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All in the family ā€“ three brothers majoring in aerospace at Ā鶹Ćā·Ń°ęĻĀŌŲBoulder

Phil, Alex, and Dom Miceli in Hawaii


(From left) Dom, Phil, and Alex Miceli on the Pacific Ocean in Hawaii.

Phil, Alex, and Dom Miceli have a lot in common, especially their choice in college education ā€” the three brothers are all aerospace engineering students at the Ā鶹Ćā·Ń°ęĻĀŌŲ.

The trio are pursuing a challenging, in-demand career field that also honors the legacy of their father.

ā€œWe were all good at math in high school, and it was always going to be some kind of engineering for me, but this especially would make him proud,ā€ Alex said.

Alex, 21, is a rising senior. Phil, 23, is wrapping up his masterā€™s in the aerospace Bachelorā€™sā€“Accelerated Masterā€™s program, and Dom, 19, is a rising sophomore.

Their father Sal passed away in 2017. He began his career at Lockheed Martin after earning a degree in aerospace from Ā鶹Ćā·Ń°ęĻĀŌŲBoulder, where he met their mother Kris, who was also an aerospace student and would go on to work at NASA.

ā€œThey met in a summer electronics class,ā€ Phil said. ā€œHe went over and asked if she needed help setting up her oscilloscope.ā€

As the brothers grew up, both of their parents eventually moved out of aerospace. Their father opened a successful financial planning firm and their mother switched to software development, but aerospace always held a special significance in their lives.

ā€œThere are so many cool projects that have been going on the last 10 years in aerospace, and Iā€™ve just always been interested,ā€ Dom said.

For Phil, aerospace offers a unique opportunity to bring together an array of disciplines.

ā€œI like computer science, but am pretty good at physics and didnā€™t want that to go to waste,ā€ Phil said. ā€œI needed to do some sort of engineering too, and aerospace lets you apply physics, science, and math, and itā€™s cool.ā€

While some siblings might not enjoy having their brothers pursue the same major at the same university ā€” and at the same time, no less ā€”the Micelis share an earnest camaraderie.

ā€œWhen Dom was applying to schools I was 100% ā€˜you should come to Ā鶹Ćā·Ń°ęĻĀŌŲBoulder.ā€™ There was no resentment,ā€ Alex said. ā€œPhil and I also lived together for the 2020-21 year.ā€

Having a brother a few years ahead of you in the same program does help with studying.

ā€œI was bugging Phil all through sophomore year with questions,ā€ Alex said. ā€œDom also just finished Calc 3. Phil and I told him it was a tough class. We understand the trials and tribulations of the program.ā€

It does lead to the occasional double take from classmates and friends, like when Alex invited Dom to join his fraternity.


Phil, Alex, and Dom on campus with their mom, Kris.

ā€œPeople were surprised. ā€˜Both of you in aerospace?!ā€™ Actually, thereā€™s one more. Weā€™ve got an older brother too,ā€ Alex said.

Phil will complete his masterā€™s degree in August. He has a job lined up as a guidance, navigation, and controls engineer at Lockheed Martin, where he has interned for the last four years. Alex, meanwhile, is in his third summer interning at Northrup Grumman.

Dom is still undecided on a career path, but he has three years of his degree to complete, so there is plenty of time. This summer, he has a software internship at a firm in Denver.

As the three brothers grow in aerospace as young professionals, their mother is on the sidelines, cheering them on.

ā€œOur mom is very, very proud of us,ā€ Dom said, with a hint of embarrassment. ā€œWhenever weā€™re out and about she loves to gush to people about how all her kids are engineers.ā€