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Be a Badger. Be a better engineer.

UW–Madison’s accelerated Master of Science in Engineering Mechanics: Aerospace Engineering is designed to give you a broad mechanics foundation with an emphasis on aerospace and a unique set of skills that will attract employers. You’ll learn theoretical and computational methods for engineering analysis and get hands-on experience in the lab. Topics include fluid mechanics, rigid-body mechanics, structural dynamics and mechanics of aerospace structures.

  • Complete your master’s in as little as 12-16 months so you can put your knowledge to work right away
  • Benefit from a course-based curriculum and tailor your experience to your personal interests and professional goals
  • Earn more with your graduate degree — engineers with master’s degrees earn an average of 22 percent more than engineers with bachelor’s degrees*

Explore UW-Madison’s Aerospace Engineering program

Master’s degree

Engineering Mechanics: Aerospace Engineering MS

Advance your career in aerospace engineering with the Engineering Mechanics: Aerospace Engineering MS program. Through coursework and projects, you’ll gain expertise to push innovation in the aerospace industry.

Spring 2026

Deadline: 09/01/25

Tuition

$1,200 per credit

Credits

30 graduate credits

Modality

Accelerated, Face-to-face

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Explore other engineering programs

The University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Engineering’s graduate programs are top-ranked among U.S. public universities by U.S. News & World Report

Professor Barry Van Veen helping his students with their work.

Join a flourishing and collaborative community at UW-Madison

At UW–Madison, we help you find the path to a better life, for you and for the people around you. Whatever your dream, UW–Madison is a catalyst for the extraordinary. That’s because we want you to move the world forward.

*UW–Madison Academic Planning and Institutional Research Dataviz (in partnership with the U.S. Census Bureau and the Institute for Research on Innovation and Science.) Percent increase identified by comparing median salaries of engineering bachelor’s and master’s graduates one year after college.