Lowell Center for Space Science & Technology
Lowell Center for Space Science & Technology is a public research centre in Lowell, Massachusetts, affiliated by University of Massachusetts Lowell. The research centre has partners and grants from research giants like NASA, National Science Federation, BoldlyGo institute for its excellence in Space science research.
Faculty
- Supriya Chakrabarti, Ph.D., Professor of UMass Lowell and Director of the institute, faculty on Physics and applied physics.
- Dimitris Christodoulou, Assistant Teaching Professor, faculty on Mathematical Science
- Ofer Cohen, excels in the field of Computational plasma physics, Computational methods, Magnetohydrodynamics
- Timothy Cook, Associate Professor in Physics; works on Visible & ultraviolet instrumentation, Sounding rockets, Small satellites, Tomography & other novel data analysis techniques
- Christopher Hansen, Chair, UMass Lowell SHAP3D Site Director, Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering; works on Materials science, self-healing materials, additive manufacturing techniques
- Silas Laycock, Associate Professor in Physics; works on Neutron stars and black holes in X-ray binaries, pulsars, multi wavelength astronomy, time domain astrophysics.
- Marianna Maiaru, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering
- Ramaswamy Nagarajan, Co-Director of HEROES; works on Biocatalysis, greener advanced materials, elastomers, thermal & morphological characterization of materials, roll to roll manufacture of flexible electronic products
- Jay Weitzen, Professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering and Wireless Communication
Research
The institute has or had worked on numerous topics or projects.- Experimental astronomy and space physics.
- Observational Astronomy
- Research on X-ray Binary Pulsars, based
- Black Hole High mass X-ray Binary
- Computational Astrophysics and Space Physics
Projects
- PICTURE C
- Project Blue
- SPACE HAUC project
Dr. Chakrabarti mentors more than 75 undergraduate students from the Kennedy College of Sciences and the Francis College of Engineering for the project. The team's goal is to design and build a small cube satellite that will be launched by NASA into the orbit. NASA has awarded the team $200,000 to develop and test a prototype satellite, called SPACE HAUC-1, which is the UMass Lowell's first mission to go around the Earth. The program is designed to demonstrate the practicality of communicating at high data rates in the X band.
SPACE HAUC was expected to launch in 2018, later postponed to 2020. The satellite has successfully passed design review and is under the testing phase. After final assembly and integration of the spacecraft, SPACE HAUC is expected launch to the ISS for further deployment.
- PICTURE B
- '''IMAGERII'''
Facilities
- The library contains source specific event files, source images, light curves, spectra, periodograms, and pulse profiles on different projects. It also contains data of six X-ray telescope missions namely, XMM-Newton, RXTE, Chandra, NuSTAR, NICER and Suzaku, spanning across a period of two decades up until 2019.
- An Astronomical Observatory is located on South Campus named UMass Lowell Schueller Observatory.