- Arecibo Celebrates National Engineers Week 06 Apr, 2022
- The Arecibo Observatory at the Upcoming 240th American Astronomical Society Meeting06 Apr, 2022
- The Arecibo Observatory Survey Salvage Committee Report06 Apr, 2022
- Facilities and Operations Update06 Apr, 2022
- PRISMA Meteor Radar Arrives at AO04 Apr, 2022
- The Grand Reopening of the Angel Ramos Science and Visitor Center at the Arecibo Observatory01 Apr, 2022
- Orbital stability analysis and photometric characterization of the second Earth Trojan asteroid 2020 XL531 Mar, 2022
- Arecibo Celebrates International Women’s Day31 Mar, 2022
- A Letter from the Director Eng. Francisco Cordova31 Mar, 2022
- The History of Arecibo’s Legacy Telescope to Impact the Future, Thanks to the AO Salvage Survey Committee31 Mar, 2022
- Announcing AO/GBT Single Dish Summer School May 16th - 20th, 2022 30 Mar, 2022
- NSF REU program at Arecibo receives funding for next 3 years23 Mar, 2022
- A Parkes "Murriyang" Search for Pulsars and Transients in the Large Magellanic Cloud23 Mar, 2022
- Noise analysis in the European Pulsar Timing Array data release 2 and its implications on the gravitational-wave background search23 Mar, 2022
- Arecibo S-band Radar Characterization of Local-scale Heterogeneities within Mercury's North Polar Deposits23 Mar, 2022
- Arecibo’s Eye on the Sun21 Mar, 2022
NSF REU program at Arecibo receives funding for next 3 years
Byelliot.gonzalez23 March 2022 Education

Education |
The Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) program at the Arecibo Observatory has received funding from the National Science Foundation for the next three years, continuing its decades-long tradition of training scientists and engineers at the facility each summer. The Arecibo Observatory was one of the first astronomy REU sites and has been hosting the program since 1987, though AO has operated undergraduate internship programs onsite since 1972.
The 10 week summer internship program provides students the opportunity to actively participate in cutting-edge scientific research. The main goals of the program are to educate and train the next generation of scientists and engineers in the areas of radio astronomy, solar system studies, and space and atmospheric science, as well as the mechanical engineering and computing application needed to support the scientific research.
The REU program at the Arecibo Observatory is unique in its ability to train interested students from the local Puerto Rican communities, and introduce students from the mainland of the U.S. to the Puerto Rican community and culture, of which the Arecibo Observatory is a valued entity.
Selected students will have the opportunity to work directly with AO staff in the following research areas:
Emission and rotation of bright pulsars (Mentor: Dr. Benetge Perera)
Initiation and Propagation of Coronal Mass Ejections (Mentor: Dr. P.K. Manoharan)
Resonance and Rayleigh lidars at Arecibo to study the Mesosphere and the Lower Thermosphere region of the Earth’s atmosphere. (Mentor: Dr. Shikha Raizada)
Investigation on the Underlying Mechanisms for Positive Response of the Ionosphere to geomagnetic storms (Mentor: Dr. Selvaraj Dharmalingam)
Comparison of local Saharan Air Layer distribution with satellite observation (Mentor: Dr. Jens Lautenbach)
Asteroid Radar (Mentors: Dr. Flaviane Venditti, Dr. Sean Marshall, Dr. Maxime Devogele)
Data Catalog and Machine Learning Environment (Mentor: Eng. Jorge Herrera)
Modern web development techniques applied to scientific data management (Mentor: Francisco Torres)
Interested in applying? The current deadline for applications is April 13!
Article written by Dr. Tracy Becker - AO Collaborator / SwRI Research Scientist
Contact: tbecker@swri.edu
Arecibo Media Contact |
Co-Principal Investigator |
Keywords: arecibo, observatory, research, experience, undergraduates, reu, education