All federal grants
🪐

Planetary Science — Federal Grants

Active NSF, NIH, DOE, and USGS awards for planetary science researchers — study of planets, moons, asteroids, and comparative planetary evolution. Refreshed daily.

15 active awards listedTop researchers in planetary science

NSF awards

National Science Foundation
EPSCoR Research Fellows: NSF: Linking Numerical and Metabolic Theories of Life History
Joseph Burger · University of Kentucky Research Foundation
$236KMar 2026
REU Site: Engaging Undergraduates in Interdisciplinary Evolutionary Science
John Logsdon · University of Iowa
$465KApr 2026
Travel: NSF Student Travel Grant for the Programming Languages Mentoring Workshop at ACM SIGPLAN Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages, 2027-2029
Jay Lim · University of California-Riverside
$60KMay 2026
CAREER: Structure-Aware Learning from Weak Supervision for Knowledge Acquisition
Yu Meng · University of Virginia Main Campus
$770KMay 2026
Collaborative Research: Frameworks: Cloud Conversations: AI-Augmented Interfaces to Research Infrastructure
Niall Gaffney · University of Texas at Austin
$300KMay 2026
Collaborative Research: Frameworks: Cloud Conversations: AI-Augmented Interfaces to Research Infrastructure
David Hancock · Indiana University
$150KMay 2026
Collaborative Research: Frameworks: Cloud Conversations: AI-Augmented Interfaces to Research Infrastructure
Katarzyna Keahey · University of Chicago
$2.54MMay 2026
Postdoctoral Fellowship: MSPRF: Tambara Functors and Stable Homotopy Theory
Noah Wisdom · Wisdom, Noah
$190KMay 2026
Postdoctoral Fellowship: AAPF: Probing exoplanet demographics with polluted white dwarfs
Isabella Trierweiler · Trierweiler, Isabella
$330KMay 2026
Collaborative Research: SaTC 2.0: RES: AIGIS: Securing the Deep Learning Model Supply Chain
Junfeng Yang · Columbia University
$410KMay 2026
Postdoctoral Fellowship: MSPRF: Using Randomness To Demonstrate the Power and Limitations of Computing
Vinayak Kumar · Kumar, Vinayak M
$190KMay 2026
Postdoctoral Fellowship: MSPRF: Homotopy Invariants of Orbifolds
Maxine Calle · Calle, Maxine Elena
$190KMay 2026

NIH awards

National Institutes of Health
No recent NIH awards for this subfield.

DOE awards

Department of Energy (via USAspending)
UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER
THIS PROPOSAL PRESENTS THE PLANNED PROGRAM AT THE UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER’S LABORATORY FOR LASER ENERGETICS (LLE) FOR THE NEXT FIVE-YEAR PERIOD (FY24–FY28) AND SUMMARIZES LLE’S ACCOMPLISHMENTS DURING THE CURRENT PERIOD (FY19–FY23). LLE’S RESEARCH ACTIVITIES FOCUS ON SUPPORTING THE MISSIONS OF THE NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION (NNSA) IN INERTIAL CONFINEMENT FUSION (ICF), HIGH-ENERGY-DENSITY (HED) PHYSICS, AND LASER AND OPTICAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY. LLE OPERATES THE OMEGA LASER FACILITY (INCLUDING THE 60-BEAM OMEGA AND THE FOUR-BEAM OMEGA EP LASER SYSTEMS) AS NNSA’S PRINCIPAL HED USER FACILITY. TOGETHER WITH THE UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER’S NEW HED PHYSICS CURRICULUM, LLE PROVIDES A UNIQUE, MISSION-ORIENTED EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCE THAT PREPARES STUDENTS FOR A CAREER WITHIN THE NATIONAL SECURITY COMPLEX. BY ENHANCING THIS PIPELINE, LLE HAS SIGNIFICANTLY EXPANDED THE NUMBER OF GRADUATES ENTERING THE NNSA WORKFORCE, WHICH IS HELPING TO FILL THE NEEDS OF THE STOCKPILE STEWARDSHIP PROGRAM.
$305,343,891Department of Energy
SOUTH DAKOTA SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY AUTHORITY
SANFORD UNDERGROUND RESEARCH FACILITY (SURF) - OPERATIONS
$237,065,653.16Department of Energy

USGS awards

US Geological Survey (via USAspending)
TRUSTEES OF THE COLORADO SCHOOL OF MINES
PROJECT ABSTRACT SUMMARYTHE DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF A U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (USGS) FEDERALLY OWNED ENERGY AND MINERALS RESEARCH FACILITY (EMRF) IN GOLDEN, CO COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT BETWEEN THEUNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (USGS) AND COLORADO SCHOOL OF MINES.THE USGS GEOLOGY, GEOPHYSICS, AND GEOCHEMISTRY (G3) AND CENTRAL ENERGY RESOURCES (CER), SCIENCE CENTERS PROVIDE UNIQUE RESEARCH AND OPERATIONAL CAPABILITIES IN CRITICAL MINERALS, ENERGY RESOURCE EVALUATION, AND OTHER ESSENTIAL ENERGY AND MINERAL PROGRAM PRIORITIES FOR THE USGS AND DOI.THROUGH THE BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL), THE USGS WILL VASTLY EXPAND INVESTMENTS IN CRITICAL MINERALS RESEARCH, ADVANCE THE DATA PRESERVATION OF GEOLOGICAL AND GEOPHYSICAL DATA, AND SUPPORT CONSTRUCTION OF A NEW USGS RESEARCH FACILITY TO SUPPORT ENERGY AND MINERALS RESEARCH. THE USGS IS COMMITTED TO INVESTING IN OUR NATION'S INFRASTRUCTURE AND ADVANCING THE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE CLEAN ENERGY SUPPLY CHAIN. A NEW FACILITY WILL ENABLE COOPERATIVE SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH, EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, AND TECHNOLOGICAL COLLABORATION TO MAXIMIZE CONTRIBUTIONS TO BASIC AND APPLIED EARTH SCIENCES FOR THE PURPOSE OF SOLVING NATURAL RESOURCE AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS, AND BENEFITTING LOCAL COMMUNITIES, GOVERNMENTAL AGENCIES, AND THE GENERAL PUBLIC OF COLORADO AND THE NATION.THE BIL PROVIDES $167 MILLION DIRECTLY TO THE USGS TO SUPPORT THE NEW ENERGY AND MINERALS RESEARCH FACILITY (EMRF). FUNDS WILL BE USED FOR DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF A USGS-OWNED FACILITY TO SUPPORT ENERGY AND MINERALS RESEARCH AND APPURTENANT ASSOCIATE STRUCTURES, THROUGH A COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT WITH AN ACADEMIC PARTNER. FUNDING IS PLANNED TO BE AVAILABLE IN FY 2022 UNTIL EXPENDED.ADDITIONAL FY 2023 AND FY 2024 FUNDING IS ANTICIPATED BY THE USGS INFRASTRUCTURE FIVE-YEAR PLAN TO COMPLETE THE PROJECT. ADDITIONAL FUNDING AMOUNTS WILL BE DETERMINED BY THE PROGRAM VALIDATION AND SCHEMATIC DESIGN TASK EFFORTS. USGS ENERGY AND MINERALS SCIENCE CAPABILITIES AND SPACE REQUIREMENTS WILL BE THE HIGHEST PRIORITY.THE U. S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY INTENDS TO ESTABLISH A COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT WITH THE COLORADO SCHOOL OF MINES (MINES) FOR THE DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF A NEW FEDERALLY OWNED ENERGY AND MINERALS RESEARCH FACILITY (EMRF) TO BE LOCATED ON LAND OWNED BY MINES. THE NEW LABORATORY AND OFFICE FACILITY WILL SUPPORT USGS AND MINES ENERGY AND MINERAL SCIENCE OPERATIONS.PHASE 1 OF THE COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT WILL FOCUS ON THE PROGRAM VALIDATION AND SCHEMATIC DESIGN ACTIVITIES OF THE PROJECT. PURSUANT TO THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT, USGS WILL BE SUBSTANTIALLY INVOLVED THROUGHOUT PHASE 1 AND THE ENTIRE PROJECT ENSURING FEDERAL BUILDING REQUIREMENTS ARE INTEGRATED IN THE DESIGN AND THE NEW SPACE SUPPORTS USGS SCIENCE IN FURTHERANCE OF PROGRAMMATIC MISSION REQUIREMENTS.THE PROJECT SHALL BE LOCATED ON THE MINES CAMPUS WITH THE NEW FACILITY BEING ADJACENT TO THE EXISTING USGS GEOLOGIC HAZARDS SCIENCE CENTER.
$240,000,000U.S. Geological Survey
Top Planetary Science researchers Browse all federal grantsGet Matched in Planetary Science