Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences - Purdue University Skip to main content

Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences

The Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences has a great diversity of programs and intersecting disciplines, with faculty and students studying in fields such as Tectonics, Geophysics, Atmospheric Dynamics and Chemistry, Environmental Sciences, Biogeochemistry, Climate Change, Severe Weather, Planetary Sciences, Astrobiology, Data Science, and many other areas. We are committed to strategic initiatives in Diversity and Inclusion, Education, Interconnections between the Earth’s interior and surface, climate and sustainability, planetary exploration and spacecraft missions, and the development of emerging fields of study.

UndergradsGrad StudentsOur PeopleResearchSeminars and Events

More information

Superheroes of Science Podcast
Diversity
Alumni
Giving to Purdue

News

Europa Clipper is one of two missions on their way to see if Jupiter’s moons could support life

POPULAR SCIENCE — On Oct. 14, 2024, NASA launched a robotic spacecraft named Europa Clipper to Jupiter’s moons. Clipper will reach the ice-covered Jovian moon Europa in 2030 and spend several years collecting and sending valuable data on the moon’s potential habitability back to Earth. Mike Sori, of Purdue EAPS, explains this mission and more for The Conversation and Popular Science.

Can Diamond Dust Help Cool Earth? Exploring Costs and Geoengineering Risks

GADGETS 360 — Injecting diamond dust into the atmosphere could potentially cool the planet by 1.6ºC, according to a recent study published in Geophysical Research Letters. Led by Sandro Vattioni, a climate scientist at ETH Zürich, the research explores whether diamonds, as opposed to commonly used materials like sulfur, could offer a safer and more effective method for stratospheric aerosol injection. Critics like Daniel Cziczo, an atmospheric scientist at Purdue University, argue that the risks of unintended consequences outweigh the potential benefits.

The little-known tale of thirsty chips

Two things that affect everyone daily are the water we need for life and the chips we need to run our electronic devices. These two essential commodities are oddly connected. By some estimates, a large semiconductor chip facility can use millions of gallons of groundwater per day. That’s the equivalent of the daily groundwater used by a small city with a population around 120,000. Three graduate students from Purdue University were awarded the “Let’s Talk About Water” grant for 2023 by the Consortium of Universities for the Advancement of Hydrologic Science (CUAHSI) to investigate groundwater use in the semiconductor industry. The grant was awarded to Ayobami Oluwadunsin Oladapo (team leader, Earth Atmospheric Planetary sciences - EAPS) and co-creators Shivika Aggrawal (Ecological Sciences & Engineering/Horticulture & Landscape Architecture - ESE/HLA) and Srilani Wickramasinghe (ESE/EAPS) for their proposal called “The little-known tale of thirsty chips.”

Asteroid Ceres is a former ocean world that slowly formed into a giant, murky icy orb

A crater-rich dwarf planet named Ceres located in the main asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter was long thought to be a celestial being composed of a materials mixture not dominated by water ice. Researchers at Purdue University used data from NASA’s Dawn mission to show that Ceres’ crust could be over 90% ice. This discovery that Ceres has a dirty ice crust is led by Ian Pamerleau, PhD student, and Mike Sori, assistant professor of Purdue University’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences (EAPS) published their findings in Nature Astronomy.

NASA Mars Rover Spots Surprising ‘Zebra Rock’ Unlike Any Other

FORBES — Mars fans have been abuzz since NASA’s Perseverance rover spotted an extraordinary rock on Sept. 13. A raw image sent back by the rover shows a striped rock with dark and light features sitting on the dusty ground. No other known Mars rocks have looked quite like this “zebra rock.” Researchers are now offering possible explanations for the oddity. “The internet immediately lit up with speculation about what this ‘zebra rock’ might be, and we’ve enjoyed reading your theories,” wrote Athanasios Klidaras, a Perseverance team member and doctoral student at Purdue EAPS.

All Departmental News

Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, 550 Stadium Mall Drive, West Lafayette, IN 47907-2051 • Phone: (765) 494-3258 • Fax: (765) 496-1210 • Contact Us

Copyright © 2024 Purdue University | An equal access/equal opportunity university | Copyright Complaints | DOE Degree Scorecards

Trouble with this page? Accessibility issues? Please contact the College of Science.