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2007 Media Coverage
- Senate throws money valley’s way
21 December 2007 – The Herald Journal
- The Senate approved a major spending bill late Thursday night, by a vote of
76 to 17, which will fund several projects in Cache Valley. Sen. Bob Bennett, R-Utah, spearheaded the effort to get the $290 million in
allocations for Utah. Millions will come to Utah State University and surrounding
projects.
- Scholarship urges women into science, engineering
21 December 2007 – By Kim Burgess, The Herald Journal
- Utah State University’s Space Dynamics Lab recently began offering two scholarships
to encourage more women to pursue science and engineering careers. Sarah Isert, an engineering major and Taren McKenna, a physics major, were the first recipients of the new awards.
- USU Space Dynamics Lab Scholarships Honor Women in Science and Engineering
12 December 2007 – By Kinsey Love, USU VP Research Office
- The Utah State University Space Dynamics Laboratory has created a new scholarship
to encourage and honor women who are pursuing careers in science and engineering.
- AIM reveals unprecedented
view of mysterious clouds
10 December 2007 – NASA News Release
- NASA's AIM satellite has provided the first global-scale, full-season view
of iridescent polar clouds that form 50 miles above Earth's surface.
- Prof honored for science academia
26 November 2007 – By Kate Rouse, The Utah Statesman
- The 2007 Utah Governor's Medal for Science and Technology was awarded this fall
to Tom Wilkerson, a research professor at USU.
- USU Space Dynamics
Lab Scientist Receives Governor's Medal
15 November 2007 – Utah State University
- Utah State University research professor Tom Wilkerson, a senior scientist with
the university’s Space Dynamics Laboratory, is a recipient of the 2007
Utah Governor’s Medal for Science and Technology.
- For contribution to science and technology, eight honored
15 November 2007 – The Salt Lake Tribune
- The State Advisory Council for Science and Technology honored eight Utahns
for their contributions to science and technology Tuesday night.
- Defense bill includes $93.5 million for Utah projects
09 November 2007 – By Suzanne Struglinski and Stephen Speckman, Deseret Morning News
- Federal money for Utah's National Guard,
the Dugway Proving Ground, Hill Air Force Base and other military programs in
the state will be on its way once President Bush signs the final version of
the defense spending bill passed by the House and Senate this week.
- Huntsman decorating USU Space Researcher
07 November 2007 – By Kim Burgess, The Herald Journal
- A senior researcher at Utah Statue University’s Space Dynamics Lab has
been named a recipient of the 2007 Utah Governor’s Medal for Science and
Technology. Tom Wilkerson will receive the award during a ceremony hosted by Gov. Jon
Huntsman, Jr. at Salt Lake City’s Clark Planetarium on Nov. 13.
- NASA Provides Seed Funding For Four Science Projects
05 November 2007 – By K.C. Jones, InformationWeek
- NASA on Friday announced the new projects, to help meet critical needs. Teams
from Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, Calif., will lead the efforts, which
are part of NASA's Innovative Partnerships Program Seed Fund. The fund is used
for overcoming technology barriers with joint-development programs and cost
sharing.
- SDL to collaborate with SpaceDev on thermal radiator technology
01 November 2007
- SpaceDev announced today that it has been awarded a $100,000 firm fixed
price contract for the development of a new radiator technology for satellite
thermal control. SpaceDev will collaborate with the Space Dynamics Laboratory
of Utah State University to build and test a validation prototype of a new
light-weight, high performance radiator technology for space applications.
- Utah State Laboratory Has Long History of Space, Aero Projects
17 September 2007 – By Turner Brinton, Space News
- When the National Science Foundation surveyed U.S. university spending on aeronautical and astronautical engineering research for 2004, Utah State University topped the list thanks in no small part to the campus' Space Dynamics Laboratory (SDL), a non-profit research corporation that works on civilian and military projects. For the past five decades, SDL has delivered sensors and subsystems for more than 400 space- and aircraft- based payloads.
- Space lab at USU
awarded $5M in funds
17 September 2007 – By Kim Burgess, The Herald Journal
- The Senate Appropriations Committee approved Department of Defense funding
for the next fiscal year, including $5 million for Utah State University’s
Space Dynamics Lab.
- $10M to Utah State
to Help Ease ISR Bandwidth Crunch
11 September 2007 – Defense Industry Daily
- Utah State University Research Foundation, North Logan, Utah, is being awarded
$10M for cost-plus-fixed-fee completion task order #0007 under previously
awarded contract (N00173-02-D-2003) for research in the area of Time Critical
Sensor Image/Data Processing. Specifically, they will research advanced networking,
compression/image processing, and ground/control station sensor processing.
- Aggies
fight terror on the home front
10 September 2007 – By Casey Snider, The Utah Statesman
- The Space Dynamics Lab researchers have spent the last 2 1/2 years developing
technology that could be used to expose weaknesses in USU's current infrastructure
that are especially vulnerable to terrorists. The program is called Exercise
Scenario Modeling Tool, and it would be used to create simulations of possible
cyber-terrorist attacks on anything from financial institutions to the basic
emergency services, like 911.
- USU Likely To Get $2 Million To Continue Fight Vs. "Cyberterrorism"
03 August 2007 – By Eric Ray, KCPW
- Utah State University is one of five institutions developing ways to combat
what has been termed "cyberterrorism." In fact, the school's Space
Dynamics Lab is in line to receive two million dollars from the federal government.
KCPW's Eric Ray spoke with Homeland Security Program Manager Jim Marshall to
get a definition of "cyberterrorism.".
- USU lab researching cyberterrorism
01 August 2007 – By Kim Burgess, The Herald Journal
- Team will likely get $2 million funding to continue work—With computers
controlling everything from ATMs to hospital databases, attacks on the nation’s
technological infrastructure could cause major disruptions. A Utah State
University lab is attempting to plan for these situations.
- U.S. Lab Eyes Missile Detection Work with Russia
16 July 2007 – By Jeremy Singer, Space News, Boston
- More than three years after the Pentagon canceled the joint development of
a pair of experimental missile warning
satellites with Russia, the two countries have yet to settle on a new avenue
of missile defense cooperation.
- Utah
State gets Senate appropriations
01 July 2007 – By Kim Burgess, The Herald Journal
- The Senate Appropriations Committee has approved two spending bills that would
provide $1.5 million for Utah State University research. USU’s Space Dynamics Lab (SDL) would receive $500,000; a study on the
economic impact of renewable energy sources in rural Utah would get $1 million.
- Idaho Falls Native Instrumental
in NASA Launch Despite Cancer
03 May 2007 – By Andrew Del Greco, KPVI News
- Last week, NASA launched their first mission to the explore mysterious ice
clouds on the edge of space. Not only was Idaho falls native Brandon Paulson
a key component of some of NASA's projects, but he accomplished a lot of what
he did while battling cancer.
- Mission aims at highest clouds
26 April 2007 – BBC News
- The US space agency (Nasa) has launched a mission to study the highest
clouds on Earth - noctilucent clouds.
- Rocket designed
by USU launches into orbit to study high-altitude clouds
26 April 2007 – By Kim Burgess, The Herald Journal
- Nearly 10 years ago, Utah State University professor Mike Taylor saw an unusual
glow in Logan’s night sky. The light came from a rare type of cloud, which forms high in the atmosphere and shines after dark. These noctilucent clouds are usually seen in polar regions and had never been documented as far south as Utah.
- Former SOFIE manager
has name inscribed on rocket
26 April 2007 – By Charles Geraci , The Herald Journal
- Embedded in the emotion surrounding another successful launch of a USU instrument
into space was the death of Brandon Paulsen, who presided over the NASA project
for two years. Faced with metastatic melanoma, Paulsen died in 2005 —
an abrupt end for a 32-yearold aspiring engineer who had already accomplished
much in the aerospace industry. While friends and family clapped Wednesday as
the spacecraft carrying the instrument reached orbit, some also cried, remembering
the passion Paulsen brought to the project.
- USU Embarks on NASA
Cloud Study
25 April 2007 – By Mary-Ann Muffoletto, Utah State Today
- Cirrus clouds, stratus clouds, cumulus clouds – since ancient times,
people have gazed skyward and pondered fluffy wisps of white and angry gray
thunderheads.
- USU Joins NASA Cloud Study
12 April 2007 – By Greg Lavine, The Salt Lake Tribune
- Clouds forming at the edge of space appear to be getting brighter and more
frequent, raising questions as to their possible link to global warming. An
upcoming NASA mission, with an assist from Utah State University, will send
a satellite into orbit to study noctilucent clouds, which appear to glow at
night.
- Utah Technology to Help NASA Spacecraft Collect Data
11 April 2007 – Ed Yeates, KSL News
- Changing movements of elusive clouds on the very edge of space could be more
ammunition for global warming. Two weeks from now, NASA will launch a spacecraft
with a Utah-built instrument aboard that will probe that cold region of our
outer atmosphere.
- Spacecraft
to Study Clouds at Edge of Space Arrives at Vandenberg
12 March 2007
- NASA's Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere (AIM) spacecraft arrived Saturday
at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., for a targeted April 25 launch aboard
a Pegasus XL rocket.
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