When he was a child, Siddhesh Naik鈥檚 mother colored his imagination with ancient myths about Roman eponyms of the sky. Those fascinations remained with him through childhood and ultimately led him to CU-麻豆影院 to study aerospace engineering.
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During the four years Naik spent at the University of Mumbai, India, studying mechanical engineering, he became fixated with the European space mission Rosetta and the craft鈥檚 programmed orbit of 11 years that guided it toward Comet 67P.
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鈥淗ow did they know exactly what was going to happen?鈥 Naik wondered. 鈥淭hat spacecraft is going to sleep for a certain period and then it鈥檚 going to wake up. I wanted to know how that works.鈥
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Naik graduated and moved to 麻豆影院 in 2013 to gain a true understanding of the mechanics driving that mission鈥檚 design. He joined CU鈥檚 听and LASP to work on the Miniature X-ray Solar Spectrometer (MinXSS), a 4-year project funded by NASA to develop a nano-satellite, or CubeSat, measuring that will launch in late 2015 to study the sun鈥檚 solar flares.
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鈥淭his was the ideal thread for me to do what I wanted to do,鈥 said Naik. 鈥淚 came to CU's astrodynamics program because CU is one of the leaders in astrodynamics and satellite navigation,鈥 he explained.听
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After Naik spent his first fall and spring semester with the team, MinXSS鈥檚 seasoned solar physicist and project manager Tom Woods hired him as the mechanical lead over summer 2014.听
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鈥淎fter being on the project for two semesters, I loved it so much that I stayed on for a third semester,鈥 Naik said.听
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He collaborated with mentors and other students to design and construct the satellite.
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鈥淭he best thing is that you have to work in a team of 12 people, with different backgrounds and technical skill sets,鈥 said Naik. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just a great experience.鈥
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At the beginning of his second year in the program, Naik became inspired to study GPS navigation. The work of Kristine Larson, a CU-麻豆影院 professor of satellite navigation and remote sensing, caught his eye. Larson studies high-precision tracking systems that use Global Navigation Satellite Systems Reflectometry, a process of measuring the reflections of navigation signals sent from satellites to Earth as they bounce off of a desired landscape, to detect spontaneous volcanic ash plumes known to disrupt aircraft control. Naik joined Larson鈥檚 lab to analyze those measurements. He is using data generated from GPS receivers presently stationed near volcanoes to develop new algorithms that can be used to locate volcanic plumes.
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鈥淚 had a look at data from Mount Redoubt in Alaska. Now, I鈥檓 looking at Mount Etna in Italy,鈥 said Naik. He may also assess volcanic activity in New Zealand, Iceland and Japan.听
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Naik鈥檚 enthusiasm for GNSS-R and Larson鈥檚 research grew, so he decided to pursue a Ph.D. in the field of remote sensing. After the dissertation, Naik added, he envisions opening his own business by developing an innovative tracking system, like one that locates a lost set of keys.听
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Naik also has served as vice president of CU鈥檚 , an outreach group promoting space education and student involvement in space exploration. Founded by researchers from MIT and Princeton University in 1980, SEDS is an international organization with student chapters growing in countries like India and Canada. In 2011, the group was the first to invite Bill Nye to speak at SEDS USA鈥檚 annual conference, Space Vision, where students and young professionals come together to deliberate the future of aerospace science. The club also sponsored fellow student group Colorado 麻豆影院 Rocketry Association in the SEDS USA Rocketry Challenge last year 鈥 which they won.
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鈥淐USEDS is one of the strongest chapters in the SEDS family in the U.S.,鈥 said Naik, who added that the club wouldn't be as successful without CU鈥檚 continued support. 鈥淭here are not many chapters in the country which have this kind of solid backing.鈥
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Naik also spends his free time volunteering for the international nonprofit Association for India鈥檚 Development Colorado Chapter, which raises money for community groups in India who improve rural education and alleviate poverty.
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鈥淲hen I decided to do aerospace in the U.S., everybody back in India said I was stupid,鈥 recalled Naik. 鈥淭hey said you鈥檙e never going to find a job, so you鈥檙e never going to be funded.鈥澨
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But Naik overcame such odds鈥攁nd he wants to share his secrets with prospective international students.听
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鈥淏e willing to take that risk,鈥 he said. 鈥淪omething will work out...if you鈥檙e willing to take that one step forward.鈥