Tag: AIAA News

Magnetic Levitation Rises to the Occasion

FROM THE INSTITUTE
A new family of hyperdrive motors may rewrite the aerospace playbook with technology that can redefine vertical lift aircraft, said Rod Randall, co-founder and chairman of MagLev Aero. It may sound like magic, but the propulsion breakthrough uses artificial intelligence (AI) and magnetic levitation (maglev) to advance technology that will allow vertical-lift aircraft to fly quieter, more efficiently, farther, and faster – and at less cost – than anything before.
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AIAA Associate Fellow Deininger Died in June 2025

FROM THE INSTITUTE
William (Bill) D. Deininger, Ph.D., died on 21 June. He was 68 years old.  Deininger graduated with a B.S. in Physics from the State University of New York Cortland (1979). He then received an M.S. in Physics and Plasma Physics from Colorado State University (1982) and a Ph.D. in Aerospace Engineering from University of Pisa (1995).
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Challenger Center and AIAA Open Nominations for 2026 Trailblazing STEM Educator Award

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Three winners will be honored for enthusiasm and dedication to STEM education

Washington and Reston, Va. (October 20, 2025) –  Challenger Center and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) announced they are accepting nominations for the 2026 Trailblazing Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) Educator Award. The annual award celebrates K-12 teachers going above and beyond to inspire the next generation of explorers and innovators. Nominations can be submitted online through December 15, 2025.

Three winners will be selected from the nominations and announced in early 2026. Each winner and their respective school or organization will be awarded $5,000. They will also receive free access to Challenger Center’s STEM education programs and have the opportunity to attend a space launch experience and/or a VIP tour of an aerospace facility.

“Educators play a vital role in sparking curiosity and helping students see themselves as future scientists, engineers, and explorers,” said Mike Kincaid, President and Executive Director, Challenger Center. “We are proud to again partner with AIAA to recognize the teachers who tend to that spark every day.”

“We share a commitment with Challenger Center to support educators who inspire and empower today’s students. They are developing the next generation STEM workforce that will make the next breakthroughs in aerospace,” said Clay Mowry, CEO, AIAA. “Their impact reaches far beyond the classroom – it reaches the stars.”

The award recognizes teachers who connect classroom lessons to the country’s current and future plans of STEM exploration and innovation, introduce students to STEM careers, and activate students’ imagination about space exploration. Past awardees have represented schools from across the United States and have gone on to achieve remarkable milestones—including participating in a Zero-G flight, being selected to serve on the National Space Council’s Users Advisory Group, and even traveling to space as a commercial astronaut.

About Challenger Center
As a leader in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) education, Challenger Center provides hundreds of thousands of students annually with experiential education programs that engage students in hands-on learning opportunities. These programs, delivered in Challenger Learning Centers and classrooms, strengthen knowledge in STEM subjects and inspire students to pursue careers in these important fields. Challenger Center was created by the Challenger families to honor the crew of shuttle flight STS-51-L. For more information about Challenger Center, please visit https://www.challenger.org/ or connect on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.

About AIAA Foundation
The AIAA Foundation inspires and supports the next generation of aerospace professionals. From classroom to career, the AIAA Foundation enables innovative K-12 and university programming, including STEM classroom grants, scholarships, conferences, and hands-on competitions. Founded in 1996, the AIAA Foundation is a nonprofit, tax-exempt educational organization connected to the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA).

About AIAA
The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) is the world’s largest aerospace technical society. With nearly 30,000 individual members from 91 countries, and 100 corporate members, AIAA brings together industry, academia, and government to advance engineering and science in aviation, space, and defense. For more information, visit www.aiaa.org or follow AIAA on LinkedIn, Instagram, X/Twitter, and Facebook.

Redefining the Vision of Sustainable Aviation at AIAA AVIATION Forum 2025

FROM THE INSTITUTE
AIAA has prioritized the exploration and orientation to sustainable aviation design and operations over the past three years, led by the Sustainable Aviation Integration and Outreach Committee (IOC) established in 2024 and chaired by Phillip Ansell from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. The committee was born from a task force chaired by Ellen Ebner from The Boeing Company. Both initiatives successfully aligned government, industry, and research-focused members and enthusiasts to help build a community focused on novel aircraft designs and operations, considerate of resources and societal needs.
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AIAA Announces 2025 Undergraduate Scholarship and Graduate Award Winners

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 14, 2025 – Reston, Va. – AIAA has announced the winners of its 2025 undergraduate scholarships and graduate awards. Through the AIAA Foundation and supported by its nearly 30,000 members, AIAA annually presents over $235,000 in academic scholarships and STEM educational grants to support the next generation of aerospace professionals.

“Congratulations to these remarkable students on earning scholarships and awards to further their education. We are proud to call them AIAA student members,” said Laura McGill, chair, AIAA Foundation. “Preparing the next generation of innovators is part of AIAA’s commitment to the aerospace community. We look forward to seeing how these students make the next breakthroughs to shape the future of aerospace.”

Applications for the 2026 scholarships and graduate awards are being accepted from 15 October 2025 to 31 January 2026. Visit the AIAA Foundation’s Undergraduate Scholarships and Graduate Awards website for more information.

The 2025 undergraduate scholarship winners are:

  • The $10,000 David and Catherine Thompson Space Technology Scholarship, named for and endowed by former AIAA President David Thompson, retired chairman, chief executive officer, and president of Orbital ATK, Dulles, Virginia, and his wife Catherine, was presented to Paige Rust, Worcester Polytechnic Institute.
  • The $10,000 Daedalus 88 Scholarship, endowed by former AIAA President John Langford, founder and chairman of Electra.aero, was presented to Abigail Frank, Purdue University.
  • The $10,000 Mary W. Jackson Scholarship, honoring the late NASA mathematician and aerospace engineer, Mary W. Jackson, was presented to Joshua Kassel, University of Colorado Boulder.
  • The $5,000 Vicki and George Muellner Scholarship for Aerospace Engineering, named for and endowed by the late Lt. Gen. George Muellner, U.S. Air Force, former AIAA President, president of advanced systems for Boeing Integrated Defense Systems, and his wife Vicki, was presented to Ishaan Kalanadha Bhatta, Purdue University.

Additional AIAA Foundation scholarships were presented by AIAA technical committees (TC) to students performing research in the TC discipline:

  • The Space Transportation TC presented a $1,500 scholarship to Avah Cherry, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

The Digital Avionics TC presented four scholarships of $3,000 each:

  • The Cary Spitzer Digital Avionics Scholarship was presented to Geenadie Rathnayake, University of Washington.
  • The Ellis F. Hitt Digital Avionics Scholarship was presented to Karsten Caillet, Georgia Institute of Technology.
  • The Dr. Amy R. Pritchett Digital Avionics Scholarship was presented to Karson Schaefers, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs.
  • The Dr. James Rankin Digital Avionics Scholarship was presented to Julianna Schneider, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The AIAA Rocky Mountain Section, comprising AIAA members located in Wyoming, Colorado, Montana, Alberta, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut presented a $500 scholarship to Titus Smith, Colorado School of Mines. The scholarship is presented to a student studying at a school that sits within the section’s geographical boundaries.

The 2025 graduate award winners are:

  • Patrick Bailey, University of South Carolina, received the Neil Armstrong Graduate Award. This $10,000 award honors the character and achievements of the late astronaut, military pilot, and educator, Neil A. Armstrong, the first human to set foot on the moon.
  • Veera Venkata Ram Murali Krishna Rao Muvva, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, received the Orville and Wilbur Wright Graduate Award. This $10,000 award is given to a full-time graduate student in memory of the Wright brothers’ contributions to the evolution of flight.
  • Stephen West and Andrew Strawn, both from North Carolina State University (NCSU), are the recipients of the Dr. Hassan A. Hassan Graduate Award in Aerospace Engineering. Dr. Hassan established the award shortly before his death in January 2019 to entice top NCSU aerospace engineering seniors, who also are AIAA members, to earn their graduate degree (M.S. or Ph.D.) in aerospace engineering at NCSU. Two $8,000 awards are presented each year.
  • Marwa Yacouti, University of Colorado Boulder, received the $1,250 John Leland Atwood Graduate Award. Established in 1999, the $1,250 award, sponsored by endowments from Rockwell and what is now The Boeing Company and named in memory of John Leland “Lee” Atwood, former chief executive officer of Rockwell, North America, recognizes a student actively engaged in research in the areas covered by the technical committees of AIAA.

Five AIAA TCs also presented graduate awards:

  • Akshaj “Akku” Kumar, Texas A&M University, received the Guidance, Navigation, and Control (GNC) TC’s $3,500 Guidance, Navigation and Control Graduate Award.
  • Cole Nielsen, Purdue University, received the Liquid Propulsion TC’s $2,500 Liquid Propulsion Graduate Award.
  • Ari Jain, Georgia Institute of Technology, received the Propellants and Combustion TC’s $1,500 Martin Summerfield Propellants and Combustion Graduate Award.
  • Kaurab Gautam, University of Cincinnati, received the Propulsion and Energy Group’s $1,000 Gordon C. Oates Air Breathing Propulsion Graduate Award.
  • Aayush Bhattarai, Auburn University, received the General Aviation TC’s $1,000 William T. Piper, Sr., General Aviation Systems Graduate Award.

Media Contact: Rebecca Gray, [email protected], 804-397-5270 cell

About AIAA 
The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) is the world’s largest aerospace technical society. With nearly 30,000 individual members from 91 countries, and 100 corporate members, AIAA brings together industry, academia, and government to advance engineering and science in aviation, space, and defense. For more information, visit www.aiaa.org, and follow AIAA on LinkedIn, Instagram, X/Twitter, and Facebook.

2025 SSTC Essay Contest Winners Announced

FROM THE INSTITUTE
We are excited to announce the winners of this year’s Space Systems Technical Committee Student Essay Contest. With the theme “Explore the growing population of objects in Earth orbit, identifying contributing causes, consequences, traffic management implications, mitigation approaches, and prospects for the future,” young minds from across the country demonstrated exceptional curiosity, creativity, and critical thinking. Their essays explored how space debris is formed, the risks it poses to satellites and astronauts, and the innovative solutions that could shape a safer future in space.
Full Story (Aerospace America)

AIAA Updates Book Proposal Process

FROM AIAA
Book and eBook proposals are now accepted through AIAA ScholarOne Books Portal—the same trusted platform many authors already use for AIAA journals. For more than 50 years, AIAA books have captured the knowledge and expertise of leaders in our industry. With our updated portal, we’re making it simpler than ever to contribute to this legacy of advancing aerospace research and innovation.

Learn More

AIAA Announces Winners of Prestigious Zarem Graduate Student Awards for Distinguished Achievement in Aeronautics and Astronautics

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 8, 2025 – Reston, Va. – AIAA is pleased to announce the winners of the Zarem Graduate Student Award for Distinguished Achievement:

  • Patrick Eid, Auburn University, won the astronautics award for his paper, “Evolution of the Bidirectional Vortex in a Capped Ellipsoidal Cyclonic Rocket Engine.” Eid presented his paper at the 76th International Astronautical Congress (IAC) in Sydney, Australia, 29 September–3 October 2025.
  • Luke Busse, University of Cincinnati, won the aeronautics award for his paper, “Multi-Sensor Based Adaptive Fusion Scheme for Position Estimation of Multirotor UAV Systems in GPS-Denied Environments.” Busse will present his paper at the 35th Congress of the International Council of the Aeronautical Sciences (ICAS) in Sydney, Australia, 13–18 September 2026.

The winners will receive their awards at AIAA SciTech Forum 2026, Orlando, Florida, 12–16 January 2026. This award was established by AIAA Honorary Fellow Abe Zarem, founder and managing director of Frontier Associates, to annually recognize graduate students in aeronautics and astronautics who have demonstrated outstanding scholarship in their field.

Patrick Eid, Auburn University, Astronautics Award

Patrick EidPatrick Eid is a Graduate Teaching and Research Assistant in the Department of Aerospace Engineering at Auburn University. He is a member of the Advanced Propulsion Research Lab directed by Professor Joseph Majdalani. Eid holds a Bachelor of Engineering in Mechanical Engineering from Notre Dame University (NDU). He has distinguished himself through leadership roles as Secretary of the ASME Student Chapter, Treasurer of the Astronomy Club, and Deputy Secretary General of the Model United Nations Program. His prior accolades include global honors at NASA’s International Space Apps Challenge and top distinctions in the ASME EFx Oral Presentation Competition at NDU and the 2025 AIAA Region II Student Conference.

Eid’s faculty advisor, Joseph Majdalani, is the Francis Chair of Excellence in Aerospace Engineering at Auburn University. An AIAA Fellow, he is recognized for pioneering work in acoustic instability and cyclonic-engine technology. With over 350 publications and 21,000 citations, he ranks in the top 0.8% of aerospace researchers globally. His breakthroughs include new cyclonic, vorticoacoustic, asymptotic, computational, similarity, stability, boundary-layer, and high-speed flow formulations. He is known for coauthoring Viscous Fluid Flow with Frank White while cracking the Pohlhausen paradox on its centennial anniversary. Besides 27 Best Papers, his main accolades include the Walker Teaching, Spencer Mentorship, Wyld Propulsion, Von Kármán Lectureship, Research Excellence, Abe Zarem Educator (4 times), Book Author, Outstanding Graduate Mentor, Leland Atwood Educator, Sustained Service, Foundation Faculty Advisor, Dannenberg Educator, Hap Arnold, Ralph Teetor Educator, Marquette Outstanding Teacher (twice), and CAREER Awards.

Luke Busse, University of Cincinnati, Aeronautics Award

Luke BusseLuke Busse received Bachelor of Science degrees in Mechanical Engineering Technology and Engineering Management from Bluefield State University, WV, in 2022, and a Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Cincinnati in 2025. He is currently a doctoral student in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Cincinnati under the supervision of Dr. Manish Kumar. Busse’s research interests include autonomous navigation and control of uncrewed aerial vehicles, machine learning, and multi-sensor fusion. His research is focused on hardware and software development of UAV systems capable of navigating in previously unknown environments where GPS is unreliable or unavailable while processing real-time data for mission-critical applications to achieve autonomous operation.

His faculty advisor, Manish Kumar, received his bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, India, and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Mechanical Engineering from Duke University. After serving as a postdoctoral researcher at Duke University, the U.S. Army Research Office, and University of Pennsylvania, he started his career as a faculty member at University of Cincinnati (UC) in the Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering where he currently serves as a Professor and the Graduate Program Director. At UC, he directs Cooperative Distributed Systems (CDS) Laboratory, co-directs Industry 4.0/5.0 Institute, and co-directs Applied Autonomy Lab. His research interests include unmanned aerial vehicles, robotics, decision making and control in complex systems, AI, multi-sensor data fusion, swarm systems, and multiple robot control.

For more information on the Abe M. Zarem Graduate Awards for Distinguished Achievement, contact Merridith Kauten, at [email protected] or 703-264-7503.

Media Contact: Rebecca Gray, [email protected], 804-397-5270 cell

About AIAA

The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) is the world’s largest aerospace technical society. With nearly 30,000 individual members from 91 countries, and 100 corporate members, AIAA brings together industry, academia, and government to advance engineering and science in aviation, space, and defense. For more information, visit www.aiaa.org, and follow AIAA on LinkedIn, Instagram, X/Twitter, and Facebook.

Exploring AAM Multimodal Integration at 2025 AIAA AVIATION Forum

FROM THE INSTITUTE
At the cutting edge of aerospace innovation, novel advanced air mobility (AAM) aircraft and technologies are poised to redefine how passengers and cargo move through complex, multi-use transportation networks. What early use cases could reap the benefits of this opportunity to enhance door-to-door mobility? The AIAA AAM Multimodal Working Group, in partnership with ITS America formally began this conversation with a webinar in June 2025, and expanded their programming with an in-person workshop at 2025 AIAA AVIATION Forum, “Early Use Cases for AAM Integration in Multimodal Transportation.”
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Ascendant Alumni – Their Journey & Where They Are Today

FROM THE INSTITUTE
Since the inception of ASCEND in 2020, a global community of emerging space trailblazers has taken the stage to pitch their vision for “Space for All.” In five years, the community has grown to 60 thought leaders. Program creator Moriba Jah, in an interview before this year’s final cohort, said, “What they share is a fire and a passion to be agents of change,” and to advocate for “regenerative, restorative, and just human space activity.” The Ascendants profiled [in this article] share how the program inspired their journey as space stewardship advocates.
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