
What Matters More: Your Party, or Your Pocket
By Katherine Langford
Miami Community Newspapers

FIU Community NewsFlorida International University FeaturedFlorida International University Home FIU launched the careers of these Artemis rocket scientists By Florida International University - May 4, 2026 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... A dozen College of Engineering & Computing graduates are working on mission-critical aspects of NASA’s Artemis program, the effort to establish a long-term human presence on the moon by 2030. Last month, the Artemis II mission marked a major milestone by sending four astronauts on a 10-day lunar flyby. Get to know a few of the FIU alumni powering the human journey through the cosmos. Claudia Eyzaguirre Claudia Eyzaguirre ’14 helps make spaceflight possible long before a rocket ever leaves the ground. As an element operations manager at NASA, she works across teams, contractors and partner companies to ensure that the many systems inside a spacecraft are assembled correctly and ready for launch. It’s high-stakes, detail-driven work, exactly the kind she began preparing for as a student at FIU. Eyzaguirre interned at NASA twice before landing a full-time role that quickly pulled her into the Artemis program, the agency’s effort to return humans to the Moon. “Thanks to FIU, I’m here,” says the Venezuelan native who arrived in Miami with her family as a teen. “FIU did a great job preparing me. The professors challenged you but were also personable, and they took the time to have office hours and give you the extra help you might need to succeed.” At the university, she built her foundation both inside and outside of the classroom. She was a member of Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honor society, competed in the SAE Aero Design model aircraft competition and conducted undergraduate research on nanomaterials. Claudia Eyzaguirre in front of NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, which carried the Artemis II astronauts into space on April 1, 2026. Her NASA career has taken her across the globe. She was selected for the highly competitive Systems Engineering Leadership Program, which took her to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California. There, she contributed to the Europa Clipper Mission, which aims to study Jupiter’s moon. Through a NASA collaboration, she also spent nearly a year in France working as the director of a 2024 Space Studies program for the International Space University, an institution dedicated entirely to space education. In her role, she managed the development of the curriculum, taught a class and coordinated activities. Already working on the Artemis III mission, she appreciates what the program means to both the country and herself. “I feel so humbled that I was part of something so significant,” she says. “I’m so lucky to say that this is my job.” Edsel Christopher Sanchez Surrounded by FIU swag and sipping cafecito in his office at Kennedy Space Center, Edsel Christopher Sanchez ’03 is exactly where he always imagined he would be. The Miami native realized his childhood dream of working for NASA, but the path started much closer to home. Growing up, he often drove past FIU’s Engineering Center, a constant presence that eventually shaped a big decision. When it came time to apply to college, he chose just one. “FIU has everything I need to be successful,” he told friends. More than two decades later, that belief still holds. “I chose FIU, and it was a slam dunk for me, for my goals, for my passion.” As an electrical engineering major, Sanchez seized a selective NASA internship during his senior year. The six-week experience turned into a job offer after graduation—and into a 22-year career. A self-described “lifer,” he has risen from system engineer to division chief of technical performance and integration. Along the way, he leaned on the same lessons he first developed at FIU: rigorous academics, collaboration and connection. “That’s one of our NASA core values: teamwork. We can’t really launch rockets, we can’t really design stuff without being part of a team.” Caption: Edsel Christopher Sanchez (center) with fellow FIU alumni and NASA co-workers William Denis ’04 (left) and Michael Milbert ’91. At FIU, Sanchez learned not only how to innovate and think creatively, but also how to plug into a broader professional community. Through his involvement in Eta Kappa Nu, Tau Beta Pi and FIU’s chapter of the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers, he built meaningful connections. Today, his division plays a critical role in NASA’s Artemis efforts, ensuring that complex systems operate in sync and infrastructure is ready to support each mission. “We also do all the major construction of infrastructure that supports Artemis…from the liquid hydrogen tank that is used as fuel [to] the construction of the platforms used in vehicle assembly.” His team—about 170 people—functions as a single unit, reflecting the same teamwork he has valued since his college days. In recent years, Sanchez has shifted toward project management, overseeing schedule, scope and cost while keeping progress on track. It’s a role that calls for the kind of leadership skills he began developing as an undergraduate and continues to rely on today. “I’m very thankful for FIU.” Allan Villorin Allan Villorin ’11, MS ’17 credits the Honors College with steering him to the moon. The double alumnus has spent 17 years at NASA. His bachelor’s degree and online master’s in computer engineering set him up perfectly for hi
Source: Miami Community Newspapers
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By Katherine Langford
Miami Community Newspapers

By Katherine Langford
WPLG Local 10

By Katherine Langford
WPLG Local 10
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