Research
Virtual Visit Request info Apply
MENUMENU
  • Office of the Vice President
    • Vision and Mission
    • RCA Awards
    • Staff Directory
  • Office of Sponsored Projects
  • Funding
    • Overview
    • TRIF
  • Safety, Compliance, & IRB
    • Overview
    • Environmental Health and Safety
    • Animal Care
    • Human Research Protection Program (IRB)
    • Research Integrity
    • Export Control
    • NAUS Culture of Safety
    • Policies
  • NAU Innovations
  • Services & Facilities
  • Research News
  • NAU
  • Research
  • Think twice before moving to Mars—NAU planetary scientist refutes terraforming in NASA study

NASA

Think twice before moving to Mars—NAU planetary scientist refutes terraforming in NASA study

Posted by Heather Tate on July 30, 2018

Terraforming the Martian Atmosphere illustration Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

Colonizing Mars as a backup planet for Earth has been a theme in both science fiction and popular science for decades, and NASA plans to send human explorers to the Red Planet within the next 20 years.

But how feasible is it for humans to explore or colonize Mars? With an average… Read more

Filed Under: College of the Environment, Forestry, and Natural Sciences, Department of Astronomy and Planetary Science

Studying Mars on Earth: NAU scientist conducting astrobiological research in Mojave Desert

Posted by Heather Tate on June 13, 2018

Christopher Edwards
Much research in the field of astrobiology—the study of life in the universe—focuses on the habitability of extraterrestrial environments in our solar system and beyond. NASA’s Planetary Science and Technology from Analog Research (PSTAR) program sponsors research exploring the Earth’s extreme environments to develop a sound basis for conducting astrobiological research on other solar system bodies. By identifying,… Read more

Filed Under: College of the Environment, Forestry, and Natural Sciences, Department of Astronomy and Planetary Science

NAU planetary scientist’s study suggests widespread presence of water on the Moon

Posted by Heather Tate on April 3, 2018

Moon NAU assistant professor of planetary science Christopher Edwards co-authored a paper recently published in Nature Geoscience that has generated interest among scientists in the field as well as in mainstream science news, such as Science Daily and Outer Places.

The researchers analyzed remote-sensing data from two lunar missions and concluded that water appears to be evenly spread across the surface of the moon, not… Read more

Filed Under: College of the Environment, Forestry, and Natural Sciences, Department of Astronomy and Planetary Science

New, high-tech lab enables NAU researchers, students to command Mars Curiosity Rover

Posted by Heather Tate on April 20, 2017

There’s a buzz of extraterrestrial activity going on in Room 230 of the Physical Sciences Building at NAU. That’s where Christopher Edwards, assistant professor of physics and astronomy, just opened the new Mars Rover Operations and Analysis Laboratory, where faculty researchers and students will use sophisticated equipment to help command the day-to-day activities of NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity Rover (MSL)… Read more

Filed Under: College of the Environment, Forestry, and Natural Sciences, Department of Astronomy and Planetary Science

NAU researcher sparks new debate with findings showing little, if any, present-day water on Mars

Posted by Heather Tate on August 29, 2016

Is there liquid water on the surface of Mars? Scientists have been theorizing that for years, but findings published by a Northern Arizona University researcher in the journal Geophysical Research Letters are sparking new debate and attracting attention by national media outlets, including the Washington Post and National Geographic, and numerous science news websites such as Read more

Filed Under: College of the Environment, Forestry, and Natural Sciences, Department of Astronomy and Planetary Science

Posts navigation

Previous 1 … 4 5

Categories

Tags

Arctic Arizona State University astronomy Ben Ruddell Bruce Hungate carbon Christopher Edwards climate change coronavirus COVID-19 COVID-19 research data David Trilling disease DNA ecosystem ecosystems Egbert Schwartz environment Greg Caporaso Julie Baldwin Kevin Gurney Mars Michelle Mack microbes NASA National Institutes of Health National Science Foundation NAU NAU Research Navajo Nation Northern Arizona University pandemic Pathogen and Microbiome Institute Paul Keim planetary science PMI public health research scientists Scott Goetz soil solar system STEM Ted Schuur

Archives

Boundless Impact
Location
Room - 4th floor, Building 20
Science Annex
525 S Beaver Street
Flagstaff, AZ 86011-4087
Mailing Address
PO Box 4087
Flagstaff, AZ 86011-4087
Contact Form
Email
ovpr@nau.edu
Phone
928-523-4340
Social Media
Visit us on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn