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Space Science and Engineering History
Space Science activities began at the University of Michigan in 1946 within the College of Engineering Department of Electrical Engineering and were soon complemented by work in the Department Aeronautical Engineering. The activities evolved into the formation of two large research laboratories in these two departments, the Space Physics Research Laboratory (SPRL) and the High Altitude Laboratory, respectively.The SPRL and the High Altitude Laboratory developed outstanding reputations as units doing research in the forefront of space sciences (e.g., falling sphere experiments, IR remote sensing, langmuir probes, mass spectrometers).
Members of the department have built and flown more than 35 instruments on NASA spacecraft, including the Voyager mission to the outer planets, the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite, the GALILEO mission to Jupiter , the CASSINI-Huygens mission to Saturn and Titan and the TIDI -TIMED Doppler Interferometer TIMED Instrument. AOSS also participates in field campaigns, designing and integrating instruments on balloons, aircraft and sounding rockets to study the dynamics and composition of the atmosphere and the near space environment of the Earth. |
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