Astrophysical and Planetary Sciences
The Research and Innovation Office has announced the 2023 RIO Faculty Fellows cohort, which includes 17 faculty members from departments and research institutes spanning the campus.
These faculty are being recognized for their outstanding records in teaching, service and leadership.
When the Orion Crew Capsule orbits the Moon there will be no one on board. But the mission will mark a key step in bringing humans back to Earth’s dusty sidekick.
Astrophysicist John Bally takes a look at the first images from NASA's James Webb Space Telescope—an instrument that is gazing farther into space and time than anything ever built by humans.
‘I love the idea that this basic principle that Einstein told us about a long time ago is something you can see,’ Âé¶¹Ãâ·Ñ°æÏÂÔØBoulder astrophysicist says.
This grant will be used to produce full dome videos that will educate the public on NASA’s latest scientific endeavors including two upcoming solar eclipses.
Astrophysicists have discovered a 5.4 billion-year-old megamaser—a beam of laser-like light that emerged when two galaxies crashed into each other
New astronomy program features Âé¶¹Ãâ·Ñ°æÏÂÔØBoulder interns giving Rocky Mountain National Park visitors a tour of the night skies.
Scientists will have a rare opportunity to study how natural collisions pummel and scour planetary surfaces.
In work that has implications for the search for life elsewhere in the galaxy, scientists analyze data from 440 stellar flares and find them to be not just common and powerful, but also more complex than previously thought