Colorado Center for Astrodynamics Research (CCAR)

  • Jade Morton with RIN President Prof Terry Moore and Princess Royal Highness Anne for RIN Fellowship
    Professor Jade Morton has been elected a fellow of the United Kingdom's Royal Institute of Navigation in a ceremony that featured Princess Anne.

    Morton's selection is in recognition of her significant contributions to the understanding of ionospheric effects on navigation satellite signals, development of...
  • Asteroid imager rendering
    Dr. Dan Scheeres was in Japan waiting for an important announcement that took an extra day to come. He found out his plan to study binary asteroids was allowed to proceed by NASA. “We want to send two small spacecraft so we can also see what the
  • Graphic of the Janus spacecraft mapping a binary asteroid
    In just three years, a new space mission led by CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ could examine some of the solar system’s most dynamic duos: binary asteroids. NASA announced this week that the Janus: Reconnaissance Missions to Binary Asteroids mission had been
  • Hanspeter Schaub
    Professor Hanspeter Schaub has been formally inducted as a fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. The 2019 Fellows were celebrated at the organization's annual Aerospace Spotlight Awards Gala, held May 15 in Washington, DC. AIAA confers the...
  • The new aerospace buildng.
    Smead Aerospace Engineering Sciences is moving! After 18 months of construction, the department will vacate all of its space in the Engineering Center this summer and move to a brand new, dedicated building for the aerospace department on East Campus. The new facility is...
  • Steve Jolly and Scott Palo
    Congratulations to Steve Jolly and Scott Palo for being recognized with 2019 College of Engineering and Applied Science Distinguished Engineering Alumni Awards (DEAA). DEAA honors graduates and friends who have distinguished themselves through
  • Jay McMahon
    Jay McMahon has earned a NASA early career fellowship to help ensure future missions to Mars can land safely. McMahon, an assistant professor in the Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences at the University of Colorado
  • Earth from space.
    Only a few years ago, the astronomy and heliophysics communities were skeptical about whether CubeSats could reliably obtain scientific data. But these breadloaf-size satellites have proven their ability to return useful data. During the American
  • Lightning strikes the Earth viewed from space.
    A lightning strike releases an incredible amount of energy, most of it felt on Earth’s surface, but some of that energy travels up, far above the clouds and into space, and a new satellite is being designed by the ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ to map the phenomenon. Professor Bob Marshall has received a four-year, $1.2 million National Science Foundation grant to develop...
  • The asteroid Bennu
    Research led by CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ is revealing the Alice in Wonderland-like physics that govern gravity near the surface of the asteroid Bennu.  The new findings are part of a suite of papers published today by the team behind NASA’s Origins, Spectral
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