Education
Asphaug received his bachelor"s degree in mathematics and English from Rice University and his Doctor of Philosophy in planetary science from the University of Arizona.
Asphaug received his bachelor"s degree in mathematics and English from Rice University and his Doctor of Philosophy in planetary science from the University of Arizona.
Until 2012, Asphaug served as a professor at the University of California at Santa Cruz. Recently he has studied the genesis of diverse small planets and asteroids in the aftermath of collisions between similar-sized planetoids during the middle to late stages of terrestrial planet formation. Asphaug was involved in National Aeronautics and Space Administration"s Galileo and LCROSS missions.
He is currently a principal advocate of a mission strategy to obtain a medical-like scan of the detailed interior structure of a Jupiter-family comet, which would reveal its origin, evolution and structure using techniques of 3D radar imaging and tomography.
Asteroid 7939 Asphaug was named in his honor.
The 1998 recipient of the Harold C. Urey Prize from the American Astronomical Society, Asphaug is at the forefront of scientists studying the "rubble pile" composition of most asteroids and the implications of such composition on efforts to divert asteroids from striking the Earth. Asphaug has also worked with Urey Prize winner Robin M. Canup to develop new theories on how the Moon was formed. Asphaug is an Eagle Scout.