The Florida Times-Union

UF awards $2.5M for creation of institute

Mission will focus on space-related research

- Special to The Sun

The University of Florida has announced a plan to put more than $2 million toward the launch of a space-related research institute.

UF was awarded $130 million in funding from the Florida Legislatur­e in 2023 and President Ben Sasse chose to put most of it toward strategic initiative­s that will advance interdisci­plinary scholarshi­p and enhance the student experience.

The Space Mission Institute will be managed by UF Research and receive $2.5 million of these funds to create a hub where scientists and scholars at UF can conduct research, collaborat­e and innovate. Programs such as the Institute of Food and Agricultur­al Sciences (IFAS), the Herbert Wertheim College of Engineerin­g, the College of Pharmacy and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, among others, will utilize the hub.

“Imagine a hub that brings together experts from across UF to revolution­ize the way we approach space travel and exploratio­n,” said Sasse in a news release. “The Space Mission Institute will be an incredible resource for UF, and it will help us work closely with the brightest minds of our time to solve some of the world’s biggest problems. As the state of Florida’s flagship university, UF has an important role to play in this sector.”

The university said it has over 100 faculty members who conduct space research as well as faculty leaders who are nationally recognized in major National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion (NASA) fields.

Rob Ferl, IFAS assistant vice president for research, said members of the institute will work to improve relationsh­ips with Space Florida and the Space Life Sciences Laboratory at the Kennedy Space Center as well as seek new partnershi­ps with the Internatio­nal Space Station National Laboratory. With a goal of joining space science

with defense goals as well as providing new opportunit­ies for students in the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) program, the institute plans to pursue a closer relationsh­ip with the United States Space Force.

“The Space Mission Institute will cultivate an entirely new generation of researcher­s who study terrestria­l analogs of important space problems,” said Forrest J. Masters, Ph.D., interim dean of the Herbert Wertheim College of Engineerin­g. “It will create new pathways for these researcher­s to advance spacefligh­t, planetary and space exploratio­n, and the search for answers to the most fundamenta­l questions known to humankind.”

Additional­ly, the institute will work to bring the university closer to the commercial space ecosystem in Florida. UF says the total economic impact of the commercial space industry in the state is expected to be over $5.3 billion throughout the next five years.

“UF has a long and distinguis­hed history of research in space — from lowEarth orbit to the moon and Mars and beyond, but this new institute will provide a vehicle for a diverse group of researcher­s to collaborat­e in new and exciting ways,” said Ferl in a news release. “This will position UF to play a more prominent role in space exploratio­n research in the state, the nation, and the world.”

He believes the initiative will bring leaders in space science and technology to the university while supporting projects that will push the university to the forefront of space research visibility.

 ?? THE GAINESVILL­E SUN/FILE ?? Century Tower on the University of Florida campus is shown on April 5, 2018.
THE GAINESVILL­E SUN/FILE Century Tower on the University of Florida campus is shown on April 5, 2018.

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