Blending a passion for aviation and astrophysics
By Sarah Fullerton

While most students spend their undergraduate years grounded in textbooks, Chloe Muhl has been splitting her time between the classroom and the skies. Over the last four years as an Honours Science student, Muhl has been balancing academics with flight training, completing the Commerical Flight Training Program at Spectrum Airways in Burlington, where she now works as a Class 4 flight instructor teaching others how to fly.
Muhl grew up travelling with her family, and it didn鈥檛 take long to realize she was captivated by more than just the destination. 鈥淪ince I was a kid, I always knew I wanted to fly an airplane,鈥 she says. 鈥淓veryone couldn鈥檛 wait to get off the plane, but that was my favourite part.鈥

By high school, she knew she didn鈥檛 want a traditional 9-5 job. Her passion for travelling and experiencing new places guided her toward aviation, but she also wanted to explore a second passion: physics.
鈥淚 took physics in high school, and I was terrible at it, but I still loved it,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen I got an email from 蓝莓视频 to pick my first-year courses I was terrified to choose physics, but I told myself I鈥檓 going to find a way to make this work because this content is cool, and no matter how hard it is I鈥檒l just read the content as many times as I have to until I understand it.鈥
She discovered her passion for astrophysics in coursework offered through the Department of Physics and Astronomy and became the first female student to complete the physics minor in three years, and the second student overall.

鈥淚n my physics courses, I learned there are career paths that combine scientific research with aviation,鈥 says Muhl. 鈥淭his connection between my two passions is something I hope to link together in my career.鈥
Muhl鈥檚 dedication to aviation hasn鈥檛 gone unnoticed. In 2024, she was awarded the prestigious Captain Judy Cameron Scholarship, presented by Cameron herself, the first woman to fly for Air Canada. With the award, she was named a , becoming a role model for girls aspiring to be pilots to bring more women into the aviation industry.
The Faculty of Science is working to create a scholarship for women in aviation. To express your interest in supporting this initiative, please contact the Director of Advancement, Meaghan Middleton (meaghan.middleton@uwaterloo.c