UAH - College of Science - Space Science News - /science/departments/space-science/news2025-07-08T18:39:35-05:00UAHwebmaster@uah.eduJoomla! - Open Source Content ManagementExciting Discoveries and Future Missions Highlight 22nd Annual International Astrophysics Conference in Spain2025-06-24T17:05:46-05:002025-06-24T17:05:46-05:00/science/departments/space-science/news/19550-exciting-discoveries-and-future-missions-highlight-22nd-annual-international-astrophysics-conference-in-spain<p><img src="//images/colleges/science/space-science/aiac_group_photo.png" alt="The 22nd Annual International Astrophysics Conference was held in Santiago de Compostela, Spain and attended by students, faculty and researchers." width="1440" height="810" loading="lazy"></p><p>The 22nd <a href="/cspar/news-and-events/aiac">Annual International Astrophysics Conference</a> (AIAC), held this year in the historic city of Santiago de Compostela, Spain, brought together leading scientists from across the globe to discuss the latest breakthroughs and challenges in solar wind and local interstellar medium physics. The conference, known for its focus on the universality of physical processes in space plasma physics, drew researchers, students, and mission scientists for a week of presentations, collaboration, and enlightened dialogue.</p>
<p>At this year’s conference, there were exciting updates from several space missions, including <a href="https://science.nasa.gov/mission/parker-solar-probe/">NASA’s Parker Solar Probe</a> (PSP), which completed its closest-ever approach to the Sun on December 24, 2024. This landmark event, along with the upcoming <a href="https://science.nasa.gov/mission/imap/">Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe</a> (IMAP) and <a href="https://science.nasa.gov/mission/helioswarm/">HelioSwarm</a> missions, served as focal points for many of the presentations and discussions.</p>
<p>“There were very exciting results from the NASA Parker Solar Probe mission that is exploring the deepest parts of the Sun's atmosphere,” says Dr. Gary Zank, the director of the <a href="/cspar">Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research</a> (CSPAR), the Aerospace Rocketdyne endowed chair of the Department of Space Science (SPA) at the University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), and the director of AIAC. “These exciting results are shedding light on how the atmosphere of the Sun is heated to well over 1 million degrees, which has been an enduring mystery for over 100 years. Several of our UAH scientists and students were deeply involved in some of these results.”</p>
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<p>Attendees listen to scientific discussions and research presentations at the 22nd Annual International Astrophysics Conference.</p>
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<p>The AIAC emphasized how distinct yet complementary missions are reshaping our understanding of the Sun and its environment. Zank noted that while Parker Solar Probe investigates the solar wind’s origins near the Sun, IMAP will observe related phenomena near Earth, offering insights into space weather that impacts satellite operations and global communications.</p>
<p>“These are all entirely different missions,” Zank explained. “Parker Solar Probe is exploring the origins of the solar wind, including the generation of shock waves, structures, the driving of magnetized turbulence, accelerating highly energetic particles,and more. All of these will be measured and observed by IMAP at the location of the Earth, and this will feed into our deeper understanding of Space Weather.”<br><br>Zank says this has important implications for Earth-bound satellites that are important for communications, navigation, military situational awareness and more. “IMAP is also exploring the boundaries of the solar wind where the solar wind meets the local interstellar medium, which has nothing to do with PSP.”<br><br>“HelioSwarm, on the other hand, will be exploring the nature of magnetic turbulence in the solar wind at very small scales. This is typically created in situ by larger scale processes within the solar wind, and these can originate low in the Sun's atmosphere where PSP is exploring,” Zank explained. “Furthermore, HelioSwarm is a configuration of 9 spacecraft unlike the single IMAP and PSP spacecraft, meaning that the kinds of measurements, multi-point, will be completely different. So all of these considerations informed and influenced conversations and scientific directions at the AIAC.”</p>
<p>One of the defining themes of AIAC - the universality of physical processes such as turbulence, magnetic reconnection, and shock acceleration - was clearly reflected throughout the presentations.</p>
<p>“Certain processes such as turbulence and magnetic reconnection or particle acceleration by shock waves or magnetic islands exist throughout the universe and not just in the solar wind or the Sun's atmosphere,” Zank says. “These processes occur around other stars, in the interstellar medium, and even in different galaxies.”</p>
<p>The conference served as a launchpad for new collaborations and interdisciplinary exploration, fostering a dynamic exchange of ideas between early-career researchers and seasoned experts.</p>
<p>“Collaborations and interdisciplinary work are a feature of a conference of this kind -- the meeting is designed to facilitate students and researchers engaging and discussing their work and identifying areas of common interest and where progress and new breakthroughs can be made," says Zank.</p>
<p>Held in Santiago de Compostela, the location itself added to the unique atmosphere of the meeting.</p>
<p>“By being located in a single hotel and having the opportunity to meet in a beautiful, vibrant and culturally rich city means people from all scientific backgrounds and fields want to attend the meeting. This allows one to create a scientifically highly diverse meeting which makes transdisciplinary interactions possible,” Zank says.</p>
<p>Looking ahead, the AIAC is already setting its sights on new frontiers in heliophysics and interstellar studies.</p>
<p>“Every spacecraft that goes to a new region or environment or makes new kinds of measurements, whether multipoint or at unexplored scales, will make exciting discoveries that create new frontiers,” Zank says. “NASA's IMAP will launch in September of this year and we can expect groundbreaking discoveries almost immediately. This will undoubtedly be a major theme of next year's AIAC meeting.”</p>
<p>Zank also shared words of encouragement for prospective students eyeing careers in space science.</p>
<p>“As evidenced by the number of students applying to the program, the opportunities to attend meetings like the AIAC, to be constantly at the frontiers of space science research working with world-class faculty make the Space Science graduate program one of the most exciting programs in the world,” he says.</p>
<p>With fresh insights and collaborative spirit, the global scientific community at the 22nd AIAC once again affirmed its reputation as a cornerstone event in the field of space physics.</p><p><img src="//images/colleges/science/space-science/aiac_group_photo.png" alt="The 22nd Annual International Astrophysics Conference was held in Santiago de Compostela, Spain and attended by students, faculty and researchers." width="1440" height="810" loading="lazy"></p><p>The 22nd <a href="/cspar/news-and-events/aiac">Annual International Astrophysics Conference</a> (AIAC), held this year in the historic city of Santiago de Compostela, Spain, brought together leading scientists from across the globe to discuss the latest breakthroughs and challenges in solar wind and local interstellar medium physics. The conference, known for its focus on the universality of physical processes in space plasma physics, drew researchers, students, and mission scientists for a week of presentations, collaboration, and enlightened dialogue.</p>
<p>At this year’s conference, there were exciting updates from several space missions, including <a href="https://science.nasa.gov/mission/parker-solar-probe/">NASA’s Parker Solar Probe</a> (PSP), which completed its closest-ever approach to the Sun on December 24, 2024. This landmark event, along with the upcoming <a href="https://science.nasa.gov/mission/imap/">Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe</a> (IMAP) and <a href="https://science.nasa.gov/mission/helioswarm/">HelioSwarm</a> missions, served as focal points for many of the presentations and discussions.</p>
<p>“There were very exciting results from the NASA Parker Solar Probe mission that is exploring the deepest parts of the Sun's atmosphere,” says Dr. Gary Zank, the director of the <a href="/cspar">Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research</a> (CSPAR), the Aerospace Rocketdyne endowed chair of the Department of Space Science (SPA) at the University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), and the director of AIAC. “These exciting results are shedding light on how the atmosphere of the Sun is heated to well over 1 million degrees, which has been an enduring mystery for over 100 years. Several of our UAH scientists and students were deeply involved in some of these results.”</p>
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<div class="left-50">
<div class="thumbnail"><img src="/images/colleges/science/space-science/aiac_classroom_1.png" alt="Attendees listen to scientific discussions and research presentations at the 22nd Annual International Astrophysics Conference.">
<div class="caption caption-below small">
<p>Attendees listen to scientific discussions and research presentations at the 22nd Annual International Astrophysics Conference.</p>
</div>
</div>
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<p>The AIAC emphasized how distinct yet complementary missions are reshaping our understanding of the Sun and its environment. Zank noted that while Parker Solar Probe investigates the solar wind’s origins near the Sun, IMAP will observe related phenomena near Earth, offering insights into space weather that impacts satellite operations and global communications.</p>
<p>“These are all entirely different missions,” Zank explained. “Parker Solar Probe is exploring the origins of the solar wind, including the generation of shock waves, structures, the driving of magnetized turbulence, accelerating highly energetic particles,and more. All of these will be measured and observed by IMAP at the location of the Earth, and this will feed into our deeper understanding of Space Weather.”<br><br>Zank says this has important implications for Earth-bound satellites that are important for communications, navigation, military situational awareness and more. “IMAP is also exploring the boundaries of the solar wind where the solar wind meets the local interstellar medium, which has nothing to do with PSP.”<br><br>“HelioSwarm, on the other hand, will be exploring the nature of magnetic turbulence in the solar wind at very small scales. This is typically created in situ by larger scale processes within the solar wind, and these can originate low in the Sun's atmosphere where PSP is exploring,” Zank explained. “Furthermore, HelioSwarm is a configuration of 9 spacecraft unlike the single IMAP and PSP spacecraft, meaning that the kinds of measurements, multi-point, will be completely different. So all of these considerations informed and influenced conversations and scientific directions at the AIAC.”</p>
<p>One of the defining themes of AIAC - the universality of physical processes such as turbulence, magnetic reconnection, and shock acceleration - was clearly reflected throughout the presentations.</p>
<p>“Certain processes such as turbulence and magnetic reconnection or particle acceleration by shock waves or magnetic islands exist throughout the universe and not just in the solar wind or the Sun's atmosphere,” Zank says. “These processes occur around other stars, in the interstellar medium, and even in different galaxies.”</p>
<p>The conference served as a launchpad for new collaborations and interdisciplinary exploration, fostering a dynamic exchange of ideas between early-career researchers and seasoned experts.</p>
<p>“Collaborations and interdisciplinary work are a feature of a conference of this kind -- the meeting is designed to facilitate students and researchers engaging and discussing their work and identifying areas of common interest and where progress and new breakthroughs can be made," says Zank.</p>
<p>Held in Santiago de Compostela, the location itself added to the unique atmosphere of the meeting.</p>
<p>“By being located in a single hotel and having the opportunity to meet in a beautiful, vibrant and culturally rich city means people from all scientific backgrounds and fields want to attend the meeting. This allows one to create a scientifically highly diverse meeting which makes transdisciplinary interactions possible,” Zank says.</p>
<p>Looking ahead, the AIAC is already setting its sights on new frontiers in heliophysics and interstellar studies.</p>
<p>“Every spacecraft that goes to a new region or environment or makes new kinds of measurements, whether multipoint or at unexplored scales, will make exciting discoveries that create new frontiers,” Zank says. “NASA's IMAP will launch in September of this year and we can expect groundbreaking discoveries almost immediately. This will undoubtedly be a major theme of next year's AIAC meeting.”</p>
<p>Zank also shared words of encouragement for prospective students eyeing careers in space science.</p>
<p>“As evidenced by the number of students applying to the program, the opportunities to attend meetings like the AIAC, to be constantly at the frontiers of space science research working with world-class faculty make the Space Science graduate program one of the most exciting programs in the world,” he says.</p>
<p>With fresh insights and collaborative spirit, the global scientific community at the 22nd AIAC once again affirmed its reputation as a cornerstone event in the field of space physics.</p>UAH Nursing faculty launches ‘Astronaut Breakfast Day’ to showcase innovative Health in Space course2025-04-30T09:08:21-05:002025-04-30T09:08:21-05:00/science/departments/space-science/news/19457-uah-nursing-faculty-launches-astronaut-breakfast-day-to-showcase-innovative-health-in-space-courseRuss Nelson<p><img src="/" alt="Health in Space class samples astronaut breakfast fare at ."></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>To demonstrate the collaborative skills necessary to tackle the practical challenges of living in space, students at (UAH) are taking a multidisciplinary course recently showcased by an event called ‘Astronaut Breakfast Day.’</p>
<!--// END Intro Text --><p><img src="/" alt="Health in Space class samples astronaut breakfast fare at ."></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>To demonstrate the collaborative skills necessary to tackle the practical challenges of living in space, students at (UAH) are taking a multidisciplinary course recently showcased by an event called ‘Astronaut Breakfast Day.’</p>
<!--// END Intro Text -->UAH development of SWEAP instruments helps Parker Solar Probe win 2024 Collier Trophy2025-04-01T08:17:28-05:002025-04-01T08:17:28-05:00/science/departments/space-science/news/19368-uah-development-sweap-instruments-helps-parker-solar-probe-win-2024-collier-trophyRuss Nelson<p><img src="/" alt="Dr. Gary Zank, director of the UAH Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research (CSPAR), holding a model of the Parker Solar Probe and SWEAP instrument suite created by Blake Parker"></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>The Solar Wind Electrons Alphas and Protons (SWEAP) instrument suite developed by researchers at The Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, (UAH) and the Marshall Space Flight Center for NASA’s Parker Solar Probe (PSP) has helped the PSP earn the coveted 2024 Robert J. Collier Trophy.</p>
<!-- // END Intro Text --><p><img src="/" alt="Dr. Gary Zank, director of the UAH Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research (CSPAR), holding a model of the Parker Solar Probe and SWEAP instrument suite created by Blake Parker"></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>The Solar Wind Electrons Alphas and Protons (SWEAP) instrument suite developed by researchers at The Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, (UAH) and the Marshall Space Flight Center for NASA’s Parker Solar Probe (PSP) has helped the PSP earn the coveted 2024 Robert J. Collier Trophy.</p>
<!-- // END Intro Text -->UAH breakthrough enables the measurement of local dark matter density using direct acceleration measurements for the first time2025-02-25T08:17:28-06:002025-02-25T08:17:28-06:00/science/departments/space-science/news/19316-uah-breakthrough-enables-the-measurement-of-local-dark-matter-density-using-direct-acceleration-measurements-for-the-first-timeRuss Nelson<p><img src="/" alt="Large Magellanic Cloud, a dwarf satellite galaxy orbiting the Milky Way"></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>Dr. Sukanya Chakrabarti, the Pei-Ling Chan Endowed Chair in the College of Science at (UAH), and her team have pioneered the use of gravitational acceleration measurements of binary pulsars to help illuminate just how much dark matter there is in the Milky Way galaxy and where it resides.</p>
<!-- // END Intro Text --><p><img src="/" alt="Large Magellanic Cloud, a dwarf satellite galaxy orbiting the Milky Way"></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>Dr. Sukanya Chakrabarti, the Pei-Ling Chan Endowed Chair in the College of Science at (UAH), and her team have pioneered the use of gravitational acceleration measurements of binary pulsars to help illuminate just how much dark matter there is in the Milky Way galaxy and where it resides.</p>
<!-- // END Intro Text -->UAH physics undergrad co-authors breakthrough study in the journal Nature probing motion of gas in a galaxy cluster2025-02-12T08:17:28-06:002025-02-12T08:17:28-06:00/science/departments/space-science/news/19284-uah-physics-undergrad-co-authors-breakthrough-study-journal-nature-probing-motion-of-gas-in-a-galaxy-clusterRuss Nelson<p><img src="/" alt="NGC 4696, a galaxy within the Centaurus galaxy cluster, 170 million miles from Earth."></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>Kokoro Hosogi, a physics student at (UAH), has achieved a rare honor for an undergraduate: her contributions are being recognized in a study published in the journal Nature.</p>
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<p><img src="/" alt="NGC 4696, a galaxy within the Centaurus galaxy cluster, 170 million miles from Earth."></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>Kokoro Hosogi, a physics student at (UAH), has achieved a rare honor for an undergraduate: her contributions are being recognized in a study published in the journal Nature.</p>
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UAH researcher says interaction of kinetic waves and suprathermal particles could be key to unlocking biggest mystery in heliophysics2025-02-04T08:17:28-06:002025-02-04T08:17:28-06:00/science/departments/space-science/news/19255-uah-researcher-says-interaction-of-kinetic-waves-and-suprathermal-particles-could-be-key-to-unlocking-biggest-mystery-in-heliophysicsRuss Nelson<p><img src="/" alt="Conceptual rendering shows NASA's Parker Solar Probe about to enter the solar corona, the outermost layer of plasma, or ionized gas"></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>Speakers at the inaugural Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Leadership Breakfast, presented by (UAH), offered messages of economic innovation, growth and cooperation to the capacity audience.</p>
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<p><img src="/" alt="Conceptual rendering shows NASA's Parker Solar Probe about to enter the solar corona, the outermost layer of plasma, or ionized gas"></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>Speakers at the inaugural Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Leadership Breakfast, presented by (UAH), offered messages of economic innovation, growth and cooperation to the capacity audience.</p>
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UAH Electric Propulsion Club seeks patent for experimental ion thruster developed by EPC students; presents at International Astronautical Congress in Italy 2025-01-07T10:17:28-06:002025-01-07T10:17:28-06:00/science/departments/space-science/news/19203-uah-electric-propulsion-club-seeks-patent-for-experimental-ion-thruster-developed-by-epc-students-presents-at-international-astronautical-congress-in-italyRuss Nelson<p><img src="/" alt="Claude Blue, research lead and EPC president; Noa Milivojevic, EPC chief mechanical engineer Ella Hazle, aerospace engineering sophomore; Dmitri Tsahelnik, aerospace engineering and physics sophomore. "></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>The Electric Propulsion Club (EPC) at (UAH), recently traveled to Milan, Italy, to present STARGATE, an experimental gridded ion thruster developed by the group, at the 75th International Astronautical Congress (IAC).</p>
<!-- // END Intro Text --><p><img src="/" alt="Claude Blue, research lead and EPC president; Noa Milivojevic, EPC chief mechanical engineer Ella Hazle, aerospace engineering sophomore; Dmitri Tsahelnik, aerospace engineering and physics sophomore. "></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>The Electric Propulsion Club (EPC) at (UAH), recently traveled to Milan, Italy, to present STARGATE, an experimental gridded ion thruster developed by the group, at the 75th International Astronautical Congress (IAC).</p>
<!-- // END Intro Text -->UAH to host second annual Business of Space Conference February 23-25; Registration is now open2024-12-17T10:17:28-06:002024-12-17T10:17:28-06:00/science/departments/space-science/news/19183-uah-to-host-second-annual-business-of-space-conference-february-23-25-registration-is-now-openAmber Capello<p><img src="/" alt="Business of Space Conference 2025"></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p> (UAH) College of Business (COB) will host the second annual Business of Space Conference to focus on creating solutions through partnerships while addressing both opportunities and barriers.</p>
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<p><img src="/" alt="Business of Space Conference 2025"></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p> (UAH) College of Business (COB) will host the second annual Business of Space Conference to focus on creating solutions through partnerships while addressing both opportunities and barriers.</p>
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UAH plasma researcher follows up first-of-its-kind study of Alfvén waves with groundbreaking new findings, possibly key to mystery of solar corona heating2024-11-13T08:17:28-06:002024-11-13T08:17:28-06:00/science/departments/space-science/news/19094-uah-plasma-researcher-follows-up-first-of-its-kind-study-of-alfven-waves-groundbreaking-of-solar-corona-heatingRuss Nelson<p><img src="/" alt="Alfvén waves"></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>Syed Ayaz, a researcher at (UAH), has published a paper in Scientific Reports that builds on an earlier first-of-its-kind study that examined kinetic Alfvén waves.</p>
<!-- // END Intro Text --><p><img src="/" alt="Alfvén waves"></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>Syed Ayaz, a researcher at (UAH), has published a paper in Scientific Reports that builds on an earlier first-of-its-kind study that examined kinetic Alfvén waves.</p>
<!-- // END Intro Text -->National Space Club taps UAH Eminent Scholar Dr. Gary Zank to receive 2024 Distinguished Science Award2024-11-05T08:17:28-06:002024-11-05T08:17:28-06:00/science/departments/space-science/news/19074-national-space-club-taps-uah-eminent-scholar-dr-gary-zank-to-receive-2024-distinguished-science-awardRuss Nelson<p><img src="/" alt="Dr. Gary Zank, director of the UAH Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research (CSPAR)."></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>The National Space Club (NSC), Huntsville Chapter, has selected Dr. Gary Zank at (UAH) to receive the 2024 Distinguished Science Award.</p>
<!-- // END Intro Text --><p><img src="/" alt="Dr. Gary Zank, director of the UAH Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research (CSPAR)."></p><!-- BEGIN Intro Text -->
<p>The National Space Club (NSC), Huntsville Chapter, has selected Dr. Gary Zank at (UAH) to receive the 2024 Distinguished Science Award.</p>
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