Rudolph Awarded Women in Defense Scholarship

Rudolph Awarded Women in Defense Scholarship

Rudolph Awarded Women in Defense Scholarship


Department of Aerospace Engineering Ph.D. student Adrienne Rudolph received a 2025-2026 Women in Defense (WID) scholarship. The WID Scholar Program, an affiliate of the National Defense Industry Association, supports high-performing women pursuing careers in fields that contribute to U.S. national security, including law and engineering, with the goal of entering and strengthening government, academia, or defense industry workforce.

Currently leading the University of Maryland’s (UMD) TERP RAPTOR student team, Rudolph is conducting research on asteroid disruption modeling to help prevent future Earth impacts. TERP RAPTOR is a UMD engineering initiative aimed at developing a rideshare probe to intercept and observe the Apophis asteroid, which will be passing close to earth in the spring of 2029. 

"Being recognized as a Women in Defense Scholar and receiving this award is an honor,” she said. “It will allow me to bring awareness to this thrilling field through teaching and my research.”

Working with faculty advisors Brent Barbee and Ray Sedwick, Rudolph explores the underlying challenges of potential asteroid impacts, such as when to alter an asteroid's trajectory versus completely disrupting it.

“Specifically, I am determining what defines robust disruption, and I am developing a model that balances computational speed and accuracy to predict the behavior of fragments resulting from disruption,” explains Rudolph. Her end goal is to define the most desirable disruption initial conditions and improve metrics for mission success.

Originally from Indiana, Adrienne earned her B.S. in aeronautical and astronautical engineering from Purdue University in 2022. After a year working in the aerospace industry, she came to Maryland to pursue her M.S. '25 and Ph.D. in aerospace engineering.

Her research has spanned from Martian super volcanoes to space debris, and she is now focusing on planetary defense, particularly the threat of potentially hazardous asteroids.

This summer, Rudolph is completing an internship with The Aerospace Corporation and, looking ahead, she aspires to contribute to planetary defense efforts and inspire the next generation of planetary defenders.

“Asteroids are out there, they have hit us before, and space will continue to hurl them at us—the question is when,” said Rudolph. “But make no mistake, we'll be ready."

Related Articles:
Seven UMD Students Receive 2025 Vertical Flight Foundation Scholarships
Joseph Mockler Awarded DoD SMART Scholarship
Aerospace Engineering Senior Earns Winston Family Award for Outstanding Thesis
Mirdamadi Wins First Prize at Translational Research Competition
Clark School Student Named Top Researcher
UMCP, UMSOM Launch B.S.-M.D. Program to Bridge Engineering, Data Science, and Medicine
BIOE Announces Spring 2025 Instructional Impact Awards
Erika Moore Named NAM Emerging Leader in Health and Medicine
BIOE Assistant Professor Receives Five-Year NIH Award to Advance Living Material Research
76 Undergrads Recognized at Annual Honors & Awards Celebration

July 10, 2025


Prev   Next

Current Headlines

Fischell Institute Hosts Maryland Department of Commerce Secretary

Rudolph Awarded Women in Defense Scholarship

Edward Eisenstein Elected President of American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Why 'Thinking More' Isn't Always Making Generative AI Smarter

BIOE Professor Publishes Global Consensus on Brillouin Microscopy in Nature Photonics

Researchers Develop Autonomous Materials Discovery Engine Using AI

UMD Team Led by Yu Named Best Paper Award Finalists at DAC 2025

ECE Professor and Former Chair Pat O'Shea Named Vice President for Research for UMD's Joint Research Enterprise

News Resources

Return to Newsroom

Search News

Archived News

Events Resources

Events Calendar