הפקולטה להנדסת אווירונוטיקה וחלל בטכניון ע"ש סטיבן ב. קליין היא מרכז אקדמי ברמה עולמית לאוירונוטיקה ואסטרונאוטיקה, המוקדש ליצירה, הרחבה והפצה של רעיונות וידע במדעי התעופה והחלל.
Roee M. Francos is currently a Computer Science Postdoctoral Fellow at the Robotics, Embedded Autonomy, and Communication Theory (REACT) Lab at Harvard University focusing on development of multi-agent resilient decision-making and coordination algorithms. In 2023, he completed his PhD in Computer Science at the Multi-Agent Robotic Systems Laboratory, the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. He received the B.Sc. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Ben-Gurion University. His research interests are in multi-agent teamwork, autonomous robotics, intelligent transportation systems, bio-inspired robotics and computer vision, focusing on collaborative algorithms for motion planning of autonomous vehicles, multi-robot learning, and air traffic management and coordination of unmanned vehicles. Roee is a recipient of the 2023 Robotics Science and Systems (RSS) Pioneers Award and the 2025 IEEE Multi-Robot & Multi-Agent Systems (MRS) Young Pioneer Award.
Pavel Galich | B.Sc. and M.Sc. in Applied Mathematics and Physics, Department of Aerophysics and Space Research, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (2012 and 2014). Ph.D. in Aerospace Engineering, Technion (2018). Postdoctoral Research Associate, Department of Materials Science & NanoEngineering (MSNE), Rice University (2018-2020). Assistant Professor at the Technion since 2020.
The Stephen B. Klein Faculty of Aerospace Engineering Colloquium series is a prime stage to spotlight the faculty researchers and the most up-to-date scientific work our faculty members conduct.
Amir Israel | Graduate of the Aerospace Engineering Faculty (2023) as part of the Silon excellence program, serves as an aerodynamics engineer in the Air Force since then.
Alexandros Peteinaris | PhD student at the Technion since March 2022
Dipl.-Ing. in Mechanical Engineering from Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece (2020)
MSc thesis at Endress+Hauser Flowtec in Switzerland (2020)
The story of the Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) from its establishment as “Bedek Metosim” to the proof of the Israeli ability to initiate, plan, develop, and fly the Lavi, a fighter aircraft considered to be the best of its generation.
Samruddhi Salunke | M.Sc. student specializing in aerospace engineering, with research interests in fluid dynamics and experimental analysis. Her work focuses on understanding cavitation and complex flow phenomena through a combination of modeling and experimentation.
The Stephen B. Klein Faculty of Aerospace Engineering Colloquium series is a prime stage to spotlight the faculty researchers and the most up-to-date scientific work our faculty members conduct.
The Stephen B. Klein Faculty of Aerospace Engineering Colloquium series is a prime stage to spotlight the faculty researchers and the most up-to-date scientific work our faculty members conduct.
Amir Israel | Graduate of the Aerospace Engineering Faculty (2023) as part of the Silon excellence program, serves as an aerodynamics engineer in the Air Force since then.
Alexandros Peteinaris | PhD student at the Technion since March 2022
Dipl.-Ing. in Mechanical Engineering from Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece (2020)
MSc thesis at Endress+Hauser Flowtec in Switzerland (2020)
The story of the Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) from its establishment as “Bedek Metosim” to the proof of the Israeli ability to initiate, plan, develop, and fly the Lavi, a fighter aircraft considered to be the best of its generation.
Samruddhi Salunke | M.Sc. student specializing in aerospace engineering, with research interests in fluid dynamics and experimental analysis. Her work focuses on understanding cavitation and complex flow phenomena through a combination of modeling and experimentation.
The Stephen B. Klein Faculty of Aerospace Engineering Colloquium series is a prime stage to spotlight the faculty researchers and the most up-to-date scientific work our faculty members conduct.