News

A photo of University of Iowa president Barbara Wilson shaking hands with Joseph Westlake, the heliophysics division director at NASA. Also included in the photo are Bradley Williams and David Carter of NASA and Joshua Weiner, the associate dean for research and infrastructure in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and professor in Biology at Iowa.

NASA touches down in Iowa to talk TRACERS

NASA delegates visited the University of Iowa on March 7-8 to learn about the largest externally funded research project in institutional history.
Two students in black lab coats working at a white board in a laboratory setting

CLAS physics and astronomy faculty closer to launching instruments for TRACERS mission

The team of University of Iowa researchers and graduate students has been working on TRACERS, which is funded by NASA, since 2019. The two satellites are anticipated to launch in April 2025.
Dr. David Miles inspects an instrument while engineers run capability tests at Van Allen Hall in Iowa City on Monday, Oct. 16, 2023.

UI professors build instruments for space mission set to launch with SpaceX in 2025

David Miles, a University of Iowa associate professor of physics and astronomy, recently took over as the principal investigator on a satellite mission that will study the near-Earth orbit. Miles is leading the project after the death of UI professor Craig Kletzing in August.
A stock image of a falcon 9 rocket

NASA Announces Launch Services for Pair of Space Weather Satellites

NASA has selected SpaceX of Hawthorne, California, and its Falcon 9 rocket to provide the launch service for the agency’s TRACERS (Tandem Reconnection and Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance Satellites) mission.
An image of Professor David Miles, the newly named principal investigator for the TRACERS mission, inspecting an instrument.

Miles Named PI of TRACERS Mission

Associate Professor David Miles has been named Principal Investigator of the Tandem Reconnection and Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance Satellites (TRACERS) Mission following the passing of Prof. Craig Kletzing in August.
Image of Craig Kletzing handing a paper to a student in a lecture hall.

Gazette: Esteemed Iowa, NASA physicist Craig Kletzing dies

Longtime University of Iowa physics and astronomy professor Craig Kletzing made big news in 2019 when he won the single largest research grant in UI history.
A photograph of Craig Kletzing in front of a black chalkboard with equations written.

Renowned Iowa physics professor, researcher Craig Kletzing dies

Craig Kletzing, the easygoing, humble University of Iowa professor who combined a zeal for teaching with a decorated research career in space plasma experimental physics, died on Thursday, Aug. 10. He was 65.
An image showing charged particles from the Sun interacting with the Earth's magnetosphere

NASA’s TRACERS Mission Passes Key Milestone, Advances Toward Launch

NASA’s Tandem Reconnection and Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance Satellites mission, or TRACERS mission, has passed a critical mission review on March 31, 2022.
2019_04_19-Craig Kletzing Teaching

Kletzing To Speak at 39th Presidential Lecture Feb. 27

Thursday, January 20, 2022
Professor Craig Kletzing is one of three distinguished University of Iowa faculty members who will give presentations at the 39th Presidential Lecture on Feb. 27.
carton-helland

From small towns to a big NASA gig

Recent University of Iowa graduates Andrew Carton and Ryan Helland grew up in small communities in Iowa never dreaming they’d be involved in space research. But through their academic experiences at Iowa, they both secured jobs with TRACERS, a landmark NASA mission.