A mentor-guided research experience for high school students interested in aerospace engineering, aviation safety, autonomous drones, satellite data, space systems, and human spaceflight.
This is a mentor-guided program — apply anytime and we'll assess fit and match you with the right aerospace mentor for your interests.
Many students are fascinated by aviation, drones, rockets, or space — but don't know how to turn that into a serious academic project. The Aerospace Research Fellowship gives a structured path to investigate a focused question, analyze real systems or data, and produce a meaningful research-style deliverable. It's ideal for students who want a deeper, more personalized experience than a cohort course.
Your mentor helps narrow a broad interest into one investigable, original research question.
Work with public datasets, technical reports, simulations, or system comparisons — not just summaries.
Finish with a research paper, technical poster, presentation, or portfolio-ready project.
A specialized pathway within Research Ignited's research ecosystem — it complements the High School Research Program, AI Research Fellowship, AI Robotics & Drone Lab, and AI Scholars Program.
Best fit for grades 10–12 (motivated 9th graders considered) who want a serious capstone or research project and are interested in engineering, computer science, physics, policy, medicine, climate, or space science — and may be preparing for college applications, STEM portfolios, science fairs, or independent research.
Your mentor takes you from broad interest to a polished deliverable — the same path real researchers follow.
Identify your aerospace interests, background, and goals to set the right scope.
Your mentor helps shape a broad interest into a focused, investigable research question.
Learn to read selected articles, technical reports, public datasets, and case studies.
Set your methods, data sources, assumptions, constraints, and expected outcomes.
Analyze data, compare systems, design a mission concept, build a model, or develop a framework.
Create a research-style paper, technical poster, presentation, or portfolio-ready project.
Optional guidance on presentation, submission, or publication pathways where appropriate.
Example areas and topics. These are starting points; your final question is shaped with your mentor.
Depending on the topic and the student's background, the final deliverable may take several forms:
An honest note: the fellowship does not guarantee publication, competition awards, or college-admissions outcomes. It provides structured mentorship and a serious academic process.
Students work with a mentor who helps them move from broad interest to a focused project. Mentors may have backgrounds in aerospace engineering, robotics, AI, aviation, drones, space systems, physics, data science, or policy.
Students ready for independent research can apply directly. Newer to aerospace? Start with the Lab, then continue into the Fellowship.
6-week cohort — flight science, drones, satellites & mission design.
1:1 mentor-guided research toward a serious deliverable.
Presentation, science fair, or publication support where appropriate.
10–12 weeks · 1:1 or very small-group mentorship · ~60 min/session
High school students (best for grades 10–12; motivated 9th graders considered) who want a serious, mentor-guided aerospace project. No fixed prerequisite — students newer to aerospace often start with the Aerospace Engineering & Mission Design Lab first. Apply and we'll assess fit together.
It depends on the topic. Some projects are data- or AI-heavy; others are systems, policy, or design focused. Your mentor scopes the project to the student's background and goals.
Typically 10–12 weeks of 1:1 (or very small-group) sessions, paced to the student. Rolling admission — apply anytime.
No. The fellowship provides structured mentorship and a serious academic process, plus optional presentation/publication guidance — but no program can guarantee publication, competition awards, or admissions outcomes.
The Lab is a 6-week cohort course that builds broad aerospace knowledge and a capstone. The Fellowship is a deeper, personalized 1:1 research experience producing an original project — a natural next step after the Lab, or a direct entry for ready students.
Apply to be matched with a mentor and develop a focused, portfolio-ready aerospace research project.
Apply Now →