UArizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory

@UArizonaLPL

The Lunar and Planetary Laboratory at the University of Arizona in Tucson.

Tucson, AZ
Liittynyt huhtikuu 2010

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  1. Kiinnitetty twiitti
    1. toukok. 2020

    View our current newsletters! 👀

    Kumoa
  2. 10. tammik.

    Today's features discovered by Greg Leonard of the -funded survey for near-Earth ! Learn more:

    Kumoa
  3. 7. tammik.

    Please join us in congratulating John Noonan, who today successfully defended his Ph.D. Dissertation, The Comet Cipher: Understanding the Ultraviolet Emissions of Cometary Comae. Congratulations, John!

    Kumoa
  4. 6. tammik.

    Amy Mainzer, a professor, and the principal investigator for ’s Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (NEOWISE), helped provide the scientific ground for — Top 10 Netflix Original — “Don’t Look Up”.

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    Kumoa
  5. 5. tammik.
    Kumoa
  6. 22. jouluk. 2021

    Researchers have identified the first signature of a magnetic field surrounding a planet outside of our solar system.

    Kumoa
  7. 17. jouluk. 2021

    Congratulations to LPL alum Dr. Moses Milazzo, selected by NASA as First Chief Scientist for the Planetary Data Ecosystem!

    Kumoa
  8. 13. jouluk. 2021

    Now is the best time to get a glimpse of Comet C/2021 A1, better known as Comet Leonard. It's named for its discoverer, Gregory Leonard, a senior research specialist at the .

    Kumoa
  9. 7. jouluk. 2021

    Check out what cool research projects our grad students are working on! LPL grad student Emileigh Shoemaker is pictured center as part of this research team in Iceland!

    Kumoa
  10. 7. jouluk. 2021

    LPL's Professor Amy Mainzer was the science advisor for the upcoming new movie, "Don't Look Up."

    Kumoa
  11. 6. jouluk. 2021

    Friday is the deadline to get your application turned in if you plan on applying to our Ph.D. program for Fall 2022! Get those applications submitted!

    Kumoa
  12. 3. jouluk. 2021

    Congratulations to Cassandra Lejoly, who today successfully defended her Ph.D. Dissertation, "The Effect of Dust in Small Bodies: A Sample of Jupiter Family Comets"!

    Kumoa
  13. 22. marrask. 2021

    How are asteroids discovered? We take several images of the same region of the sky and make a sequence (a short movie). Asteroids move, whereas stars are stationary. It is the motion of asteroids that allows us to discover them! Here is the discovery sequence of an asteroid.

    Kumoa
  14. Good luck to LPL alum Nancy Chabot and the DART mission team as they prepare for blast-off on Tuesday!

    Kumoa
  15. 19. marrask. 2021

    MPEC 2021-V326 announced new potentially hazardous asteroid 2021 VN22. 2021 VN22 was discovered at our 1.5m survey telescope by observer K. W. Wierzchos on November 13th, 2021. It is an Aten group PHA with a diameter between 136 - 303m. 2021 VN22 poses no impact threat to Earth.

    Kumoa
  16. 19. marrask. 2021

    Planetary sciences associate professor Vishnu Reddy snapped these shots from his backyard of this morning's partial lunar eclipse.

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    Kumoa
  17. 17. marrask. 2021

    MPEC 2021-V326 announced new potentially hazardous asteroid 2021 VG19. 2021 VG19 was discovered at our 0.68m survey telescope by observer A. R. Gibbs on November 13th, 2021. It is an Apollo group PHA with a diameter between 148 - 331m. 2021 VG19 poses no impact threat to Earth.

    Kumoa
  18. A team of LPL researchers led by graduate student Ben Sharkey think that the near-Earth asteroid Kamo`oalewa might actually be a lost fragment of the moon.

    Kumoa
  19. Congratulations to LPL's Prof. Shane Byrne for being selected to the Mars Ice Mapper Science Measurement Definition Team along with LPL grad student Indujaa Ganesh and postdoc Stefano Nerozzi who were selected to the early career team for the study!

    Kumoa
  20. There is still time to apply LPL's Ph.D. program! Here is one of the many research opportunities we have coming up for Fall 2022! Applications close 12/10. More info:

    Kumoa
  21. 8. marrask. 2021

    Please join us in congratulating Laci Brock, who today successfully defended her Ph.D. dissertation titled, “Connecting Points in Time: From the Evolution of Clouds in Substellar Atmospheres to Students' Perceptions of Earth's Place in the Universe.” Congratulations, Laci!

    Kumoa

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