
David Brain
· Department ChairUniversity of Colorado Boulder · Astrophysical & Planetary Sciences
Active 1977–2024
About
David Brain is a professor and Department Chair at the University of Colorado Boulder's Astrophysical & Planetary Sciences department. His research focuses on how atmospheres evolve, particularly in relation to transitions to and from habitable states. He utilizes spacecraft measurements and computer simulations to investigate atmospheric escape to space, the role of magnetic fields in surface habitability on solar system planets and exoplanets, and how the Sun and solar wind energize upper atmospheres. His work also includes studying plasma processes at Mars, Venus, and Earth.
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Computer Security
- Sociology
- Social Science
- Geology
- Physics
- Astrobiology
- Data science
- Aerospace engineering
- Earth science
- Engineering
- Geography
- Environmental science
- Astronomy
- Biology
- Meteorology
- Remote sensing
- Aeronautics
Selected publications
Space Science Reviews · 2022 · 63 citations
- Computer Science
- Aeronautics
- Astrobiology
The Emirates Mars Mission (EMM) was launched to Mars in the summer of 2020, and is the first interplanetary spacecraft mission undertaken by the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The mission has multiple programmatic and scientific objectives, including the return of scientifically useful information about Mars. Three science instruments on the mission's Hope Probe will make global remote sensing measurements of the Martian atmosphere from a large low-inclination orbit that will advance our understanding of atmospheric variability on daily and seasonal timescales, as well as vertical atmospheric transport and escape. The mission was conceived and developed rapidly starting in 2014, and had aggressive schedule and cost constraints that drove the design and implementation of a new spacecraft bus. A team of Emirati and American engineers worked across two continents to complete a fully functional and tested spacecraft and bring it to the launchpad in the middle of a global pandemic. EMM is being operated from the UAE and the United States (U.S.), and will make its data freely available.
Exogeoscience and Its Role in Characterizing Exoplanet Habitability and\n the Detectability of Life
arXiv (Cornell University) · 2020 · 2 citations
- Computer Science
- Astrobiology
- Sociology
The search for exoplanetary life must encompass the complex geological\nprocesses reflected in an exoplanet's atmosphere, or we risk reporting false\npositive and false negative detections. To do this, we must nurture the nascent\ndiscipline of "exogeoscience" to fully integrate astronomers, astrophysicists,\ngeoscientists, oceanographers, atmospheric chemists and biologists. Increased\nfunding for interdisciplinary research programs, supporting existing and future\nmultidisciplinary research nodes, and developing research incubators is key to\ntransforming true exogeoscience from an aspiration to a reality.\n
Frequent coauthors
- 473 shared
B. M. Jakosky
Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics
- 447 shared
J. S. Halekas
- 312 shared
D. L. Mitchell
University of California, Berkeley
- 279 shared
J. R. Espley
Goddard Space Flight Center
- 264 shared
J. G. Luhmann
University of California, Berkeley
- 236 shared
Y. Dong
University of Colorado Boulder
- 232 shared
R. J. Lillis
- 205 shared
C. Mazelle
Education
- 2002
Ph.D. and M.S., Astrophysics Planetary and Atmospheric Sciences
University of Colorado Boulder
- 1995
B.A., Physics (Space Physics Concentration) and Mathematics
Rice University
Similar researchers at University of Colorado Boulder
- Resume-aware match score
- Save to shortlist
- AI-drafted outreach
See your match with David Brain
PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.
- Free to start
- No credit card
- 30-second signup