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Aerospace Engineering professor Laksh Narayanaswami
Foundations of Legacy: Laksh Narayanaswami
As an Aerospace Engineering professor with a long history at Embry‑Riddle, Laksh Narayanaswami shares his meaningful experience with strengthening the Aerospace Engineering program and preparing students to change the future.
Kayla Taylor, Embry‑Riddle alumna and Ph.D. student, whose research focuses on improving aviation safety through effective incident report writing. (Photo: Kayla Taylor)
Transforming Aviation Safety Through Writing
Ph.D. student Kayla Taylor is helping make aviation safer by improving how pilots write and communicate incident reports.
Robotic systems presentations at Preview Day. (Photo: Wilson Van Ness)
Want a Career in Robotics? Embry‑Riddle Can Help You Achieve Your Goals
Embry-Riddle Prescott offers the unique opportunity to pair Computer or Electrical Engineering with the world of robotics. With a specific robotics focus in your education, you’ll be on track to engineer the career you’ve always wanted.
Ian Williams
Embry‑Riddle to SpaceX: Ian William’s Path to Success
From a young age, Ian Williams knew that he wanted to be an engineer. Now, he is interning at SpaceX - fulfilling dreams, constantly learning and enjoying every step along the way.
Bert Zarb hero image.
Foundations of Legacy: Bert Zarb
For over 25 years, Dr. Norbert Zarb has been dedicated to purposefully impacting Embry-Riddle students and helping them shape the future.
Teresa Symons
Reaching for the Stars: Women in Astronomy
Read about alumna Dr. Teresa Symons to learn more about her path to becoming an astrophysics staff scientist at Caltech/IPAC.
Two people seated in the cockpit of a small aircraft during flight.
Alumnus Launches Flight App to Match Students With Instructors
Embry-Riddle Worldwide graduate Jess Ellwanger ('19) turns his aviation journey into a fast-growing startup bridging gaps in flight training.
Sean Barnier (left) and Danica Marr (right) had the opportunity to fly on NOAA’s WP-3D Orion aircraft this summer. (Photos: Sean Barnier and Danica Marr)
Flying Into the Future: A Student’s Experience on NOAA’s WP-3D Orion
Embry-Riddle undergraduate students Danica Marr (‘26) and Lannon McGregor (‘26) and alumnus Sean Barnier (‘25) had the rare opportunity to fly aboard the WP-3D Orion aircraft, often referred to as the “P-3."
EJ in front of the Qasr Al Watan presidential palace. (Photo: EJ Bailey)
Around the World With SMART Scholar Elias EJ Bailey
Elias "EJ" Bailey received a Department of Defense (DOD) Science, Mathematics and Research for Transformation (SMART) Scholarship in his first year at Embry-Riddle. Now a rising junior, his experiences have taken him around the globe — and prepared him for the future.
Abigail Connors (’27)
Navigating the Stars
With hands-on research experience and Embry‑Riddle’s on-campus telescope, Space Physics student Abigail Connors (’27) is charting her own course in the world of astronomy.
Student kneels behind a large fixed-wing radio-controlled aircraft with tricycle landing gear and high-aspect-ratio wings on a campus walkway lined with palm trees.
Vikas Patel Is Built for the Landing
Aerospace engineer Vikas Patel blends artistic vision, flight precision and technical intuition — from flying taildraggers to designing lunar guidance systems. He launched a student art competition to promote creativity and interest in spaceflight. Now headed to Stanford after a NASA internship, he’s building a future where human safety and imagination take flight.
Sean McConoughey on Embry‑Riddle's Daytona Beach, Florida, campus. (Photo: Bill Fredette-Huffman)
Launching a Passion
Sean McConoughey, an aerospace engineering student and ARC Scholarship recipient, transformed his early rocketry success into impactful research and leadership at Embry-Riddle’s Daytona Beach Campus.