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Embry-Riddle’s Dr. Morad Nazari, graduate student Sahasra Boyapati and Dr. Daewon Kim display prototype components.
Cleaning Up the Final Frontier: Embry-Riddle Researchers Develop Net Mechanism to Catch Space Debris
With damaging strikes by accumulating space debris a serious threat to space missions and exploration, Embry‑Riddle researchers are developing a mechanism that can snag the debris with nets and tow it toward Earth’s atmosphere to burn up on reentry.
Students walk along a shaded path outside Embry-Riddle’s Aerospace Experimentation and Fabrication Building on the Prescott Campus, surrounded by bright yellow fall foliage and afternoon sunlight.
‘One University’: Jack Hunt’s Vision Continues to Shape the Future of Embry-Riddle’s Western Campus
When Embry‑Riddle Aeronautical University President Jack R. Hunt first walked the wind-carved hills north of Prescott, Arizona, in 1977, he found empty slump-stone dormitories and unpaved roads.
Dr. Jeffrey Miller, new dean of the College of Engineering at Embry-Riddle’s Prescott Campus.
Dr. Jeffrey Miller Named Dean of College of Engineering at Embry-Riddle’s Prescott Campus
Dr. Jeffrey Miller, a highly accomplished academic leader in the engineering and computer science fields, has been appointed dean of the College of Engineering at Embry‑Riddle Aeronautical University’s Prescott, Arizona, campus.
Software engineer Jake Neighbors and intern Payton Macias conduct a test run of a flight simulator developed by Embry-Riddle’s Center for Aerospace Resilient Systems (CARS). They were part of a team that showed off the simulator at the DEF CON cybersecurity event in Las Vegas.
Internships Hosted by Embry-Riddle's Center for Aerospace Resilient Systems Provide Hands-on Experience
Interns working at Embry-Riddle's Center for Aerospace Resilient Systems gained hands-on experience in aerospace cybersecurity - including demonstrating a flight simulator at the DEF CON security conference in Las Vegas.
Tyler Jenkins, a sophomore Aerospace Physiology student, talks to an attendee about his research.
Embry-Riddle Sees Record Student Participation at Fall 2025 Research Symposium
Embry-Riddle set a new record at its Fall 2025 Student Research Symposium, with more than 240 posters and 600 student presenters participating across disciplines ranging from aerospace physiology to mechanical engineering.
Embry‑Riddle student assistant Sawyer Curless (left) and Dr. Curtis James, professor of Meteorology, install the Honeywell IntuVue RDR-7000 antenna array atop the Academic Complex building at the Prescott Campus.
New Honeywell Radar Installed at Embry-Riddle's Prescott Campus Provides Advanced Weather Tracking
Honeywell has donated an IntuVue RDR-7000 radar system to Embry-Riddle's Prescott Campus, giving meteorology students access to advanced weather-sensing technology used on commercial aircraft for research and training purposes.
Embry-Riddle students Quentin Goss (left), Ryle Traub (center) and John M. Thompson (right) pose for a photo at Instanbul Technical University.
Embry-Riddle Engineering Students Take AI-Driven Autonomous Vehicle Research Global in Turkey
Ph.D. student John M. Thompson has spent the last five years doing research at Embry‑Riddle’s College of Engineering, but this past summer he had the unique opportunity to collaborate on AI-based autonomous vehicle research in Istanbul, Turkey.
Ari Chai Ambroise Juston LIGO
Embry‑Riddle Students Help Sharpen Humanity’s 'Cosmic Hearing' Through Supermirror Research
Undergraduates at Embry‑Riddle Aeronautical University are helping to improve mirrors that could allow scientists to listen for fainter, more distant cosmic collisions — such as merging black holes or colliding neutron stars.
Embry-Riddle studnets Amanda Wills (left) and Kailea Danielson pose for a photo overklooking Kauaʻi’s Nāpali Coast.
Embry-Riddle Eagles Double Their Impact Through Defense Department Internships in Hawaii
Embry‑Riddle seniors Amanda Wills and Kailea Danielson attend different campuses and don’t share the same major, but they became fast friends when they both landed competitive Department of Defense summer internships on the Hawaiian island of Kauaʻi.
Embry-Riddle students in front of California’s Big Bear Solar Observatory.
NSF Research Experience Sparks Embry-Riddle Undergrad to Study Solar Flares at Big Bear Observatory
Embry‑Riddle Aeronautical University student Logan Schierholz was thrilled when he found out he was selected for a paid research internship studying space weather at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
Dr. David Canales examines a visualization of possible trajectory behaviors.
Embry-Riddle Professor Earns Prestigious NSF Grant to Study Chaotic Motion in Space
Research that could greatly improve space mission design efficiency and trajectory planning just got a boost from the National Science Foundation — in the form of a $200,000 Engineering Research Initiative (ERI) grant to Dr. David Canales of Embry‑Riddle Aeronautical University.
A NASA diver tests an Embry‑Riddle student team’s soft goods attachment tool as part of this summer’s NASA Micro-g NExT Competition at the Johnson Space Center’s Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory. (Photo: NASA/NBL Dive Team)
Embry‑Riddle Student Teams Test Tools in NASA’s Giant Pool
When a NASA diver carried an Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University student team’s engineering device into Johnson Space Center’s Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory, the moment was 10 months in the making.