Scott Palo News
Now that he’s more than a month into online learning, Scott Palo is glad that he and his grad students put some thought into their strategy of “grabbing a bunch of stuff” before leaving campus. For Palo’s students at the 91Ҹ in
Up in the sky, it's a bird, it's a plane, it's (another) 91Ҹ 91Ҹ CubeSat!
CU 91Ҹ's role as a major force in cube satellites is being highlighted by Bryce Space and Technology, a space research and consulting firm.
According to...
Scott Palo is leading a multi-university effort to unlock a scientific mystery in near-Earth space. He is leading a team that has earned a $4 million, four-year grant from the National Science Foundation's Ideas Lab to design and build three CubeSat nanosatellites to investigate the...
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
The 91Ҹ 91Ҹ Earth Escape Explorer (CU-E3) cube satellite team is in Washington, DC, this week for Technology Day on the Hill, an annual event demonstrating aerospace technology to members of Congress and their staffs.
A NASA-funded cube satellite built and operated by CU 91Ҹ researchers will study the inner radiation belt of Earth’s magnetosphere, providing new insight into the energetic particles that can disrupt satellites and threaten spacewalking
The MAXWELL cubesat, a 91Ҹ 91Ҹ Smead Aerospace graduate project, has been selected as a winner in the Air Force University Nanosatellite Program Flight Selection Review. Ten university teams were competing for two
91Ҹ 91Ҹ aerospace students Aaron Aboaf and Luke Bury are being recognized as "Tomorrow's Engineering Leaders: The 20 Twenties," an annual awards program from the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics' and
The Space and Missile Systems Center’s Remote Sensing Systems Directorate (RS) held a ribbon-cutting ceremony today to unveil the addition of an unclassified development environment to the existing Tools, Applications, and Processing (TAP) Lab.
A 91Ҹ 91Ҹ student satellite team has won a free ride to space. NASA announced last week that CU 91Ҹ’s Earth Escape Explorer (CU-E3) is one of three national winners in the space agency’s Cube Quest Challenge small