “hot Jupiters.” The findings, led by a team from CU Boulder, could help reveal how the atmospheres around these and a host of other worlds are escaping into space.

PhD student designing augmented reality for space missions

PhD student designing augmented reality for space missions

Dec. 6, 2023

“The current methods of trajectory design for missions that go beyond low Earth orbit to the Moon are very complicated and not intuitive. I want to change that,” said Dezell Turner, an aerospace PhD student aiming to streamline orbital design with an interactive, augmented reality tool.

Unique CU Boulder, NSO collaboration allows journey into varied solar physics research paths

Unique CU Boulder, NSO collaboration allows journey into varied solar physics research paths

Dec. 5, 2023

The George Ellery Hale Fellowships, created by CU Boulder in partnership with NSF’s National Solar Observatory, are designed to give students the freedom to explore a mix of solar and space physics research paths with multiple mentors before deciding on a thesis project.

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