MIT Department of Aeronautics & Astronautics | December 2025

Text: MIT AeroAstro Monthly Roundup. Text is displayed next to an animation of clouds and wavy lines moving over a blue circle

Announcements

MIT will be closed for winter break starting Tuesday, December 23. We’ll see you in 2026!


Explore a wide variety of offerings during the 2026 Independent Activities Period (IAP) – courses are open to all students, staff, faculty, and alumni! 


The Roundup will return in February 2026.

The Roundup is a monthly newsletter to keep the AeroAstro community up-to-date on research, community news, and important happenings across the department and MIT. Explore past issues of the Roundup on our website.

Community Corner

Two people at a retirement celebration, with a congratulatory message on a screen and a bouquet of flowers.  Transcribed Text:  "Wishing you a happy retirement, Helen! Congratulations!"

After 40 years of dedicated service, AeroAstro celebrated Helen Halaris’ retirement. Helen served as Program Administrator for the Massachusetts Space Grant Consortium alongside Director and Prof. Jeffrey Hoffman. 

A large group of people posing in front of pool tables, with a pop art mural of a person and a shark in the background.  Transcribed Text:  "NOW, MES PETITS... POUR LA 8-BALL!"

GA³ broke into the end-of-year celebrations at Flat Top Johnny’s, cueing up rounds of pool and festive music.

A conference room with people seated around a table, and a side table filled with colorful gift bags.

AeroAstro staff took part in the season of giving with the annual Yankee Swap.

HR bits

Spot Awards: Huge thank you to Eunice Nganga and Karen Bruce for their extra support in December. Have someone you would like to recognize? Submit a nomination any time (log-in required) – Spot Awards are open to everyone!


This January, check out the webinars provided by MyLife Services on Finding Belonging.

Congratulations!

Sara Seager accepts her 2025 NOMIS award

Prof. Sara Seager among the recipients of the 2025 NOMIS Distinguished Scientist and Scholar Award for her ongoing research exploring the chemistries that might support life on Venus and other extraterrestrial environments.


The Electroaerodynamic (EAD) propulsion team, including Arthur Brown, Nicolás Gómez Vega, Nicholas Perovich, Hector Xu, and former Prof. Steven Barrett, were granted a second full patent for their surface-integrated EAD thrusters.

Leon in a suit, displaying his award

Léon Lüer (HRL) won a Karl Doetsch Young Scientist Prize for his outstanding master’s thesis on the active prevention of plasma blackouts during the atmospheric re-entry of spacecraft.

From left to right: Shaan Jagani, Amber Velez, Matthew Michalek, and Trevor Bormann.

The MITten team placed first in the MADMEC innovation contest with their spray-on coating that protects power lines from ice.

CommLab

The AeroAstro Comm Lab provides 1-1 peer coaching sessions for all forms of technical communication. Make an appointment to improve the effectiveness of your next paper, poster, presentation and more!



New Fellow Recruitment

The AeroAstro Comm Lab is seeking new Fellows with a wide diversity of skills to join our team this spring! AeroAstro-affiliated graduate students and postdocs, including international students, who plan to be at MIT through at least spring 2027 are encouraged to apply to be a Communication Fellow. This paid (up to $3,000/year!) position is a great way to help your peers and to develop your own communication skills. Becoming a Comm Fellow counts towards your professional development requirement!


You do not need to already be an expert in technical communication to apply. This is a great professional development opportunity through training, mentoring, resource creation, teaching, and more for anyone interested in improving their communication skills. Applications open at the end of December and close in early February. Please see our website for more information and the application.


Upcoming events:

Highlights

Person inside the International Space Station with Earth visible through a window.

NASA astronaut and Course XVI alum E. Michael Fincke called in from the ISS Cupola to chat with first-year students. He may be a long way from his East Campus dorm, but never far from our hearts! 


The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine’s Committee on a Science Strategy for the Human Exploration of Mars, co-chaired by Prof. Dava Newman, released a landmark report outlining the scientific case for future crewed Mars missions.

A large group of people standing on a tarmac in front of a modern glass building.

Théo Rulko (ISN) presented his work on a multi-physics approach to predicting oxidation transitions and failure in silicon carbide spacecraft heat shields at the 2025 Ablation Workshop in Las Cruces, NM.


The inaugural AeroAstro Professional Areas Showcase brought undergraduate students together with faculty, TAs, and department leadership for a review of the Professional Area Subjects (PAS) that form the backbone of Course XVI’s undergraduate curriculum.

Christopher Kwon (necstlab) led the detailed engineering work on HAVEN (Hazard-response Aero-deployable Vehicle for Emergency Nominal re-entry), a speculative space architectures project that imagines an inflatable emergency “lifeboat” for future space stations and reentry to Earth. The project was displayed in the MIT Media Lab lobby.

Course 16.00, Introduction to Aerospace and Design, was successfully revived this year under the leadership of Prof. Olivier de Weck, Prof. Jeffrey Hoffman, Senior Technical Instructor Dave Robertson, and TA Jonathan Stoppani. The course culminated in the successful launch of high atmospheric stratospheric balloons by five teams, reaching altitudes between 70,000 and 105,000 feet.

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

Coming soon: A discussion of Deborah Tannen’s book You Just Don’t Understand: Women and Men in Conversation facilitated by Prof. Nancy Leveson.


Register for the discussion in advance to receive a complimentary copy of the book. 


Upcoming event: A Day of Service and Learning in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. January 19, 2026


To celebrate the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., please join in the several in-person volunteer events offered through Many Helping Hands 365.Org at the 2026 Cambridge MLK Day of Service and Learning. Register for the events here.


Feedback: 

aa-diversity@mit.edu

Research

ACL

MIGHTY: Hermite spline-based efficient trajectory planning | Researchers have developed algorithms that let small flying robots quickly figure out safe paths through cluttered, changing environments.


MIT engineers design an aerial microrobot that can fly as fast as a bumblebee | With insect-like speed and agility, the tiny robot could someday aid in search-and-rescue missions.

ACDL

Observational causality by states and interaction type for scientific discovery | Researchers Alvaro Martinez-Sanchez and Adrian Lozano-Duran developed a new way to uncover “who is causing what” in real-world systems like the atmosphere or turbulent flows.

LAE

When companies “go green,” air quality impacts can vary dramatically | Cutting air travel and purchasing renewable energy can lead to different effects on overall air quality, even while achieving the same CO2 reduction, new research shows.

In the Media

Space News | Overview Energy demonstrates technologies for space solar power | Alum Marc Berte’s space solar power startup has emerged from stealth after demonstrating a key technology for its plans to transmit power from space to the Earth.


Astronomy.com | Dec. 5, 1993: Service on the Hubble begins | The discovery that the primary mirror on the Hubble Space Telescope suffered from spherical aberration was a scientific disaster. The fix would demand unmatched precision – enter Story Musgrave and Prof. Jeffrey Hoffman.

Do you have highlights to include in future editions of the

Monthly Roundup?

Send them to aa-communications@mit.edu.

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