Message From The FRS Chair

DPS Committee Hill VisitMarch and April have been active months for the appropriations process, and we have been active in Congressional communication. The FRS has visited 12 Congressional offices in addition to White House Office of Science and Technology Policy staff to advocate for strong planetary science funding in FY2017. DPS committee members also met with relevant Congressional committee staff to discuss conference travel restrictions.  We will continue Congressional outreach though the coming months at opportune times. 

The Senate has marked up its version of the Commerce, Justice, and Science appropriations bill, and the House is likely to do the same soon. It’s great to see this key legislation make progress and we will continue to advocate for the appropriations process to go forward in regular order, although it is still highly likely that there will be a continuing resolution through the election. The Senate bill calls for a low number for planetary science ($1.356 B) and this past week the FRS expressed its disappointment with Congressional staff. The House number promises to be very strong so that the reconciliation between the bills brings planetary to a healthy level — we need to keep the pressure on! Our ask to Congress has been for a 5% increase over the FY2016 appropriated level; we acknowledge that that is a tough ask for many members of Congress, so we are emphasizing that planetary can be no lower than FY2016, which is $1.631 B. 

The Congressional leave-behind materials can be found at the FRS section of the DPS website. If you have any questions or comments, please contact Makenzie Lystrup.

Newsletter 16-12

Issue 16-12, April 24, 2016

 

+—————————————CONTENTS————————————-+

  1. MESSAGE FROM THE FRS CHAIR 
  2. LUNAR AND SMALL BODIES GRADUATE CONFERENCE 2016
  3. COMETARY SCIENCE AFTER ROSETTA DISCUSSION MEETING
  4. NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE FACILITIES REVIEW SUMMARY
  5. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

MESSAGE FROM THE FRS CHAIR

 

March and April have been active months for the appropriations process, 

and we have been active in Congressional communication. The FRS has visited 

12 Congressional offices in addition to White House Office of Science and 

Technology Policy staff to advocate for strong planetary science funding in 

FY2017. DPS committee members also met with relevant Congressional 

committee staff to discuss conference travel restrictions.  We will continue 

Congressional outreach though the coming months at opportune times. 

 

The Senate has marked up its version of the Commerce, Justice, and Science 

appropriations bill, and the House is likely to do the same soon. It’s great to 

see this key legislation make progress and we will continue to advocate for 

the appropriations process to go forward in regular order, although it is still 

highly likely that there will be a continuing resolution through the election. 

The Senate bill calls for a low number for planetary science ($1.356 B — 

http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/cpquery/R?cp114:FLD010:@1(sr239)) and this 

past week the FRS expressed its disappointment with Congressional staff. 

The House number promises to be very strong so that the reconciliation 

between the bills brings planetary to a healthy level — we need to keep the 

pressure on! Our ask to Congress has been for a 5% increase over the FY2016 

appropriated level; we acknowledge that that is a tough ask for many members 

of Congress, so we are emphasizing that planetary can be no lower than FY2016, 

which is $1.631 B. 

 

The Congressional leave-behind materials can be found at the FRS section of 

the DPS website. If you have any questions or comments, please contact 

Makenzie Lystrup at [email protected]

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

LUNAR AND SMALL BODIES GRADUATE CONFERENCE 2016 

 

Abstract Submission Deadline: June 3

 

Registration is now open for the 7th Annual Lunar and Small Bodies Graduate 

Conference (LunGradCon 2016) to be held on Tuesday, July 19, 2016 at the 

NASA Ames Research Center, preceding the NASA Exploration Science Forum 

(ESF). With the expanded interests of the Solar System Exploration Research 

Virtual Institute (SSERVI), the scope of this year’s LunGradCon includes both 

lunar and small bodies science. LunGradCon provides an opportunity for grad 

students and early-career postdocs to present their research on lunar and small 

body science in a low-stress, friendly environment, being critiqued only by their 

peers. In addition to oral presentations, the conference presents opportunities for 

professional development and networking with fellow grad students and postdocs, 

as well as senior members of SSERVI. A limited amount of funding will be 

provided for travel and lodging costs. The deadline for registration and abstract 

submission is June 3rd 2016, 11:59 PM PDT.

 

For more details, please visit:

 

http://impact.colorado.edu/lungradcon/2016/

or email any questions to: [email protected]

 

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COMETARY SCIENCE AFTER ROSETTA DISCUSSION MEETING

 

The deadline for poster abstract submissions has been extended to April 29

for the “Cometary science after Rosetta” discussion meeting to be held at the

Royal Society in London, UK on June 14-15, 2016. Full details are at:
https://royalsociety.org/events/2016/06/cometary-science/ 

 

An accompanying meeting, “Comets after Rosetta” is being held in London,

June 16-17. The deadline for talk and poster abstract submission is April 30.

Full details are at:

http://www.ucl.ac.uk/mssl/planetary-science/comets-after-rosetta

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE FACILITIES REVIEW SUMMARY

 

NASA’s Planetary Science Division (PSD) is evolving how it deals with 

multi-user facilities. As part of this activity, PSD performed a review of 

currently funded facilities, how they are working, and the extent to which 

they serve the science needs of the broader planetary community. The 

summary document from this review, which took place at the end of 

calendar year 2015, can be found at http://www.lpi.usra.edu/psd-facilities/.

 

Questions on the Facilities Review may be directed to Doris Daou 

at [email protected].

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) MARS PALEOCIMATE POSTDOC

University of Chicago

 

Application Deadline : July 15, 2016

 

content/mars-paleoclimate-postdoc

———————————+

Send submissions to:

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

To unsubscribe visit http://aas.org/unsubscribe or email [email protected].

To change your address email [email protected] 

Newsletter 16-11

Issue 16-11, April 17, 2016

 

+—————————————CONTENTS————————————-+

  1. CALL FOR LETTERS OF APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP ON NASA’S 
    SCIENCE INSTRUMENT DEFINITION TEAM FOR GHAPS
  2. SUMMER SCHOOL FOR SOFTWARE SYSTEMS IN ASTRONOMY
  3. OPAG MEETING – NEW STEERING COMMITTEE MEMBERS SOUGHT
  4. KEY DEADLINES APPROACHING FOR NEXT GENERATION SUBORBITAL 
    RESEARCHERS CONFERENCE (NSRC) 2016

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

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CALL FOR LETTERS OF APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP ON 

NASA’S SCIENCE INSTRUMENT DEFINITION TEAM FOR GHAPS

 

NASA’s Planetary Science Division (PSD) invites scientists and other 

qualified and interested individuals to apply for membership on the 

Gondola for High Altitude Planetary Science Project (GHAPS) 

Science Instrument Definition Team (SIDT) to help define instrument 

priorities for a stratospheric balloon gondola telescope that will 

serve as a community asset for future planetary science observations.

 

Applications should submit a one-page letter describing interest and 

qualifications, as well as a one-page Curriculum Vitae (both in pdf 

format). The letter should also contain a statement confirming the 

applicant’s time availability during the one month time period to 

participate on the SIDT, particularly if there are any major schedule 

constraints that may restrict engagement at critical times. The 

expected activities include the following:

 

– Teleconferences beginning approximately the week of May 23, 2016; 

– A potential face-to-face meeting in June 2016 in the Washington, 

  DC area (SIDT members provide their own travel support);

– Preparation and review of materials for the final report;

– Additional meetings/telecons as appropriate.

 

Deadline: May 6, 2016 (11:59 p.m. ET)

Submit letters to Rob Landis at [email protected]

Subject Line: GHAPS SIDT Application

 

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SUMMER SCHOOL FOR SOFTWARE SYSTEMS IN ASTRONOMY

 

The University of Hawaii’i at Hilo Physics and Astronomy Department 

offers the two week course (July 25 – August 5). The course covers 

software design and implementation of telescope and instrument control 

systems, observation planning tools, and software for analyzing and 

archiving astronomical data. A full course description and instructions 

for enrollment are given at:

 

http://phys.uhh.hawaii.edu/Summer2016/summer2016.php

 

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OPAG MEETING – NEW STEERING COMMITTEE MEMBERS SOUGHT

 

The next OPAG meeting will be August 11-12 at Little America in 

Flagstaff, AZ. If you would like to make a presentation (including 

science nuggets), please contact OPAG chair Alfred McEwen 

([email protected]).

 

OPAG needs five new members for the steering committee because of 

rolloffs from time expiration and other commitments. We will accept 

nominations (including self-nominations) consisting of one paragraph 

about how your involvement will benefit OPAG, plus your CV, sent to 

[email protected]. The OPAG committee will vote on who to add, 

considering how to maintain balance between science disciplines, 

planetary objects, and institutions, to retain expertise in relevant 

technologies, and to promote diversity. 

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

KEY DEADLINES APPROACHING FOR NEXT GENERATION 

SUBORBITAL RESEARCHERS CONFERENCE (NSRC) 2016

 

This year’s Next Generation Suborbital Researchers Conference 

(NSRC-2016) will be held at the Omni Interlocken Resort, in 

Broomfield, Colorado, on June 2-4, 2016, with a welcome reception on 

June 1. Key deadlines for meeting participation are rapidly 

approaching, these are: 

 

Poster Abstracts Submission: Deadline April 28th

Early-Bird (Discounted) Meeting Registration: Deadline April 29th

Hotel Room Reduced Rate Registration: Deadline May 1st

 

Topics discussed at NSRC-2016 will include flight provider status, 

regulatory issues, NASA’s flight opportunities program, as well as 

applications including planetary science, astronomy and solar physics, 

atmospheric science, microgravity sciences, education, public outreach, 

life sciences, suborbital and commercial markets and policy, 

technology, and technology testing.

 

All contributed abstracts this year will be for posters to maximize 

the time needed to have practical provider and NASA/FAA discussions 

and networking, which will be focused on maturing payload ideas into 

actual suborbital flights. NSRC plans to accept ALL poster 

contributions that relate to next-gen suborbital research and 

education.

 

To learn more about the conference, to register, and to submit an 

abstract, visit: 

 

http://nsrc.swri.org

 

———————————+

Send submissions to:

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

To unsubscribe visit http://aas.org/unsubscribe or email [email protected].

To change your address email [email protected]

Newsletter 16-10

Issue 16-10, April 10, 2016

 

+—————————————CONTENTS————————————-+

  1. MAVERICKS LAB: GRAD STUDENT AND POST DOC OPPORTUNITY
  2. COURSE ON PLANETARY INTERIORS
  3. EARLY CAREER TRAVEL SUPPORT FOR SBAG 15 MEETING
  4. SOLAR SYSTEM SUBGROUP PARTICIPATION FOR FAR-IR SURVEYOR STDT
  5. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

MAVERICKS LAB: GRAD STUDENT AND POST DOC OPPORTUNITY

 

The SETI Institute has partnered with NASA HQ, NVIDIA and the Asteroid 
Grand Challenge for a summer research project aimed at pairing young 
planetary scientists with early-career machine learning software 
developers to “hack” various datasets pertaining to the tracking 
and cataloging of NEO’s. The idea is to see what can be gleaned 
from such datasets by applying some of the latest developments in 
machine learning to analyze the data in new and innovative ways.

The project is called “Mavericks Lab” and it has its own website at:

http://www.maverickslab.org

We are looking for more applicants to the project from the planetary 
science community, where the target is PhD candidates or postdocs.  
The project will run for ~6 weeks this summer, and will be hosted 
here at SETI Institute. Participants will be housed at dormitories 
at NASA Ames. Applications due April 24. 

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

COURSE ON PLANETARY INTERIORS

 

The International School of Space Science of the Consorzio Interuniversitario 

per la Fisica Spaziale organizes a Course on “Planetary Interiors”, to be held

in L’Aquila, Italy, September 12-16, 2016, directed by L. Iess, T. Van Hoolst, 

W. Pecorella.

 

The school is designed for PhD students, young post-doctoral researchers, and 

engineers working in planetary sciences or instrument development for 

planetary missions. The school will provide an integrated overview of our

current understanding of the interior structure and evolution of planets and 

satellites, focusing on three complementary modules: 1) theoretical models,

2) observational methods and measurements, 3) space instrumentation. 

The school intends to contribute to the development of a new generation 

of planetary scientists and engineers motivated by two major upcoming missions 

of the European Space Agency, BepiColombo to Mercury in 2018 and JUICE 

to Jupiter and its satellites in 2022, and several other planetary missions 

(including NASA’s JUNO and InSight missions to Jupiter and Mars) 

designed to probe the interior of planets and moons. Based on an 

interdisciplinary approach, the school will explain how current and future 

planetary missions will be able to broaden our knowledge of the interior 

structure, dynamics, and evolution of solar system bodies.  Mission 

perspectives and challenges on short and longer term will be discussed,

and links with exoplanetary research will be explored.

 

Applications are due before June 12, 2016.

For more information visit http://www.cifs-isss.org/ or send an e-mail 

to [email protected]

 

Best regards,

Luciano Iess ([email protected])

Tim Van Hoolst ([email protected])

Walter Pecorella ([email protected])

 

Secretary: Paola Solini/Anna Rita Leone
CIFS – International School of Space Science
c/o Dip. di Scienze Fisiche e Chimiche
Università degli Studi L’Aquila – Italy

e-mail: [email protected]
http://www.cifs-isss.org

 

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EARLY CAREER TRAVEL SUPPORT FOR SBAG 15 MEETING

ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS

 

The 15th meeting of the Small Bodies Assessment Group will be help at 
the JHU Applied Physics Laboratory June 28-30, 2016. A draft agenda 
can be found at: 

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/sbag/meetings/jun2016/draft_agenda_20160401.pdf

 

We are now accepting applications for early-career travel support to attend 

the upcoming SBAG meeting. Please pass the information on to any students, 

post-docs or early career scientists/engineers that may be interested in 

attending the meeting.

 

The details are below.

 

Early career travel support: We are planning to offer limited U.S. travel support 

for early career scientists to participate in the SBAG 15 meeting. Interested 

undergraduate students, graduate students, postdocs, and other early career 

scientists (within 3 years of PhD/MS/BS) should submit a letter and a 

CV to SBAG Early Career Secretary Angela Stickle ([email protected])

by COB (5 pm Eastern time) April 29, 2016. Included in the letter, which must 

not exceed 2 pages, should be a demonstration of financial need and an 

explanation of how the applicant’s work relates to the purposes of the SBAG. 

The letter and CV should be combined into a single PDF document for 

submission by e-mail attachment.  Recipients of travel support will be expected 

to give a short presentation of their SBAG-relevant work at the SBAG 15 

meeting.

 

Thanks,

Angela Stickle

SBAG Early Career Secretary

 

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SOLAR SYSTEM SUBGROUP PARTICIPATION FOR FAR-IR

SURVEYOR STDT

 

Dear Colleagues:

NASA initiated a community-based process to identify Mission Concepts 

for candidate large missions to follow the James Webb Space Telescope 

(JWST) and the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST). The 

Science and Technology Definition Team (STDT) has been organized for 

the Far-IR Surveyor (http://cor.gsfc.nasa.gov/studies/far-ir/) and has a 

charter to deliver a competitive mission concept for the next Astrophysics 

decadal survey (http://science.nasa.gov/media/medialibrary/2016/01/04/Mission_Concept_Study_and_Definition_Team_Charter-V1_2015-12-28.pdf ). 

I, Stefanie Milam, have been appointed as the lead for the Solar System 

subgroup of the Far-IR STDT. I am soliciting members of this subgroup 

to actively participate and contribute to this study over the next few years. 

If you are interested in working with this group, please email me 

directly to be included in future correspondence. 

Sincerely,

Stefanie Milam, NASA GSFC
[email protected]

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) POSTDOC MARS SCIENCE LABORATORY ROVER MISSION

Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences

Purdue University

West Lafayette, Indiana

 

content/postdoc-mars-science-laboratory-rover-mission

 

Application Deadline: May 6, 2016

 

B) PLANETARY SCIENTIST

Department of Heliospheric and Planetary Science

NASA Marshall Space Flight Center

Huntsville, Alabama

 

content/planetary-scientist

 

Application Deadline: July 1, 2016

 

C) POSTDOCTORAL SCIENTIST

NAIC
Arecibo, Puerto Rico

 

https://usra-openhire.silkroad.com/epostings/index.cfm?fuseaction=app.jobinfo&jobid=405

 

———————————+

Send submissions to:

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

To unsubscribe visit http://aas.org/unsubscribe or email [email protected].

To change your address email [email protected].

First Announcement For The 2016 Joint DPS/EPSC Meeting

Please join us for the joint  48th Division for Planetary Sciences (DPS) and 11th European Planetary Science Conference  (EPSC) meeting in Pasadena, CA, USA from October 16-21, 2016. We anticipate an exciting program that captures the breadth of international planetary science by combining the scientific results of the participants in the DPS and EPSC research communities at one single meeting.

Scientific Program: Contributed research papers for oral and poster presentations are solicited for original research.

Key Deadlines:

  • Abstract Submission Opens: May 3, 2016
  • Abstracts Due: June 23, 2016
  • Late Abstract Deadline: August 2, 2016 (poster submissions only)

Workshops: Space is available for topical workshops to be held in conjunction with the joint DPS/EPSC. Guidelines are available. The proposal form is now available and open for submission. Workshops requests submitted by May 23, 2016 can be included in the registration form so as to be open to all meeting attendees.

Lodging: Group room rates are available in three local hotels to those who make reservations prior to Sept 14, 2016.

We hope to see you in Pasadena!

For more information visit our website.

Newsletter 16-09

Issue 16-09, April 2, 2016

 

+—————————————CONTENTS————————————-+

  1. FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THE 2016 JOINT DPS/EPSC MEETING
  2. NASA SMD SEEKING REVIEWERS FOR ROSES PROPOSALS
  3. NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE SUBCOMMITTEE (PSS) SURVEY ON PLANETARY LABORATORIES, FACILITIES, AND TECHNICAL SUPPORT
  4. 2016 NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE SUMMER SCHOOL APPLICATIONS OPEN
  5. UPCOMING MEETINGS

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THE 2016 JOINT DPS/EPSC MEETING

 

Please join us for the joint  48th Division for Planetary Sciences (DPS) and 

11th European Planetary Science Conference  (EPSC) meeting in Pasadena, 

CA, USA from October 16-21, 2016.  We anticipate an exciting program 

that captures the breadth of international  planetary science by combining 

the scientific results of the participants in the DPS and EPSC research  

communities at one single meeting.  

 

Scientific Program:  Contributed research papers for oral and poster presentations 

are solicited for original research at  aas.org/meetings/dps48/abstracts.  

Key Deadlines:

Abstract Submission Opens:  May 3, 2016

Abstracts Due: June 23, 2016

Late Abstract Deadline: August 2, 2016 (poster submissions only)

 

Workshops: Space is available for topical workshops to be held in conjunction 

with the joint DPS/EPSC.  Guidelines are available at 
aas.org/meetings/dps48/workshop_guidelines.    The proposal form is now 

available and open for submission.  Workshops requests submitted by 

May 23, 2016 can be included in the registration form so as to be open to all 

meeting attendees.

 

Lodging:  Group room rates are available in three local hotels to those 

who make reservations prior to Sept 14, 2016 at

aas.org/meetings/dps48/travel_and_lodging.

 

We hope to see you in Pasadena!  

 

For more information visit our website: aas.org/meetings/dps48

 

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NASA SMD SEEKING REVIEWERS FOR ROSES PROPOSALS

 

NASA’s Science Mission Directorate is recruiting reviewers for ROSES

proposals to Astrophysics and Planetary Science. If you are interested in 

being a reviewer, please go to

 

http://science.nasa.gov/researchers/volunteer-review-panels/

 

We especially encourage post-doctoral fellows and other early career 

scientists to volunteer. The following programs are currently listed: 

Astrophysics Data Analysis, Exoplanets Research, Emerging Worlds, 

Solar System Observations, Cassini Data Analysis, Maturation of 

Instruments for Solar System Exploration.

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE SUBCOMMITTEE (PSS) SURVEY 

ON PLANETARY LABORATORIES, FACILITIES, AND TECHNICAL

SUPPORT

 

Laboratory instruments and facilities are critical for analyzing 

extraterrestrial and terrestrial materials that inform planetary exploration 

and data analysis, constraining the interpretations of planetary remote 

sensing data, and developing future flight instrumentation.  The planetary 

community perceives that a significant proportion of Planetary Science 

Directorate (PSD) laboratories may be underfunded to the point at which 

the science they support is put at risk.

 

It is becoming increasingly difficult to maintain technical staff support, 

placing stress on the community’s research and training needs. The PSS 

is obtaining community input about the number and type of PI laboratories 

that undertake research supporting PSD objectives, and their technical staff 

support models. This information is needed to understand the planetary 

community’s laboratory capabilities and challenges, and to define the 

magnitude of the stress on research and training needs. The requested 

information will be used to inform discussions with PSD about the 

challenge and to help formulate potential solutions.

 

Please participate in the survey, by going to http://goo.gl/forms/hEh6Fk7LUn

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

2016 NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE SUMMER SCHOOL APPLICATIONS OPEN

 

NASA is accepting applications from science and engineering post-docs, 

recent PhDs, and doctoral students for its 28th Annual Planetary Science 

Summer School, which will be held July 25-29, 2016 at the Jet Propulsion 

Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

 

During the program and pre-session webinars, student teams will carry out 

the equivalent of an early mission concept study, prepare a proposal 

authorization  presentation, present it to a review board, and receive feedback. 

By the end of the session, students will have a clearer understanding of the 

life cycle of a space mission; relationships between mission design, cost, 

and schedule; and the tradeoffs necessary to stay within cost and schedule 

while preserving the quality of science.

 

Applications are due April 6, 2016.  Partial financial support is available for 

a limited number of individuals. Further information is available at 

https://pscischool.jpl.nasa.gov/

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

UPCOMING MEETINGS

 

A) LINKING EXOPLANET AND DISK COMPOSITIONS

Space Telescope Science Institute

September 12-14, 2016

 

Abstract submission and pre-registration are now open through our website!

Visit the website to see a preliminary agenda and to pre-register and submit 

your contributed abstract:

 

http://www.cvent.com/d/ffqwn1

 

Abstract:

This workshop will gather scientists working on the compositional characterization 

of planets and planet-forming regions in protoplanetary disks. Recent and upcoming 
advancements make it timely to have a round-table conversation among the several 

communities involved, to join forces in tackling our most compelling questions on 

the origins of exoplanet diversity. Do exoplanet compositions retain the imprint of 

large-scale disk processes? Do disks include compositional trends that imprint on 

planets? What do we learn in this context from observations of Solar System bodies? 

And what can we test with observations of disks and exoplanets in the near future?

We intend to identify long-lasting and observable links between exoplanet and disk 

compositions, to help the community in shaping the essential parameter space to 

cover with existing and upcoming observatories for exoplanet and disk 

characterization.

 

Invited Speakers:

Conel Alexander (Carnegie DTM)

Uma Gorti (SETI, NASA Ames)

Mike Line (Arizona State)

Jonathan Lunine (Cornell Univ.)

Christoph Mordasini (Univ. of Bern)

Ilaria Pascucci (Univ. of Arizona)

Sean Raymond (Univ. of Bordeaux)

Leslie Rogers (Univ. of Chicago)

 

Organizing Committee:

Daniel Apai (Univ. of Arizona)

Andrea Banzatti (STScI, chair)

Fred Ciesla (Univ. of Chicago)

Jonathan Fortney (UCSC)

Flory Hill (STScI, coordinator)

Sarah Horst (JHU)

Inga Kamp (Kapteyn Inst. Groningen)

Nikole Lewis (STScI, co-chair)

Amaya Moro-Martin (STScI)

Karin Oberg (Harvard CfA)

Klaus Pontoppidan (STScI)

Olivia Venot (Katholieke Univ. Leuven)

Marie Ygouf (STScI)

 

B) ESAC 2016 JWST WORKSHOP

Mastering the Science Instruments and the Observing Modes of JWST

European Space Astronomy Centre (ESAC)

26 – 28 September, 2016

 

This is the first announcement for the 2016 ESAC JWST Workshop 

“Mastering the Science Instruments and the Observing Modes of JWST”, 

sponsored by the European Space Agency to be held at ESAC, near 

Madrid, Spain, on 26 – 28 September of 2016.

 

The 2 1/2 day workshop will showcase the capabilities of the JWST

science instruments and their expected in-orbit performance. It aims to 

help prospective JWST users to select the best observing modes to 

achieve their science goals. For this purpose, experts from NASA, 

ESA, CSA, as well as the JWST instrument teams and operation leads 

from STScI will be available to answer community questions on all 

JWST observing modes.

 

There will be ample time for question and answer sessions with mission 

experts to help attendees develop optimal science projects.

 

At this point, we are requesting the community to express their interest in 

attending the workshop by pre-registering by Apr 15 2016 at the following 

web page:

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/VW5T5JR

Pre-registration will give precedence at the registration phase that will be 

opened in June. More detailed information is available on the workshop 

website:

http://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/jwst-2016-esac

 

Send your questions/comments to:  [email protected]

 

The  ESAC 2016 JWST Workshop Program Organising Committee

 

———————————+

Send submissions to:

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

To unsubscribe visit http://aas.org/unsubscribe or email [email protected].

To change your address email [email protected].

Newsletter 16-08

Issue 16-08, March 27, 2016

 

+—————————————CONTENTS————————————-+

  1. NEOWISE 2016 DATA RELEASE
  2. EXOPLANET BIOSIGNATURES WORKSHOP WITHOUT WALLS
  3. SBAG 15 MEETING ANNOUNCEMENTS
  4. NOAO 2016B OBSERVING PROPOSALS DUE 31 MARCH
  5. ALMA CYCLE 4 CALL FOR PROPOSALS
  6. JOB OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

NEOWISE 2016 DATA RELEASE

 

The Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (NEOWISE) and the 

Infrared Processing and Analysis Center (IPAC) announce the NEOWISE 2016 Data 

Release.

 

The NEOWISE 2016 Data Release includes all data acquired during the second 

year of the NEOWISE Reactivation mission (Mainzer et al. 2014, ApJ, 792, 30), 

13 December 2014 to 13 December 2015.  These data are combined with the 

Year 1 NEOWISE data into a single archive that contains approximately

5.1 million 3.4 and 4.6 micron images and a database of over 38.1 billion 

source detections extracted from those images.  

 

NEOWISE scanned the entire sky nearly four complete times during the first 

two years of survey operations, with approximately six months between 

survey passes.  Twelve or more independent 3.4 and 4.6 micron exposures are 

made on each point of the sky during each survey epoch.  Therefore, the 

NEOWISE archive is a time-domain resource for extracting multiple, independent 

thermal flux and position measurements of solar system small bodies, as well

as background galactic and extragalactic sources.

 

A quick guide to the NEOWISE data release, data access instructions and 

supporting documentation is available at  

http://wise2.ipac.caltech.edu/docs/release/neowise/.

Access to the NEOWISE data products is available via the on-line and API 

services of the NASA/IPAC Infrared Science Archive 

(http://irsa.ipac.caltech.edu).

 

NEOWISE utilizes the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) spacecraft that 

surveyed the sky in 2010, and was placed into hibernation in February 2011 

following the completion of its primary mission.  The spacecraft was brought 

out of hibernation in September 2013, and renamed NEOWISE with a mission 

to detect and characterize asteroids and comets, and to learn more about the 

population of near-Earth objects that could pose an impact hazard to the 

Earth.  Survey observations began on December 13, 2013, and the first 

candidate solar system moving object detection tracklets were reported to

the IAU Minor Planet Center two weeks after the survey start.  Three

deliveries of tracklets have been made each week since that time, yielding

over 300,000 confirmed detections of nearly 19,000 different solar system 

objects to date. 

 

NEOWISE is a project of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory/California Institute of 

Technology. NEOWISE is funded by the National Aeronautics and Space 

Administration. 

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

EXOPLANET BIOSIGNATURES WORKSHOP WITHOUT WALLS

 

A NExSS and Astrobiology Program Joint Workshop

 

The NASA Nexus for Exoplanet System Science (NExSS) and Astrobiology 

Program are hosting an Exoplanet Biosignatures Workshop Without Walls

to review, frame, and advance the science and technology of remotely detectable 

biosignatures for the search for life on planets around other stars.  Future 

exoplanet observations will soon focus on the search for life beyond the Solar 

System. Biosignatures to be sought are those with global, potentially detectable, 

impacts on a planet. Biosignatures occur in an environmental context in which

geological, atmospheric, and stellar processes and interactions may work to 

enhance, suppress or mimic these biosignatures. The workshop will bring 

together scientists from astronomy, planetary science, Earth sciences, 

heliophysics, biology, biogeochemistry, and instrument/mission development. 

 

When/Where:

mid-April, 2016: Pre-workshop online activities to commence

July 27-29, 2016:  In-person workshop (and online participation), Seattle, WA

 

Website:

http://nai.nasa.gov/calendar/workshop-without-walls-exoplanet-biosignatures/

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

SBAG 15 MEETING ANNOUNCEMENTS

 

Dear SBAG community,

 

The SBAG 15 meeting is scheduled for June 28-30, 2016, hosted at APL in 

Laurel, MD. Some logistical details are still being finalized, but a draft agenda 

is now available online:

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/sbag/meetings/

 

The SBAG 15 meeting is also in the NASA Conference Tracking System,

with NCTS # 24436-16. If you typically use the NASA Conference Tracking 

System for your travel, or have a different travel authorization processes for

your institution, please follow those usual procedures.

 

Also, I’d like to say thank you to the many members of the SBAG community 

who contributed to the generation of the SBAG Goals Document over the last 

year, through serving on the committees, reviewing the drafts during community 

comment periods, and contributing feedback and comments. The final document 

is available online:

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/sbag/goals/

 

Best wishes,

Nancy Chabot

SBAG Chair

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

NOAO 2016B OBSERVING PROPOSALS DUE 31 MARCH

 

Dear Colleague: 

 

Proposal forms and information for observing time requests for the 2016B

semester (August 2016 – January 2017) are available on the  NOAO web page:   

 

http://ast.noao.edu/observing/proposal-info 

 

Time requests for 2016B may be made for Gemini North and South, Cerro

Tololo Inter-American Observatory (including SOAR and SMARTS), and

Kitt Peak National Observatory (including WIYN).  Public-access  time with

the Subaru and AAT telescopes is also available through  time-exchange

agreements.  

 

The Call for Proposals is available in HTML at   

 

http://ast.noao.edu/observing/call-for-proposals-2016b 

 

and as a self-contained, downloadable PDF document at   

 

http://ast.noao.edu/sites/default/files/cfp2016b.pdf  

 

Observing proposals for all facilities available through NOAO in 2016B

are due by Thursday evening, 31 March 2016, 11:59pm MST.  The Gemini

Observatory has issued a Call for Proposals for 2016B. A time exchange

agreement continues with Subaru.  For more information  see:   

 

http://www.gemini.edu/sciops/observing-gemini/2016b-call-proposals  

 

Through an exchange between CTIO and the Australian Astronomical

Observatory, five nights at the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT) are 

available in 2016B.  For more information, see:   

 

http://www.noao.edu/gateway/aat/  

 

NASA and NSF have entered into a Partnership for Exoplanet Research

to support community use of the NOAO share of WIYN telescope time. 

Proposals for non-exoplanet research are being accepted in 2016B as well,

but will be eligible for scheduling only if there is time available after the

approved exoplanet proposals are scheduled.  For more information, see:

 

http://ast.noao.edu/observing/wiyn-exoplanets-2016b  

 

Several new observing resources have become available to the NOAO

community.  Recently added instruments or modes include:    

– GRACES, feeding a hi-res CFHT spectrograph from Gemini North   

– DSSI (speckle camera) as a visitor instrument at Gemini North   

– Phoenix (hi-res n-IR spectrograph), visiting at Gemini South   

– Mosaic 3.0 with LBNL CCDs at the KPNO 4-m   

– KOSMOS Spectrograph, including MOS at the KPNO 4-m   

– ARCoIRIS (n-IR imaging spectrograph) at the CTIO 4-m   

– COSMOS Spectrograph, including MOS at the CTIO 4-m   

– DSSI (speckle camera) for exoplanet programs at the WIYN 3.5-m   

– ODI, with upgraded 40×48′ focal plane at the WIYN 3.5-m 

 

For information about all telescopes and instruments available through

NOAO, including links to instrument pages and manuals, see:   

 

http://www.noao.edu/noaoprop/help/facilities.html   

 

PhD thesis observations require a web form to be filled out by the

student’s advisor. Without this letter, students are ineligible for travel

support. The form needs to be submitted by Monday, 4 April 2016.

Please see:    

http://www.noao.edu/noaoprop/thesis/  

 

Proposals For Gemini (including Subaru) MUST use the Phase-I Tool, 

known as PIT.  PIT is a downloadable application and is available at:

http://www.gemini.edu/sciops/observing-gemini/proposal-submission/phase-i-tool-pit  

 

Proposals for all other NOAO resources should use the NOAO Web Proposal

Form available at: http://www.noao.edu/noaoprop/ 

Proposals can be be completed and submitted through the web form. 

Optionally, a customized version of the form can be downloaded, completed

locally, and then uploaded at:    http://www.noao.edu/noaoprop/submit/  

Investigators requesting time with both Gemini and other NOAO resources

will need to complete both a PIT submission and the  NOAO proposal form.

Questions about the proposal form or the proposal process may be directed

to [email protected]. Questions specific to an observing run may

be sent to the site, either [email protected] or [email protected]

Gemini related questions may be sent to [email protected] or through the

Gemini Helpdesk at:

http://www.gemini.edu/sciops/helpdesk/submit-general-helpdesk-request

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

ALMA CYCLE 4 CALL FOR PROPOSALS

 

The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) is pleased to

announce the ALMA Cycle 4 Call for Proposals for scientific observations

to be scheduled from October 2016 to September 2017. 

 

Deadline: 21 April 15:00 UT.

 

https://almascience.nrao.edu/proposing/call-for-proposals

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

JOB OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) POSTDOCTORAL SCIENTIST

 

Planetary Radar Group 

Arecibo, Puerto Rico

 

content/postdoctoral-scientist

 

———————————+

Send submissions to:

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

To unsubscribe visit http://aas.org/unsubscribe or email [email protected].

To change your address email [email protected]

Newsletter 16-07

Issue 16-07, March 8, 2016

+—————————————CONTENTS————————————-+

1)REMINDER: LAST CALL FOR 2016 DPS PRIZE NOMINATIONS

2)NASA ADVISORY COUNCIL PLANETARY SCIENCE SUBCOMMITTEE MEETING

3)NASA PDS ROADMAP TEAM NOMINATIONS

4)EIGHTH ANNUAL SUSAN NIEBUR WOMEN IN PLANETARY SCIENCE EVENT AT LPSC

5)SUMMER SCHOOL: BRAVE NEW WORLDS: UNDERSTANDING THE PLANETS OF OTHER STARS

6)2016B NASA IRTF CALL FOR PROPOSALS

7)OBSERVATION CAMPAIGN OF KBO TARGETS FOR PROPOSED NEW HORIZONS EXTENDED MISSION

8)UPCOMING MEETINGS

+——————————————————————————————–+

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

REMINDER: LAST CALL FOR DPS 2016 PRIZE NOMINATIONS

DEADLINE MARCH 15, 2016

Every year the DPS recognizes exceptional achievement in our field.

It is time to consider nominating a respected colleague for one of the
annual

DPS prizes:

The Gerard P. Kuiper Prize honors outstanding contributions to the field of

planetary science.

The Harold C. Urey Prize recognizes outstanding achievement in planetary

research by a young scientist.

The Harold Masursky Award acknowledges outstanding service to planetary

science and exploration.

The Carl Sagan Medal recognizes and honors outstanding communication

by an active planetary scientist to the general public.

The Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Sciences Journalism Award recognizes

and stimulates distinguished popular writing on planetary sciences.

Detailed descriptions of each of the prizes and the criteria for
nominees for

each can be found at
prizes. The nomination
form and

instructions can also be retrieved from this website. The completed
nomination

form and supporting material should be emailed to [email protected]
.

Starting this year we are requiring that the nomination package with all

supporting material be submitted as a single document of less than 20
mbytes;

.pdf is highly preferred. If you have a nomination from a past year that is

being carried over, you do not need to resubmit unless you are including
new

material.

Anyone except current DPS Committee members may submit a nomination.

A completed nomination will be retained and considered by the Prize

Subcommittee for three years, or as long as the nominee is eligible,
whichever

is less. Past nominees may be re-nominated after the expiration of a prior

nomination. A posthumous nomination is allowed for a limited time after the

nominee’s death, except for the Sagan Medal. For specific details, see
the URL

noted above.

The deadline for nominations this year is March 15.

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

NASA ADVISORY COUNCIL PLANETARY SCIENCE SUBCOMMITTEE MEETING

The Planetary Science Subcommittee of the NASA Advisory Council will

meet TOMORROW March 9 and Thursday March 10.The link to the agenda

appears below, as well as information on how to join the meeting via
telephone

and webex:

http://science.nasa.gov/media/medialibrary/2016/03/02/PSS_agenda_for_Mar…

Teleconference Information:

Toll free conference call number 1-888-603-9741

Pass code: 7275246

WebEx Link: https://nasa.webex.com/

Meeting number for March 9

998 136 809

Password: PSS@Mar9

Meeting number for March 10

999 111 391

Password: PSS@Mar10

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

NASA PDS ROADMAP TEAM NOMINATIONS

Dear Colleague,

**

Be a part of the future of NASA’s Planetary Data System (PDS)! The PDS

is beginning the process of creating its next Roadmap and NASA is
soliciting

self-nominations for the PDS Roadmap Study Team. The goal of this activity

is to develop a practical, community-developed pathway to implement the new

long-term vision (see URL below) for the PDS, which continues to accomplish

NASA’s broad objective for the PDS; namely, preserving and making available

all data products from planetary exploration research and missions.

The PDS Chief Scientist, Dr. Ralph McNutt (Johns Hopkins University

Applied Physics Laboratory), will serve as the Chair of the Roadmap

Study Team. Ms. Emily Law (NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory – JPL)

will serve as his Deputy.

Background

The Planetary Data System (PDS) archives electronic data products from

NASA planetary missions, sponsored by NASA’s Science Mission

Directorate. It actively manages the archive to maximize its usefulness.

All PDS-curated products are peer-reviewed, well documented, and

available online to scientists and to the public. More information on

The Roadmap is available from the PDS homepage at:

https://pds.nasa.gov/roadmap/index.shtml.

The PDS is one of four NASA organizations within the Planetary Science

Division which works to ensure that planetary science archived data and

curated samples remain accessible to current researchers; preserved for

future generations; and protected against corruption, contamination, and

loss. NASA expects to increase interoperability and searchability across

all archives.

It is expected that the PDS Roadmap Study Team will do much of its

work virtually, using tele- and web-conferences. However, there will be

up to three, two-day long face-to-face meeting.

To nominate yourself for membership on the PDS Roadmap Study team,

E-mail a single PDF-formatted file to the PDS Program Scientist, Dr.

Michael New, at [email protected]
and the PDS Program Executive,

Mr. William Knopf, at [email protected]
by 11:59 PM EDT on

March 28, 2016. The subject line should include the phrase “PDS Roadmap

Study Team Self-Nomination”.

The application material should consist of:

1. The reasons for the submitter’s interest in the PDS Roadmap.

2. The capabilities and experience that the submitter would bring

to the PDS Roadmap.

3. A short statement of commitment to perform the tasks assigned

to the PDS Roadmap.

4. A two-page resume or /curriculum vitae/, including relevant
publications.

Nominations are solicited from researchers at U.S.-based research and

academic institutions, Government laboratories, including NASA centers

and JPL, industry, and private individuals. Only U.S. persons (for the

purpose of U.S. export control regulations, i.e., U.S. citizens and

permanent residents; see
http://oiir.hq.nasa.gov/nasaecp/Webbrfg/tsld018.htm)

are eligible to serve on the PDS Roadmap Study Team.

NASA will select the PDS Roadmap members for balance of expertise in

relevant science and technology areas.

NASA reserves the right to cancel this road-mapping activity at any time,

should programmatic and/or other reasons warrant it.

Questions about the PDS Roadmap should be addressed to the NASA PDS

Project Manager, Dr. Thomas Morgan, [email protected] at

301-286-1743.

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

EIGHTH ANNUAL SUSAN NIEBUR WOMEN IN PLANETARY

SCIENCE EVENT AT LPSC

Wednesday, 6:00 to 7:30 p.m.,

Waterway 5, Woodlands Waterway Marroitt

(LPSC Conference Venue, Houston, TX)

Everyone has implicit or unconscious biases shaped by societal expectations

and past experiences. These biases can influence evaluation and judgement,

in either a positive or negative way. Studies have shown that unconscious

bias can negatively affect the careers of women and other minorities in

STEM fields. In addition to raising awareness about best practices, this

event is meant as a springboard for implementing positive change in our

community. We welcome everyone’s input on this important topic. RSVP

(not required, but requested so we will have an idea about attendance

numbers), and more information:
http://bit.ly/WIPS_2016

Note: The formal event will be 6:00-7:30 and light refreshments will be

provided thanks to generous support from the Division for Planetary
Sciences

(thank you!!!). We have the room until 8 for those who wish to continue

small group discussions.

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

SUMMER SCHOOL: BRAVE NEW WORLDS:

UNDERSTANDING THE PLANETS OF OTHER STARS

May 29-June 03, 2016 – Lake Como School of Advanced Studies.

Only nine planets were known before 1995, the ones orbiting our favourite

star, the Sun, which then included Pluto. Twenty years later, we have
«lost»

Pluto but we have gained two thousands planets in orbit around other stars.

Current statistical estimates indicate that, on average, every star in
our Galaxy

hosts at least one planetary companion, i.e. our Milky Way is crowded with

one hundred billion planets! The most revolutionary aspect of this young

field is the discovery that the Solar System does not appear to
be the paradigm

in our Galaxy, but rather one of the many possible configurations we
are seeing

out there. These include planets completing a revolution in less than
one day,

as well as planets orbiting two stars or moving on trajectories so
eccentric as

to resemble comets. Some of them are freezing cold, some are so hot
that their

surface is molten. Finding out why are these new worlds as they are is
one of

the key challenges of modern astrophysics.

The school is directed to Ph.D. students and young researchers who are

interested in widening their knowledge in the field exoplanets, through an

integrated approach covering observations, data analysis and
interpretation.

More information is available at:

http://gatr.lakecomoschool.org

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

2016B NASA IRTF CALL FOR PROPOSALS

The due date for the 2016B semester (August 1, 2016 to January 31, 2017)

is Friday, April 1, 2016. See our online submission form, which is
available

for proposal submission from 12:00AM on March 01, 2016 until 5:00PM

on April 01, 2016 HST. Available instruments include: (1) SpeX, a 0.7 – 5.3

micron cross-dispersed medium-resolution spectrograph (up to R=2,500) and

imager; (2) CSHELL, a 1-5 micron high-resolution spectrograph (up to

R=40,000), available until Sept. 30, 2016; (3) MORIS, a 512×512 pixel Andor

CCD camera (60″x60″ field-of-view) mounted at the side-facing window of the

SpeX cryostat that can be used simultaneously with SpeX; and (4) iSHELL, a

1.1 – 5.3 micron cross-dispersed echelle spectrograph (up to R=70,000) and

imager, is expected to be available starting Oct. 1, 2016 under shared
risk.

Information on available facility and visitor instruments and performance

can be found at:
http://irtfweb.ifa.hawaii.edu/Facility.

Please see
http://irtfweb.ifa.hawaii.edu/observing/callForProposals.php
for

the full text.

7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7

OBSERVATION CAMPAIGN OF KBO TARGETS FOR PROPOSED

NEW HORIZONS EXTENDED MISSION

Having completed its successful flyby of the Pluto system, the New

Horizons spacecraft is on a trajectory to encounter Kuiper Belt Object

2014 MU69. Pending NASA approval for an extended mission, New

Horizons will also take advantage of being an observing platform in the

outer solar system to observe a select number of other KBOs having

favorable geometries for resolved or high signal-to-noise measurements.

Earth-based observations can support these pending New Horizons

measurements through calibrated photometry at low phase angle (Earth),

which will be complementary to the higher phase angle data from the

spacecraft. In particular for objects having the potential for resolved

imaging from the spacecraft, knowledge of the rotational phase at the time

of the New Horizons observations can help constrain the overall shape

of these distant objects. An Earth-based campaign website
in support of

the pending science from the New Horizons extended mission is

under construction.

Candidate KBO targets

8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8

UPCOMING MEETINGS

A) Half a Decade of ALMA: Cosmic Dawns Transformed
September 20 – 23, 2016
Renaissance Indian Wells Resort & Spa
Indian Wells, CA, USA

Mid April 2016 Abstract submissions and Registration opens
Mid May 2016 Abstract submission closes

The sensitivity and spectral grasp of the Atacama Large

Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) have revolutionized the

study of youngest structures in the Universe, from galaxy formation

through the formation of stars and planets. ALMA has produced over

300 refereed papers with over 3000 citations at its four-year mark,

reporting impressive and scientifically compelling results as the most

sensitive and highest resolution mm/submm interferometer in the world.

This international four-day conference will highlight ALMA results at

the threshold of the array’s fifth year of science operations and bring

together researchers from around the world to motivate collaborations

for ALMA Cycle 5. Science topics will include all fields of astronomy,

from the solar system and the Sun to exoplanets, circumstellar disks and

planet and star formation, astrochemisty, evolved stars, the interstellar

medium and star formation in our own Galaxy, to nearby galaxies and

beyond to the distant Universe.

The conference will feature invited and contributed talks as well as

poster sessions. Early career researchers and students are particularly

encouraged to attend.

Meeting website:

http://go.nrao.edu/ALMA5years

———————————+

Send submissions to:

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected] )

To unsubscribe visit http://aas.org/unsubscribeor email
[email protected] .

To change your address email [email protected]

.

Newsletter 16-06

Issue 16-06, February 28, 2016

+—————————————CONTENTS————————————-+
1) IN MEMORIAM: MILDRED SHAPLEY MATTHEWS (1915-2016)
2) MESSAGE FROM THE FRS CHAIR
3) NASA CALL FOR LETTERS OF APPLICATION TO SDT
4) SBAG ANNOUNCEMENT
5) 2016 NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE SUMMER SCHOOL APPLICATIONS OPEN
6) A NEW VOLUME IN THE “HELIOPHYSICS” SERIES
7) UPCOMING MEETINGS
+——————————————————————————————–+

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1
IN MEMORIAM: MILDRED SHAPLEY MATTHEWS (1915-2016)

On February 11, just four days short of her 101st birthday, Mildred Shapley
Matthews passed away peacefully at her home in California with her family
present. Mildred was the daughter of Harvard College Observatory Director
Harlow Shapley and she held the interesting distinction of being “lost in the
solar system” for 75 years. As a commemoration of his newborn daughter,
Shapley bestowed the name Mildred to asteroid 878 discovered in 1916.
Unfortunately the initial observations of the asteroid were limited, and the
object was “lost” with highly uncertain orbital elements until recovered in 1991.
Friends and colleagues seeing Mildred over the years would always ask,
“are you found yet?” Matthews’ foundational contributions to planetary science
began around the time of her nominal retirement age, when in the 1970s she
began working as the production editor in the inaugural years of the Space
Science Series created by Tom Gehrels. Her role became most prominently
recognized as co-editor on more than a dozen volumes extending in to the 1990s.
Overall for more than 20 Space Science Series volumes she edited, operating
through friendly (then increasingly stern, but always polite) post cards and
phone calls to delinquent authors, it was Matthews who brought the books
into their final published form. Matthews leaves behind a legacy of books
that have served as the gateway for countless planetary science careers and
insights toward future advancements in our field. In 1993, Matthews received
the DPS’ Harold Masursky Award for Meritorious Service to Planetary Science.

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2
MESSAGE FROM THE FRS CHAIR:

The Federal Relations Subcommittee will be visiting Congress to advocate for
planetary science on March 18 and April 21. In Fiscal Year 2016, Congress
appropriated $1.63B for planetary science, and we will be thanking them for that
and encouraging them to continue their strong support for our science. We are
in the process of updating our messaging and the materials that we provide to
Congressional offices. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact
Makenzie Lystrup at [email protected]

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3
CALL FOR LETTERS OF APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP
ON NASA’S SCIENCE DEFINITION TEAM FOR EUROPA LANDER
PRE-PHASE A STUDY

The Planetary Science Division of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate
plans to conduct a Pre-Phase A study of a Europa lander mission concept.
This study will build upon previous NASA studies with a goal to defining
the science objectives and feasibility of specific lander mission concept
focused on assessing the habitability of and searching for life on Europa.
NASA invites scientists and other qualified and interested individuals at U.S.
institutions to apply for membership on the Europa Lander Science Definition
Team (SDT).

Members of the SDT will provide the technical team and NASA with scientific
assistance and input during preliminary mission design. Near-term activities of
the SDT will include the establishment of prioritized science objectives and a
realistic scientific concept of operations, development and assessment of
alternative architectures, including model payload/instrument suites for proof
of concept, and suggestions for threshold science objectives/measurements for
a viable mission within resource constraints provided by NASA. NASA will
use the products of this study for planning purposes. The SDT will be formed
in March 2016 and will be disbanded after the work is complete.

The SDT will:

1. Identify and prioritize science objectives to be addressed by the lander
mission concept.

2. Participate in a Pre-Phase A mission concept study designed to
address those science objectives. Aspects of this participation will include:

• Science traceability, identification of measurements, and
specification of model payload
• Science concept of operations
• Participation in tradeoffs among scientific value, cost, and risk

3. Assist in the preparation of study reports.

Volunteers selected for membership will have demonstrated expertise
and knowledge in areas highly relevant to science relevant for the lander
mission concept. NASA anticipates the selection of approximately seven
to ten SDT members. Representative(s) from the NASA Planetary Science
Division will serve as ex officio members of the SDT.

DETAILS REQUESTED FOR SDT MEMBERSHIP SELECTION

Responses to this Call for Membership in the SDT shall be in the form of a
Letter of Application. The Letter of Application should provide clearly
defined evidence of the candidate’s relevant demonstrated experience and
background. The Letter of Application may also contain a brief list of
references to scientific or technical peer-reviewed papers the applicant has
published that formally establish their position of scientific leadership in
the community; this list is not included in the page count limitation below.
The letter should also contain a statement confirming the applicant’s time
availability during the next twelve months to participate on the SDT,
particularly if there are any major schedule constraints that may restrict
engagement at critical times. The expected time commitment would include
the following:

• Weekly to biweekly teleconferences beginning in April 2016
• Two face-to-face meetings in the first half of 2016
• Preparation and review of materials for the final report
• Additional teleconferences and face-to-face meetings as the SDT
deems appropriate

Note that a significant amount of the interaction among the SDT is
anticipated to be via E-mail and webex.

Letters of Application are invited only from individuals, and group
applications will not be considered. In addition, collaborations and
teams will not be considered.

Each Letter of Application, limited to one page, shall be submitted by
E-mail no later than March 18, 2016 (11:59 p.m. EST), to Dr. Curt Niebur
at the address below. The subject line of the E-mail should include
“Europa Lander SDT”.

The issuance of this Call for Letters of Application does not obligate
NASA to accept any of the applications. Any costs incurred by
prospective investigators in preparing submissions in response to this
Call are incurred completely at the submitter’s own risk.

Dr. Curt Niebur
Planetary Sciences Division
Science Mission Directorate
E-mail: [email protected]
Phone: 202-358-0390

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SBAG ANNOUNCEMENT

Dear SBAG community,

An initiative to develop a long term roadmap for the exploration of Ocean
Worlds has kicked off. The committee charged with developing this roadmap
is committed to an open and inclusive process. At this point, all bodies which
plausibly can have or are known to have an ocean will be considered as part of
this study and that includes bodies of interest to SBAG.

Please consider joining this roadmap effort if this topic is of interest to you by
emailing the co-chairs:

Amanda Hendrix ([email protected])
Terry Hurford ([email protected])
And please copy me on the email as well ([email protected]).

Best wishes,
Nancy Chabot
SBAG Chair

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5
2016 NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE SUMMER SCHOOL
APPLICATIONS OPEN

NASA is accepting applications from science and engineering post-docs,
recent PhDs, and doctoral students for its 28th Annual Planetary
Science Summer School, which will be held July 25-29, 2016 at the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

During the program and pre-session webinars, student teams will carry
out the equivalent of an early mission concept study, prepare a
proposal authorization presentation, present it to a review board,
and receive feedback. By the end of the session, students will have a
clearer understanding of the life cycle of a space mission;
relationships between mission design, cost, and schedule; and the
tradeoffs necessary to stay within cost and schedule while preserving
the quality of science.

Applications are due April 6, 2016. Partial financial support is
available for a limited number of individuals. Further information is
available at:

http://pscischool.jpl.nasa.gov

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A NEW VOLUME IN THE “HELIOPHYSICS” SERIES

A fourth volume in the “Heliophysics” series will be released by Cambridge
University Press (CUP) on March 17, 2016, entitled “Heliophysics: Active
stars, their astrospheres, and impacts on planetary environments”. This volume,
edited by C. Schrijver, F. Bagenal, and J. Sojka, expands the topics related to
the Sun-Earth connections presented in the preceding three volumes to other
bodies in the solar system and to extrasolar planetary systems.

CUP (at cambridge.org) offers a 20% discount (on pre-orders, and throughout
2016 after the book becomes available) with discount code “heliophy”:
www.cambridge.org/9781107090477.

The same discount (with the same code) applies to the hardcover and
paperback editions of the preceding three “Heliophysics” volumes,
subtitled “Plasma physics of the local cosmos”, “Space storms and
radiation: causes and effects”, and “Evolving solar activity and the
climates of space and Earth”.

A provisional 5th volume on “Space Weather and Society” can be freely
downloaded from:
http://www.vsp.ucar.edu/Heliophysics/science-resources-textbooks.shtml

The Heliophysics books aim at the advanced undergraduate and at
graduate-level students, taking the perspective of heliophysics as a single
intellectual discipline. The books touch on most branches of heliophysics,
with particular emphasis on universal processes and on the multi-disciplinary
character of many of its diverse range of specialties. The list of topics
includes the formation of planetary systems, astrophysical dynamos,
heliospheric perturbations, particle acceleration, cosmic-ray modulation,
interactions of the solar wind with planetary magnetospheres, impulstive
and explosive events, irradiance and the tropospheric climate system,
ionospheric processes, and impacts of space weather on satellites and
for manned space flight, among many more.

The Heliophysics book series has its origins in the Summer School
series of the same name. Many of the recorded lectures, problem sets,
lab manuals, and other online supporting materials can be accessed at
the School’s site at http://www.vsp.ucar.edu/Heliophysics/.

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UPCOMING MEETINGS

A) 2016 ANNUAL LABORATORY ASTROPHYSICS DIVISION
OF THE AAS MEETING
San Diego, CA
June 13-16, 2016

http://lad.aas.org/meetings/lad2016

Key dates:
Regular Registration: March 3, 2016
Abstracts: March 3, 2016

The 2016 LAD meeting will be devoted to the interplay between laboratory
astrophysics and other fields in astronomy, planetary science and related
sciences. The meeting will be held jointly with the 228th Meeting of the
AAS, and feature the inaugural 2015 Laboratory Astrophysics Prize talk
by Lou Allamandola, a talk by the 2016 Laboratory Astrophysics Prize
winner Peter Beiersdorfer, and a talk by the inaugural LAD Early Career
Prize Winner Francois Lique. The sessions will cover the full range of LAD
topics, with special focus on interplay with observatories such as ALMA,
Hitomi (nee’ Astro-H — now launched!), and NuSTAR.

The session titles and invited speakers are listed below; each session has
room for contributed talks. A parallel 4-day long poster session, with all
posters up the entire time, is also planned. We encourage you to submit.

Sessions:

Bridging Laboratory & Astrophysics: Dust & Ices with ALMA & Hitomi
Monday, 13 June 2014: 10:00 am-11:30 am
Laboratory astrophysics is the Rosetta Stone that enables astronomers to
understand and interpret the cosmos. This session will focus on the interplay
between astrophysics with theoretical and experimental studies into the
underlying dust and ice processes, which drive our Universe, focusing on
connections to ALMA or Hitomi observations.
Confirmed Speakers:

• Lou Allamandola, NASA/Ames Research Center
[Inaugural Laboratory Astrophysics Prize Talk]
• Lia Corrales, MIT

Bridging Laboratory and Astrophysics: Molecules seen with ALMA I
Monday, 13 June 2014: 2:00 pm-3:30 pm
Laboratory astrophysics is the Rosetta Stone that enables astronomers to
understand and interpret the cosmos. This session will focus on the interplay
between astrophysics with theoretical and experimental studies into the
underlying molecular processes, which drive our Universe, with special
attention to connections with ALMA observations.
Confirmed Speakers:

• Viviana Guzman, Harvard
• Paola Caseli, MPE

Bridging Laboratory and Astrophysics: Molecules seen with ALMA II
Tuesday, 14 June 2014: 10:00 am-11:30 am
Laboratory astrophysics is the Rosetta Stone that enables astronomers to
understand and interpret the cosmos. This session will focus on the
interplay between astrophysics with theoretical and experimental studies
into the underlying molecular processes, which drive our Universe, with
special attention to connections with ALMA observations.
Confirmed Speakers:

• Francois Lique, University Le Havre [Inaugural LAD Early Career Prize Talk]
• Lucy Ziurys, University of Arizona

Bridging Laboratory and Astrophysics: Planetary Physics seen with
ALMA and Hitomi
Tuesday, 14 June 2014: 2:00pm-3:30 pm
Laboratory astrophysics is the Rosetta Stone that enables astronomers
to understand and interpret the cosmos. This session will focus on the
interplay between astrophysics with theoretical and experimental studies
into the underlying planetary science processes, which drive our Universe,
with special attention to observations done with ALMA and Hitomi.
Confirmed Speakers:

• Martin Cordiner, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
• Geoff Blake, CalTech

Bridging Laboratory and Astrophysics: Atomic Physics seen with Hitomi
Wednesday, 15 June 2014: 10:00 am-11:30 am
Laboratory astrophysics is the Rosetta Stone that enables astronomers to
understand and interpret the cosmos. This session will focus on the interplay
between astrophysics with theoretical and experimental studies into the
underlying atomic processes, which drive our Universe, with special attention
to observations done with Hitomi.
Confirmed Speakers:

• Peter Beiersdorfer, Lawrence Livermore National Lab
[2016 Laboratory Astrophysics Prize Talk]
• Renata Cumbee, University of Georgia

Bridging Laboratory and Astrophysics: Atomic, Nuclear, & Particles
Physics with Hitomi and NuSTAR
Wednesday, 15 June 2014: 2:00pm-3:30 pm
Laboratory astrophysics is the Rosetta Stone that enables astronomers to
understand and interpret the cosmos. This session will focus on the
interplay between astrophysics with theoretical and experimental studies
into the underlying nuclear processes, which drive our Universe, with
special attention to observations done with Hitomi and NuSTAR.
Confirmed Speakers:

• Javier Garcia, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
• Steven Boggs, UC-Berkeley

Science Organizing Committee: Farid Salama, Randall Smith, Steven
Federman, Paul Drake, Daniel Wolf Savin, John Black, Nancy Janet
Chanover, Gianfranco Vidali, Karin Oberg, Edward Brown, Jan Cami,
Oswald Siegmund

B) ASIA OCEANIA GEOSCIENCES CONFERENCE 2016
July 31 – Aug 5, Beijing, China

Session Title: Moon And Mercury – A Comparative View
Planetary Sciences – Session PS 16

Conference website:
http://www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2016/public.asp?page=home.htm
Abstract submission deadline: extended to March 4, 2016

Session Description: Recent years have provided us with many new
insights on both the Moon and Mercury. In the past the Moon was
often considered as a Mercury analog. Now we know that this view
is true only to a limited extent. However there are many similarities
between these two bodies, and the differences allow us to learn more
about airless bodies in the Solar System in general. Therefore we invite
contributions to this comparative session. In addition to comparative
presentations, contributions that focus on just one of these bodies are
welcome.

Main Convener: Dr. Jorn Helbert
(German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany), [email protected]
Co-convener(s): Dr. David Blewett
(Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, United States),
[email protected]
Prof. Sho Sasaki (Osaka University, Japan),
[email protected]
Prof. Masaki Fujimoto (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Japan),
[email protected]

———————————+
Send submissions to:
Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected])

To unsubscribe visit http://aas.org/unsubscribe or email [email protected].
To change your address email [email protected]

Message From The FRS Chair

The Federal Relations Subcommittee will be visiting Congress to advocate for planetary science on March 18 and April 21. In Fiscal Year 2016, Congress appropriated $1.63B for planetary science, and we will be thanking them for that and encouraging them to continue their strong support for our science. We are in the process of updating our messaging and the materials that we provide to Congressional offices. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact Makenzie Lystrup at [email protected]