Displaying 133-144 of 238 Results

Two women stand in front of aircraft lot.
Eagle Researcher Develops Procedures to Make Aborted Landings Safer
When a pilot discontinues a landing mid-descent — climbing away from the ground to conduct another approach or divert to another airport — the maneuver is called a “go-around.”
Dr. Dan Macchiarella and Embry‑Riddle student Tyler Deal greet guests at Science Sunday at the Brevard Zoo. (Photo: Dan Macchiarella)
Eagles Use Drones to Support STEM Education, Wildlife, Our Environment
Recent work by Embry‑Riddle Aerospace Engineering researchers focuses on estimating changes in the mass properties of space vehicles as they exchange crew and cargo while in orbit. In this photo (from bottom to top), the Soyuz MS-25 crew ship is pictured docked to the Prichal docking module, which is attached to the Nauka science module of the International Space Station (ISS). The ISS was orbiting 266 miles above the South Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Argentina when this photograph was taken on May 15, 2024. (Photo: NASA)
Eagles Work to Optimize Spacecraft Operation in Latest Research Publications
Embry‑Riddle researcher Dr. Hever Moncayo (right) and graduate student Gabriela Gavilánez Gallardo (left) stand in the Advanced Dynamics and Control Lab next to the flight simulator being used for their AI research project. Aerospace engineering Ph.D. student Nathan Schaff, who is also a pilot, is sitting in the flight simulator. (Photo: Embry‑Riddle/Melanie Azam)
Eagles Use AI to Improve Aviation Safety
Embry‑Riddle student Joan Dwyer (left), shown with her faculty mentor, Dr. Maria Rickling, had an opportunity to interact directly with Daytona Beach International Airport executives to learn how airports recruit new air carriers. (Photo: David B. O’Maley College of Business)
Student Project Provides Real-World Aviation Business Experience
Embry‑Riddle is extending its long record of embarking on innovative space research by joining forces with three other Florida universities to undertake new space manufacturing initiatives. (Photo: Embry‑Riddle/Jason Kadah)
Embry‑Riddle Partners With Florida Universities to Boost Space Manufacturing
Embry-Riddle students show NASA astronaut Anil Menon (left) a spacesuit glove prototype that was part of their winning project at the NASA Artemis Student Challenge. (Photo: NASA/James Blair)
Embry‑Riddle Students’ Augmented-Reality Tool for Astronauts Wins NASA Innovation Award
Embry‑Riddle’s Nationwide Eclipse Ballooning Project (NEBP) team, pictured here, launched a weather balloon earlier this year that was meant to gather data during a total solar eclipse. (Photo: Chloe Reed)
Embry‑Riddle Students Partner With NASA to Study Total Solar Eclipse
Dr. Amber Paul (right) works with Carol Mitchell, a student researcher in Paul's Omics Lab for Health and Human Performance who was a co-author on research published in a Nature compendium of space biology papers (Photo: Embry‑Riddle/Bernard Wilchusky)
Embry‑Riddle Space Biology Research Featured in Landmark Publication by Nature
Students work year-round in Embry‑Riddle’s Meteorology Laboratory, learning how to track storms and present news and weather updates to the public. (Photo: Daryl Labello/Embry‑Riddle)
Riding the Storm: How Embry‑Riddle is Preparing for an Active Storm Season
Embry‑Riddle’s Dr. Jules Yimga provides expert advice to help travelers navigate the summer travel rush. (Photo: Getty Images)
Aviation Expert Offers Advice on Navigating the Summer Travel Rush
Diagram showing reinforcement learning control of lower-limb exoskeleton, including musculoskeletal model, neural networks for motion imitation and muscle coordination, and deployment on human subject with sensors and actuators.
Artificial Intelligence Strategy May Promise More Widespread Use of Portable, Robotic Exoskeletons — on Earth and in Space