Howell started as an assistant professor at
Purdue University School of Aeronautics and Astronautics in 1982 and is the School's first female tenured professor. She is best known for her contributions to the
three-body problem, the interplanetary superhighway, and artificial satellite theories. Howell's work on computing the characteristics of the
invariant manifolds associated with halo orbits was first applied for design of trajectory for
Genesis mission and enabling low-energy sample return from
Sun-Earth L1 point. The spacecraft trajectory for Genesis exploiting Howell's manifold method was computed by Howell and her student Brian Barden during a weekend in August 1996 after an urgent request from
Jet Propulsion Lab scientist
Martin Lo. Howell is currently the Editor-In-Chief Emeritus of the
AAS Journal of the Astronautical Sciences; she is also a member of other editorial boards. She is both an
AIAA and an
AAS Fellow. ==Awards and honors==