Newsletter 16-47

Issue 16-47, December 11, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: PLANETARY SCIENCE EXAMPLES FROM PRESENT, PAST AND FUTURE
  2. RENEW YOUR AAS/DPS MEMBERSHIP TODAY
  3. REGISTRATION FOR SMALL BODIES ASSESSMENT GROUP (SBAG) MEETING 16
  4. CALL FOR PAPERS (SECOND ANNOUNCEMENT) – SIXTH MARS POLAR CONFERENCE
  5. EXOPLANET SCIENCE WITH SMALL TELESCOPES: PRECISE RADIAL VELOCITIES
  6. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

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MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: PLANETARY SCIENCE EXAMPLES 

FROM PRESENT, PAST AND FUTURE

 

Monday: The DPS Committee reviewed, discussed and passed the 2017 

budget in an hour! Thanks to treasurer, Andy Rivkin for leading that effort, 

for the subcommittee chairs getting in their requests, and to the Committee 

for discussing and voting it approved. The budget funds telecommunications 

and activities of the subcommittees, and travel for the Committee’s and 

federal relations subcommittee members’ Congressional visits in the spring. 

Next on our agenda is reviewing charges of all subcommittees. 

 

Tuesday: Ben Feist (yes, the singer’s brother), recounted at Goddard Space 

Flight Center last week, his personal pathway to a project restoring the Apollo 

17 mission timeline http://benfeist.com/project-apollo-17. That lead to Apollo 

17 in real-time http://apollo17.org. As Ben said, he did this to engage people 

in the history of our space program, and he succeeded! It is awesome. 

 

Back to Monday: The subcommittee on professional climate and culture and 

our secretary’s newsletter (thank you Anne Verbiscer), brought to my attention 

Planetary Science Vision 2050 Workshop. So I took a side trip to vision 33 

years down the road, asking among my network of younger colleagues to 

contribute to an abstract.   Five of my 8 co-authors wouldn’t have proposed to 

this opportunity, if I weren’t going to AGU and wasn’t writing an abstract for ACM.

 

Wednesday: Back to the present with some current data from the Dawn mission 

reviewing plans for upcoming data collection.  It is fun and a privilege. 

 

Thursday: Drafted Planetary Visions abstract, sent to co-authors for review and 

augmentation.  

 

Friday: Revised and submitted in spite of the fact that the deadline was moved 

forward to next week.  

 

I truly appreciate the opportunity to lead the division for planetary science 

this year. As we enter the holiday season, I encourage everyone to pause to 

enjoy it, spend time with those we love, and recommit our efforts to explore

and share our knowledge broadly so that we inspire, engage and enlighten 

those in the world around us.  Happy Holidays.

 

Lucy McFadden

DPS Chair

 

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RENEW YOUR AAS/DPS MEMBERSHIP TODAY
 

AAS emailed members in early September announcing the start of membership 

renewal season, and many took notice. Online renewals are arriving at a steady

pace. If you have already paid your dues, thanks for your continued support.

 

To help reduce costs and the Society’s carbon footprint, we encourage you to

renew online today for fast, easy self-service. Simply log in to pay your dues,

to confirm or update your journal subscriptions and Division memberships, 

and to lock in savings for 2017 by renewing for two years at the current rate. 

(Note: That last option isn’t available to junior members, who instead get two

years for the price of one — currently $81 —when first joining the Society, 

then renew annually thereafter.)

 

Renew before 31 December to maintain your benefits and receive additional 

savings: the AAS will extend a one-time 15% discount off your portion of the 

author charges for one paper published in the Astronomical Journal, the 

Astrophysical Journal, ApJ Letters, or ApJ Supplement. Eligible members 

can double their savings: if you renew by 31 December for two years, you will 

receive the 15% author discount on one paper each in 2017 and 2018.

The Society has much planned for 2017 — including the 229th meeting of the 

AAS in Grapevine, TX in January — so you won’t want to miss out on the latest 

science, member communications, and career and networking opportunities. 

Supporting the AAS is supporting your discipline. Renew today!

 

If you have any questions about your dues or benefits, or need assistance 

when logging in, please contact the membership team by email at 

[email protected] or by phone at 202-328-2010. Thank you!

 

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REGISTRATION FOR SMALL BODIES ASSESSMENT GROUP (SBAG) 

MEETING 16

 

JANUARY 11-13, 2017   TUCSON, ARIZONA

 

Information about the 16th Meeting of the Small Bodies Assessment 

Group (SBAG), including registration, is now available. You can 

access it either through the “Registration” link on the SBAG website at 

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/sbag/ 

or directly at 

http://www.cvent.com/events/nasa-small-bodies-assessment-group-meeting/event-summary-b7501148951746258c5b21207299687c.aspx 

The meeting will start Wednesday morning, and end Friday noon.

An agenda will be posted soon. 

I hope to see you in Tucson next month. 

Tim Swindle

SBAG Chair

 

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CALL FOR PAPERS (SECOND ANNOUNCEMENT) –

SIXTH MARS POLAR CONFERENCE

 

The Scientific Organizing Committee is organizing a special issue of Icarus 

related to Mars Polar research, particularly in the fields of polar geology, 

glaciology, climate record, atmospheric dynamics, terrestrial analogs, ground 

ice, geochemistry, and Mars polar surface activity. In recognition of the broad 

scope, interdisciplinary nature, and strong international interest in this topic, 

we welcome the participation of any interested scientist with relevant theoretical, 

experimental, or field experience. This special issue is open to all interested 

authors with Mars Polar related research to publish, whether they attended the 

conference or not. Please email questions or notices of intent to guest editors,

Adrian Brown and Michael Sori

 

Manuscripts should be submitted through Icarus’ EVISE website. Authors must 

select “Mars Polar Science VI” when they reach the “Article Type” step in the

 submission process.

 

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EXOPLANET SCIENCE WITH SMALL TELESCOPES: 

PRECISE RADIAL VELOCITIES

 

Announcing the first workshop devoted to the discussion of how sub-meter-

class telescopes can be used to discover, confirm, and characterize exoplanets 

using the Doppler method. The workshop will take place on April 24-26, 2017 

at University of Pennsylvania, Philadephia, PA. Registration is open now on 

our website at http://web.sas.upenn.edu/smalltrv/, and abstracts are due on 

February 3, 2017. 

 

Please send questions or inquiries to Prof. Cullen Blake at [email protected].

 

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JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

  1.  

LESIA, University of Paris

  •  

 

Application Deadline: 2/28/2017

 

content/post-doc-position-comet-scienceinfraredrosetta 

 

 

  1.  

AT THE SWEDISH INSTITUTE OF SPACE PHYSICS IN UPPSALA

This project will investigate the structure and dynamics of Saturn’s 

ionosphere and its interaction with the charged dust and plasma near 

its rings. The Cassini mission will end in 2017 with close orbits 

through the ring systems and passages through the upper atmosphere 

and ionosphere of Saturn. The Radio & Plasma Wave Science instrument 

package includes IRF’s Langmuir probe. Data from this will be analysed 

in order to study the ring dust and plasma and make the first detailed 

in-situ measurements of Saturn’s ionosphere.

 

Candidates should have completed a PhD in space physics or a related 

field during 2013 or later. Candidates planning to obtain their PhD 

before April 2017 may apply. If the candidate has an older degree and 

wants to refer to special circumstances, this should be clearly 

stated. Candidates should demonstrate experience in spacecraft data 

analysis, as part of national and international collaborations. 

Experience with theoretical modelling is an advantage, as is an 

interest in developing instrumental techniques and methods, and 

experience in coordinating scientific activities.

 

Further details: http://www.irf.se/jobb

 

Closing date for applications: 26 January 2017

Reference number: 2.2.1-312/16

 

———————————+

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 Chair: Planetary Science Examples From Present, Past And Future

Monday: The DPS Committee reviewed, discussed and passed the 2017 budget in an hour! Thanks to treasurer, Andy Rivkin for leading that effort, for the subcommittee chairs getting in their requests, and to the committee for discussing and voting it approved. The budget funds telecommunications and activities of the subcommittees, and travel for the Committee’s and federal relations subcommittee members’ Congressional visits in the spring.

Next on our agenda is reviewing charges of all subcommittees.

Tuesday: Ben Feist (yes, the singer’s brother), recounted at Goddard Space Flight Center last week, his personal pathway to a project restoring the Apollo 17 mission timeline. That led to the web-based Apollo 17 in real-time. As Ben said, he did this to engage people in the history of our space program, and he succeeded! It is awesome.

Back to Monday: The subcommittee on professional climate and culture and our secretary’s newsletter (thank you Anne Verbiscer), brought to my attention Planetary Science Vision 2050 Workshop. So I took a side trip to imagine 33 years down the road, seeking contributions from my network of younger colleagues to contribute to an abstract.   Five of my 8 co-authors wouldn’t have proposed to participate in this opportunity. I was able to lead it because I wasn’t going to AGU and wasn’t writing an abstract for ACM.

Wednesday: Back to the present with some current data from the Dawn mission reviewing plans for upcoming data collection.  It is fun and a privilege.

Thursday: Drafted Planetary Visions abstract, sent to co-authors for review and augmentation.  Friday: Revised and submitted in spite of the fact that the deadline was moved forward.

It was a week where I worked hard to change the narrative of pending doom that I continue to find among many media posts, and in discussions with colleagues and friends. I won’t put my head in the sand, and will work to share and communicate planetary science for the benefit of all.

I truly appreciate the opportunity to lead the Division for Planetary Sciences this year. As we enter the holiday season, I encourage everyone to pause to enjoy it, spend time with those we love, and recommit our efforts to explore and share our knowledge broadly so that we inspire, engage and enlighten those in the world around us.  Happy Holidays.

Newsletter 16-46

Issue 16-46, December 4, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. RENEW YOUR AAS/DPS MEMBERSHIP TODAY
  2. PLANETARY SCIENCE VISION 2050 WORKSHOP ABSTRACTS DUE
  3. SEEKING MEMBERS FOR THE WFIRST SOLAR SYSTEM WORKING GROUP
  4. THE EXOCLIPSE CONFERENCE – EXPLORING NEW WORLDS IN THE SHADE
  5. AGU-JPGU JOINT MEETING MAY 20-25, 2017
  6. 4*P COMA MORPHOLOGY CAMPAIGN
  7. NEXT EGU CONFERENCE
  8. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

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 RENEW YOUR AAS/DPS MEMBERSHIP TODAY
 

AAS emailed members in early September announcing the start of membership 

renewal season, and many took notice. Online renewals are arriving at a steady

pace. If you have already paid your dues, thanks for your continued support.

 

To help reduce costs and the Society’s carbon footprint, we encourage you to

renew online today for fast, easy self-service. Simply log in to pay your dues,

to confirm or update your journal subscriptions and Division memberships, 

and to lock in savings for 2017 by renewing for two years at the current rate. 

(Note: That last option isn’t available to junior members, who instead get two

years for the price of one — currently $81 —when first joining the Society, 

then renew annually thereafter.)

 

Renew before 31 December to maintain your benefits and receive additional 

savings: the AAS will extend a one-time 15% discount off your portion of the 

author charges for one paper published in the Astronomical Journal, the 

Astrophysical Journal, ApJ Letters, or ApJ Supplement. Eligible members 

can double their savings: if you renew by 31 December for two years, you will 

receive the 15% author discount on one paper each in 2017 and 2018.

The Society has much planned for 2017 — including the 229th meeting of the 

AAS in Grapevine, TX in January — so you won’t want to miss out on the latest 

science, member communications, and career and networking opportunities. 

Supporting the AAS is supporting your discipline. Renew today!

 

If you have any questions about your dues or benefits, or need assistance 

when logging in, please contact the membership team by email at 

[email protected] or by phone at 202-328-2010. Thank you!

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

PLANETARY SCIENCE VISION 2050 WORKSHOP ABSTRACTS DUE

 

ABSTRACT DEADLINE DECEMBER 9, 2016
http://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/V2050/

 

So often our planning horizon in planetary sciences is shorter than the time 

it takes to develop critical technologies for missions. And we don’t often take 

the time to think strategically about what we want to be doing scientifically 

20 or 30 or more years from now. This workshop and the resulting report is 

a chance for our community to bring their ideas to an open forum where we 

can look far into the future and imagine what we might be doing in planetary 

science in 2050. Only through exercises such as this can we think strategically 

about what we have to do now scientifically and in technology development to 

enable these visions to become reality.

 

This workshop is not a decadal survey activity. Nonetheless, it will inform 

future strategic planning processes, like the next decadal survey. If you or your 

colleagues have ideas about where you feel your field should be going, or if you 

have a vision of where you feel we should be in 34 years and how we might be 

able to get there, please submit an abstract.

 

The 5 themes for the workshop have their roots in the planetary science decadal 

survey and map to NASA’s current goals for Planetary Science:

 

ORIGINS — understanding formation and evolution of solar systems (including 

exoplanetary systems)

WORKINGS — understanding how the processes in our solar system operate, 

interact, and evolve

LIFE — improve our understanding of the origin and evolution of life, 

including Earth analogs, to guide our search for life elsewhere

THREATS AND RESOURCES — identify and characterize objects that 

pose threats to Earth or offer resources for human exploration

OTHER — other thoughts about where we might be in three decades that 

are not captured above (e.g., terraforming; mining for resources)

 

However, we are looking beyond these near-term concepts to where they 

will take us in the future.

 

Steve Mackwell

 

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SEEKING MEMBERS FOR THE WFIRST SOLAR SYSTEM WORKING GROUP

NASA’s Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) is NASA’s next 
flagship mission after JWST. WFIRST is on track for a 2025 launch and 
a 6 year primary mission. This mission has two primary instruments: the 
Wide Field Instrument (WFI) with a 0.25 square degree FOV and the 
Coronagraph Instrument (CGI), which is designed to take images and 
spectra of super-Earths. Between the two instruments, WFIRST will be 
capable of imaging and grism spectroscopy over the wavelength range 
0.7-2 microns as well as R~100 spectroscopy with an IFU. More details 
can be found here: 

https://wfirst.gsfc.nasa.gov/ 
 
We are soliciting participants for the WFIRST Solar System Working 
Group to help develop science cases and provide input to the project 
team on instrumentation and observatory constraints. If you are 
interested please contact either of the co-leads, James (Gerbs) Bauer 
(JPL – [email protected]) or Stefanie Milam (NASA/GSFC – 
[email protected]) by December 30, 2016.

 

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THE EXOCLIPSE CONFERENCE – EXPLORING NEW WORLDS IN THE SHADE

2017 Aug 20-24

http://physics.boisestate.edu/exoclipse 

 

Exoclipse is an exoplanet conference with focus on microlensing, direct, RV,

and transit detection and characterization of exoplanets. Hosted by Boise State

University, the conference spans five days and includes a trip to view the total

solar eclipse. Friends and family are welcome. 

 

SCIENTIFIC ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: Charles Beichman (California

Institute of Technology), David Bennett (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center),

Beth Biller (University of Edinburgh), Sarah Dodson-Robinson (University of

Delaware), Hannah Jang-Condell (University of Wyoming), Bruce Macintosh

(Stanford University), Stan Metchev (University of Western Ontario), & Aki

Roberge (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center) 

 

LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: Christine Chang (Boise State University),

Brian Jackson (Boise State University), Daryl Macomb (Boise State University),

Christian Marois (NRC-Herzberg), Angelle Tanner (Mississippi State University),

& Tiffany Watkins (Boise State University)

 

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AGU-JPGU JOINT MEETING MAY 20-25, 2017

The first joint meeting of the Japan Geosciences Union and the American 

Geophysical Union will be held from May 20-25, 2017 in Makuhari Messe, 

Greater Tokyo area, Japan: http://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2017/

The meeting will cover frontier research in all areas of Space and Planetary 

Science, Solid Earth, Atmosphere and Hydrosphere Science, Biogeoscience, 

and Human Geoscience.  The list of scientific sessions and their schedule is 

now available at: http://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2017/session_list/ and 

http://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2017/downloads/program_schedule_E_1117.pdf

 

Abstract submission will be open from Jan. 6-Feb. 16, 2017.

 

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4*P COMA MORPHOLOGY CAMPAIGN

As you may know three comets (41P/Tuttle-Giacobini-Kresak and 
45P/Honda-Mrkos-Pajdusakova in early 2017, and 46P/Wirtanen
in late 2018) will have close approaches (0.08-0.15 AU) to Earth. 
Three close approaches in two years is a relatively rare occurrence.

Similar to the Comet ISON Coma Morphology Campaign, we are
organizing this 4*P Coma Morphology Campaign and are requesting
the participation of both professional and amateur astronomers.
The goal is to achieve science facilitated by a multi-longitudinal
observing campaign. 

Please look at:

http://www.psi.edu/41P45P46P for more 

information related to the campaign.

Thank You.
Sincerely,
Nalin Samarasinha, Beatrice Mueller, Matthew Knight, Tony Farnham, 
and Walt Harris

 

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NEXT EGU CONFRENCE

 

Dear colleagues,

The next EGU conference will be held in Vienna on 23-28 April 2017.

Abstracts to this session can be submitted at the EGU website:

http://egu2017.eu/home.html

 

Abstract submission deadline : January 11, 2017

 

We would like to invite you to submit an abstract to the  Session:

 

PS3.1
Outer planets, icy satellites and rings

 

Conveners: Athena Coustenis, Glenn Orton, Linda Spilker, Sushil K. Atreya, 

Christina Plainaki, Jean-Pierre Lebreton, Nicolas Altobelli 

 

 

Session details are described and abstract submission is possible at:

 

http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2017/abstractsubmission/23170

 

Please also consider submitting abstracts in the session 

 

 

PS3.2

Initial Results from Juno’s Exploration of Jupiter and the Earth-based 

Collaborative Campaign

 

Convener: Scott Bolton; Co-Conveners: Paul Hartogh, Tristan Guillot, 

Glenn Orton, John Connerney, Jean-Claude Gérard 

 

http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2017/abstractsubmission/24838

 

Looking forward to seeing you in Vienna,

With best regards,
the conveners

Session descriptions:
 

PS3.1
Outer planets, icy satellites and rings

 

This session welcomes papers about the outer planets and Pluto systems, 

including their satellites with atmospheres or not, with special emphasis 

on observations (both from space and from the ground), modelling, and 

theoretical interpretation. Abstracts on satellite interactions with their

neutral environments, and ring systems are also welcome. Supporting 

laboratory investigations and concepts for future spacecraft missions and

investigations are also relevant to this session.

 

PS3.2 
Initial Results from Juno’s Exploration of Jupiter and the Earth-based 

Collaborative Campaign

 

NASA’s Juno mission to Jupiter launched in 2011 and arrived at Jupiter 

on July 4, 2016. Juno’s scientific objectives include the study of Jupiter’s 

interior, atmosphere and magnetosphere with the goal of understanding 

Jupiter’s origin, formation and evolution. An extensive campaign of Earth 

based observations of Jupiter and the solar wind were orchestrated to 

complement Juno measurements during Juno’s approach to Jupiter and 

during its orbital mission around Jupiter. This session provides results 

from the Juno measurements and the collaborative campaign during the 

early phases of Juno’s prime mission. Scientific results include Jupiter’s 

interior structure, magnetic field, deep atmospheric dynamics and 

composition, and the first in-situ exploration of Jupiter’s polar 

magnetosphere and aurorae.

 

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JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

  1.  

Earth and Planetary Sciences Department

Johns Hopkins University

 

content/postdoctoral-positions-planetary-physics

 

Deadline  February 15, 2017

 

  1.  

Astrophysics/Space Science
JPL/Caltech Postdoctoral Program 

 

Date Posted: 12/01/2016
Application Deadline: 01/23/2017
Research Opportunity: 0000712

 

This ad is posted at: http://postdoc.jpl.nasa.gov/researchapplicants/jobpostings/index.cfm?FuseAction=ShowJobPosting&JobPostingID=712

 

  •  

The California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Postdoctoral Scholars 

Program at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) invites applications for a 

postdoctoral research position with the Exoplanet and Comparative Planetary 

Sciences team, and working with scientists in both the JPL Astrophysics & 

Space Science and Planetary Science Sections. The goal of this initiative at 

JPL and Caltech is to build on the existing experience and expertise on 

astrophysics and planetary science, to develop deeper connections across 

these fields to improve our ability to discover, characterize, and understand 

exoplanets in their broader context. Therefore, we are seeking a postdoctoral 

scholar who will contribute to this endeavor. 

JPL provides a collaborative and interdisciplinary environment for researchers 

with interests spanning exoplanetary science, astronomy, planetary and earth 

sciences, and the associated technologies that enable this work, as well as many 

opportunities for collaboration with researchers at the Caltech campus. Between 

Astrophysics and Planetary Science, there are more than one hundred active 

Scientists at JPL, working on many projects, instruments, and missions, and 

creating diverse opportunities for interactions and collaborations. JPL also hosts 

the NASA Exoplanet Exploration Program (ExEP) Office, whose co-location 

provides many additional opportunities for interactions with the broader community 

of exoplanetary science. 

The successful candidate will be expected to lead and publish research in any

area related to exoplanetary science (theoretical, observational, or instrumental), 

to interact and work with scientists at JPL and Caltech, and to assist in coordinating

collaborative or community efforts across JPL and Caltech. Strong preference 

will be given to candidates who demonstrate willingness and potential to look 

to the future of the field, and who can articulate their vision. Candidates should 

have a recent PhD in astronomy, astrophysics, physics, planetary science or 

related fields. Candidates who have received their PhD within the past five 

years since the date of their application are eligible. The successful applicant 

will have a specific sponsor appointed as a mentor at JPL. 

The annual starting salary will be commensurate with the established Caltech 

postdoctoral rates at JPL, which can vary somewhat according to the selected 

applicant’s qualifications. The appointee will also receive health insurance and 

additional resources for research-related expenses and will have access to local 

facilities, including Palomar Observatory and the JPL Supercomputing Facility. 

Postdoctoral Scholar positions are awarded for a minimum of one-year period 

and may be renewed up to a maximum of three years. 

A complete application will consist of 1) a cover letter describing the particular 

interest in the opportunity, and the specific connections and potential collaborations 

that are envisioned, 2) a CV that includes contact information, a bibliography 

which clearly shows the refereed publications, and contact information for 

three reference letter writers, and 3) a statement describing current and 

proposed research. For this last item, the applicant may choose to separate 

 

the current and proposed statements, or to have them written as one unit; 

and there is no specific page limit, though 3-4 pages is a general guideline. 

For full consideration, please submit these by January 23, 2017. 

Information about science at JPL can be found at https://science.jpl.nasa.gov

and specifically for the Exoplanetary Initiative at https://exoplanetary.jpl.nasa.gov.

For more information, please contact the JPL Postdoc Office at 

[email protected], and they can direct questions as appropriate. 

Caltech and JPL are equal opportunity/affirmative action employers. 

Women, minorities, veterans, and disabled persons are encouraged to apply. 

———————————+

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 Chair

I would like to echo the statement sent by AAS President Christine Jones on behalf of the AAS council released on November 18 by copying it below.

 

As President of the American Astronomical Society, I wish to remind members and other stakeholders of the Society’s resolute commitment to promote inclusiveness. In keeping with the AAS Council’s recent adoption of a comprehensive code of ethics, it is the responsibility of each of us to treat every member of our Society — and every member of society more generally — with respect and dignity, regardless of race, ethnicity, skin color, national origin, age, disability, religion, faith, gender identity, gender expression, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, or political opinions. I expressed similar sentiments in my last President’s Column, but they bear repeating in the aftermath of a polarizing national election that has been followed by a growing number of cruel incidents.

We must all be committed to ensuring an astronomy community that is safe and welcoming for all people, especially those who are currently underrepresented in our science and/or marginalized by society at large. I urge all AAS members to be mindful of how we treat each other and to support students and colleagues, especially those who may now feel threatened or frightened by recently reported acts of harassment, intimidation, and violence against people of color, women of all backgrounds, immigrants of all statuses, Jews, Muslims, people with disabilities, LGBTQIA+ persons, and those at the intersections of these axes. I am especially troubled by hateful acts occurring on the campuses of educational institutions.

Finally, as our colleagues in the American Geophysical Union (AGU) frequently point out, science plays a central role in America’s security, economy, and well-being. Let’s do our part to ensure that science continues to make our country more secure, more prosperous, and more comfortable — for everyone.

— President Christine Jones for the AAS Council 

 

I think we can do two things: reach out to our colleagues who may feel threatened or unsafe and offer them our support and empathy. And continue to pursue our scientific endeavors for the benefit of everyone in the world.

–Lucy McFadden, DPS Chair

Newsletter 16-45

Issue 16-45, November 20, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR
  2. RENEW YOUR AAS/DPS MEMBERSHIP TODAY
  3. DEADLINE EXTENDED: ICES IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM WORKSHOP
  4. CALL FOR PAPERS: PLANETARY SPACE SCIENCE SPECIAL ISSUE
  5. TRICK OR TREAT AND TELESCOPES
  6. OPAG MEETING AGENDA
  7. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

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MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR

 

I would like to echo the statement sent by AAS President Christine Jones on 

behalf of the AAS council released on November 18

http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?m=1118606474481&ca=c2298562-5fa8-4731-b180-81b979b29038 

by copying it below.

 

As President of the American Astronomical Society, I wish to remind members 

and other stakeholders of the Society’s resolute commitment to promote inclusiveness. 

In keeping with the AAS Council’s recent adoption of a comprehensive code of ethics

it is the responsibility of each of us to treat every member of our Society — and every 

member of society more generally — with respect and dignity, regardless of race, 

ethnicity, skin color, national origin, age, disability, religion, faith, gender identity, 

gender expression, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, or political opinions. 

I expressed similar sentiments in my last President’s Column, but they bear repeating 

in the aftermath of a polarizing national election that has been followed by a growing 

number of cruel incidents.

 

We must all be committed to ensuring an astronomy community that is safe and 

welcoming for all people, especially those who are currently underrepresented in 

our science and/or marginalized by society at large. I urge all AAS members to be 

mindful of how we treat each other and to support students and colleagues, especially 

those who may now feel threatened or frightened by recently reported acts of harassment, 

intimidation, and violence against people of color, women of all backgrounds, 

immigrants of all statuses, Jews, Muslims, people with disabilities, LGBTQIA+ 

persons, and those at the intersections of these axes. I am especially troubled by 

hateful acts occurring on the campuses of educational institutions.

 

Finally, as our colleagues in the American Geophysical Union (AGU) frequently 

point out, science plays a central role in America’s security, economy, and well-being. 

Let’s do our part to ensure that science continues to make our country more secure, 

more prosperous, and more comfortable — for everyone.

 

— President Christine Jones for the AAS Council 

 

I think we can do two things: reach out to our colleagues who may feel threatened 

or unsafe and offer them our support and empathy. And continue to pursue our 

scientific endeavors for the benefit of everyone in the world.

 

–Lucy McFadden, DPS Chair

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

RENEW YOUR AAS/DPS MEMBERSHIP TODAY
 

AAS emailed members in early September announcing the start of membership 

renewal season, and many took notice. Online renewals are arriving at a steady

pace. If you have already paid your dues, thanks for your continued support.

 

To help reduce costs and the Society’s carbon footprint, we encourage you to

renew online today for fast, easy self-service. Simply log in to pay your dues,

to confirm or update your journal subscriptions and Division memberships, 

and to lock in savings for 2017 by renewing for two years at the current rate. 

(Note: That last option isn’t available to junior members, who instead get two

years for the price of one — currently $81 —when first joining the Society, 

then renew annually thereafter.)

 

Renew before 31 December to maintain your benefits and receive additional 

savings: the AAS will extend a one-time 15% discount off your portion of the 

author charges for one paper published in the Astronomical Journal, the 

Astrophysical Journal, ApJ Letters, or ApJ Supplement. Eligible members 

can double their savings: if you renew by 31 December for two years, you will 

receive the 15% author discount on one paper each in 2017 and 2018.

The Society has much planned for 2017 — including the 229th meeting of the 

AAS in Grapevine, TX in January — so you won’t want to miss out on the latest 

science, member communications, and career and networking opportunities. 

Supporting the AAS is supporting your discipline. Renew today!

 

If you have any questions about your dues or benefits, or need assistance 

when logging in, please contact the membership team by email at 

[email protected] or by phone at 202-328-2010. Thank you!

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

DEADLINE EXTENDED: ICES IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM WORKSHOP

 

The abstract submission deadline for the Ices in the Solar System Workshop 

has been extended to Wednesday, November 23rd, 23:59 CET, to accommodate 

the exceptional interest of the community for this event.

 

http://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/ices-in-the-solar-system

 

This workshop will focus on experimental and mission data relevant for the 

past and future exploration of volatile rich bodies in the Solar System.The 

pre-registration has shown a strong interest in this topic with over one hundred 

participants expected. The topics covered by this workshop will include: 

 

  • Experimental research and associated modeling (preparation of ice analogs 

and experimental weathering in the lab, analysis and modeling techniques to 

infer optical, thermal, mechanical, electrical, thermodynamical, structural and 

compositional properties.

·       Mission data revealing ices and their properties, composition, geological 

context and history in the Outer Solar System  (Rings, icy moons, KBOs 

and Kuiper Belt), Asteroid Belt, Mars (polar caps, ground ice) or well 

within the snow line (Mercury, Moon).

·       The astrobiological potential of ices and their role and transport during 

the Solar System evolution- including the connection to the interstellar 

medium, proto-solar nebulae, icy giants and planetesimals formation. 

 

The LOC for the Ices in the Solar System Workshop

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

CALL FOR PAPERS: PLANETARY SPACE SCIENCE SPECIAL ISSUE

 

“Atmospheres, Magnetospheres and Surfaces of the outer planets, their satellites 

and ring systems: Part XII”

 

Following up on our previous 11 special issues for PSS on this subject, we invite 

colleagues who have recently given a presentation concerning outer planets and 

their systems at one of the 2015-2016 Planetary meetings (EGU, DPS-EPSC, 

AOGS, AGU, JpGU, EWASS, EANA, etc) to submit a paper in a new special 

issue of Planetary and Space Science on the subject of the sessions regarding 

the Atmospheres, Magnetospheres and Surfaces of the outer planets, their 

satellites and ring systems.

 

All papers presented in these meetings (solicited, contributed oral and posters) 

and concerning results on the outer planets and their systems, as well as 

laboratory or modelling work for the analysis of such data, are welcome to an 

article in this PSS issue.

 

This special issue will include also solicited reviews on the progress in the 

research concerning outer planets systems in the past years (likely themes could 

include the giant planets, the icy moons, the rings, etc)… This issue will cover 

also some of the recent discoveries from space missions like Cassini-Huygens 

and Juno. We would also welcome papers from the New Horizons mission to 

Pluto and its system.

 

The deadline for submission of the manuscripts for this issue will be end of 

April 2017. Please forward this message to other colleagues who may be 

interested and kindly send us an indication of interest for submitting a

manuscript as soon as possible and in any case before mid-December 2016.

 

We do not have a specific page limitation. Submitted manuscripts should be 

written in good, grammatical English. Care should be taken to ensure that the 

wording is matter of fact and not superfluous. The text should be long enough 

to deal with the subject in a scientific manner, and this varies depending on 

the subject being handled. Authors are invited to submit their paper in the 

appropriate PSS electronic format to the Journal’s web site using the guidelines 

for the authors. The usual refereeing process is applied for publication in PSS. 

The issue is now open for submissions.

 

Instructions for submission:

The submission website for this journal is located at: 

https://www.evise.com/evise/faces/pages/homepage/homepage.jspx?_adf.ctrl-state=nnbgqauhm_70

To ensure that all manuscripts are correctly identified please select the name of 

the special issue when you upload your manuscripts: SI:Outer Planets XII

 

Looking forward to your manuscripts and indications of interest,

 

The Guest Editors

 

– Athena Coustenis ([email protected])

– Sushil Atreya ([email protected])

– Julie Castillo ([email protected])

– Ingo Müller-Wodarg ([email protected])

– Linda Spilker ([email protected])

– Giovanni Strazzulla ([email protected])

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

TRICK OR TREAT AND TELESCOPES

 

If you have any  anecdotes from, pictures of, or numbers of people attending 

our first “Trick-or-Treat and Telescopes” evening, please send them to 

[email protected].

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

OPAG FEBRUARY MEETING AGENDA

 

Dear OPAG community,

 

The next OPAG meeting will be 22-23 February 2016, at the Georgian Terrace 

in Atlanta (http://www.thegeorgianterrace.com/), hosted by Georgia Tech.

 

Below is a draft list of agenda items, with requests for inputs in a few areas.

 

— Alfred McEwen, OPAG chair

 

—————————————————————————–

Welcome — Alfred McEwen

PSD update — Jim Green

Outer Planets update — Curt Niebur

Europa Lander SDT results and discussion — SDT chairs (Kevin Hand, 

   Alison Murray, Jim Garvin)

Europa Clipper updates — Bob Pappalardo

Europa-Enceladus plumes workshop summary — from one of the 

   conveners (Carly Howett, John Spencer, Matt Hedman)

Cassini update — Linda Spilker

Juno update — Scott Bolton

Ice Giant SDT results — Amy Simon and Mark Hofstadter

Roadmaps to Ocean Worlds study — Amanda Hendrix and Terry Hurford, maybe others

New Frontiers mission concepts to outer planets — 

  (email [email protected] if you are interested in presenting)

Summary from Nat. Academy Searching for Life workshop — TBD  (Jim Kasting?)

Update of Nat. Academy R&A study?  

LUVOIR study — Britney Schmidt

Participating Scientist study — Louis Prockter

2-minute presentations of science nuggets (send to [email protected])

Technology posters and 2-minute oral summaries

Discussion of draft findings — Alfred McEwen

 

Special Wed night public talk on Cassini — Linda Spilker

 

7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

  1.  
  2.  

 

content/b612-postdoctoral-fellow-computational-astrodynamics

 

B612 is hiring a Postdoctoral Fellow to work on orbital dynamics 

problems related to Planetary Defense from asteroid impacts on Earth. 

The fellow is expected to conduct original research in collaboration with 

B612 and University of Washington researchers.  Areas of research could 

include asteroid deflection scenarios and mission planning, the evolution 

of  individual asteroid impact probabilities, implications of near term asteroid 

discovery improvements on the catalog of known asteroid risks and the 

distribution of asteroid deflection cases, as well as other topics in Planetary 

Defense.  The applicant is expected to be based in either Silicon Valley or 

Seattle.  The position will collaborate closely with University of Washington 

faculty and members of the LSST team.

 

  1. ALMA AMBASSADORS PROGRAM

    https://science.nrao.edu/facilities/alma/community1/facilities/alma/ambassadors-program

 

The ALMA Ambassadors Postdoctoral Program provides training and 

a $10,000 research grant to postdoctoral researchers interested in expanding 

their ALMA/interferometry expertise and sharing that knowledge with their 

home institutions through the organization of ALMA Cycle 5 proposal writing 

workshops. The NAASC will sponsor a group of selected postdocs to travel to 

NAASC headquarters in Charlottesville, Virginia for 3 days in February 2017 

to receive in depth training in topics related to ALMA proposal writing (including 

interferometry basics, ALMA science capabilities, recent ALMA headlines, and 

use of the Observing Tool) as well as guidance with speaking on these topics. 

The postdocs will then return to their home institutions to host a local day-long 

proposal writing workshop (similar to an abbreviated version of Community Day 

and NRAO Live! events from previous observing cycles) in Feb/March 2017 in 

advance of the Cycle 5 ALMA proposal deadline in April.

 

All talk materials, supplies, and infrastructure for the workshops are provided 

by the NAASC. A $10,000 monetary grant is offered in support of the selected 

postdocs’ independent research programs. Postdocs with some radio or sub-mm 

interferometry experience are preferred. Postdocs must be based at a US institution. 

Although not required, we will consider multiple postdoctoral applicants from 

the same institution.

 

Deadline to apply is December 15th. To apply please send a CV and a cover letter 

explaining: (i) your interest in the program, (ii) your experience with interferometry, 

(iii) any experience you have giving talks, and (iv) your availability to attend a 

training workshop in Charlottesville in February 2017 to Sabrina Stierwalt 

([email protected]).

 

  1.  

 

https://cw.na1.hgncloud.com/nrao/loadJobPostingDetails.do?jobPostingID=103280&source=joblist

 

Deadline December 30, 2016

 

———————————+

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 16-44

Issue 16-44, November 13, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. RENEW YOUR AAS/DPS MEMBERSHIP TODAY
  2. CHRONOLOGY OF THE FORMATION OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM SCHOOL
  3. PLANNING YOUR SOLAR SYSTEM OBSERVATIONS WITH JWST
  4. EARLY CAREER TRAVEL SUPPORT FOR SBAG 16 MEETING
  5. 2016 PIERAZZO INTERNATIONAL STUDENT TRAVEL AWARD
  6. MARS EXPLORATION SCIENCE MONTHLY NEWSLETTER FOR NOVEMBER 2016
  7. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

RENEW YOUR AAS/DPS MEMBERSHIP TODAY
 

AAS emailed members in early September announcing the start of membership 

renewal season, and many took notice. Online renewals are arriving at a steady

pace. If you have already paid your dues, thanks for your continued support.

 

To help reduce costs and the Society’s carbon footprint, we encourage you to

renew online today for fast, easy self-service. Simply log in to pay your dues,

to confirm or update your journal subscriptions and Division memberships, 

and to lock in savings for 2017 by renewing for two years at the current rate. 

(Note: That last option isn’t available to junior members, who instead get two

years for the price of one — currently $81 —when first joining the Society, 

then renew annually thereafter.)

 

Renew before 31 December to maintain your benefits and receive additional 

savings: the AAS will extend a one-time 15% discount off your portion of the 

author charges for one paper published in the Astronomical Journal, the 

Astrophysical Journal, ApJ Letters, or ApJ Supplement. Eligible members 

can double their savings: if you renew by 31 December for two years, you will 

receive the 15% author discount on one paper each in 2017 and 2018.

The Society has much planned for 2017 — including the 229th meeting of the 

AAS in Grapevine, TX in January — so you won’t want to miss out on the latest 

science, member communications, and career and networking opportunities. 

Supporting the AAS is supporting your discipline. Renew today!

 

If you have any questions about your dues or benefits, or need assistance 

when logging in, please contact the membership team by email at 

[email protected] or by phone at 202-328-2010. Thank you!

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

CHRONOLOGY OF THE FORMATION OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM SCHOOL

 

A new, one week school on the Chronology of the formation of the

Solar System is organized from Feb 12 to 17, 2017, at the conference

center in Les Houches (France) on the specific subject of the interactions

between the outer solar system and the interstellar medium.
https://www-n.oca.eu/crida/SchoolChronoVI/CFSSVI.html 

 

The goal of this school is to review our current knowledge on the formation

of stars and protoplanetary disks, as well as of planetesimals and planets in

these disks. The  focus will be on the heritage of chemical and structural

properties from the parent interstellar medium, with an emphasis on the most

recent results. This is an interdisciplinary school, at the frontier between

planetary science, chemistry of interstellar medium and cosmochemistry.

 

The school is open to Ph.D. students and researchers who wish to broaden

their knowledge in an interdisciplinary spirit. The lectures will be accessible

to non specialists, but a background in planetary science or astrophysics is

required. The lectures can be grouped in three categories:

(a) chemistry and mineralogy of grains in the interstellar medium,

(b) evolution of molecular clouds and protoplanetary disks,

(c) constraints from observations of molecular clouds, disks and solar system

     objects.

The list of lectures and lecturers can be found here:
https://www-n.oca.eu/crida/SchoolChronoVI/ChronoVI_Program.html
All lectures will be in English. 

 

The lectures will take place each morning from 8h30 to 12h30 and from

16h30 to 19h00. The free time till the afternoon session will be used for

informal exchanges among the participants and with the lecturers. Seminars

from the participants are possible in the evenings. The participants will

arrive in the afternoon of Sunday (Feb 12), and the school will end at 12h30

on Friday (Feb 17). The total time of lectures will be 27,5 hours. 

 

The number of participants is limited to 70 (including the lecturers). If you

are interested in this school, please refer to the practical informations displayed

on: https://www-n.oca.eu/crida/SchoolChronoVI/PracticalChronoVI.html

about (pre)registration.  

 

Hoping to see you numerous in Les Houches next winter 

 

Aurelien Crida, Karine Demyk, Guy Libourel, Alessandro Morbidelli

& the whole S.O.C.

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

PLANNING YOUR SOLAR SYSTEM OBSERVATIONS WITH JWST

At the 2016 DPS meeting in Pasadena, Drs. Stefanie Milam (GSFC) and  

John Stansberry (STScI) presented a “JWST Early Release Science (ERS) 

and Proposal Workshop” as well as a JWST Townhall event.   A webcast

of the workshop, as well as all of the presentations, are now available on line at

https://webcast.stsci.edu/webcast/detail.xhtml?talkid=5248&parent=1

In addition to details about the specific ERS call, the packages include detailed 

description of JWST’s moving target capability as well as expected 

instrumental performances.  If you have any questions on any of the presented 

materials, the ERS program, or JWST observations, please feel free to contact 

Stefanie Milam (Stefanie.n.milam  nasa.gov).

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

EARLY CAREER TRAVEL SUPPORT FOR SBAG 16 MEETING

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

support for early career scientists to participate in the Small Bodies Assessment

Group (SBAG) 16 meeting, to be held at the University of Arizona on 

January 11-13, 2017.  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) November 25, 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 16 meeting.

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

2016 PIERAZZO INTERNATIONAL STUDENT TRAVEL AWARD

Application deadline: 9 PM PST, November 30, 2016

Awards will be announced on or before December 9, 2016

This award is established by the Planetary Science Institute in memory 
of Senior Scientist Betty Pierazzo to support and encourage graduate 
students to build international collaborations and relationships in 
planetary science. Two awards will be made each year, contingent upon 
there being meritorious applications. One will be awarded to a graduate 
student working on his or her Ph.D. at an institution within the U.S. 
This is to support travel to a planetary science related meeting 
(conferences and workshops) outside of the U.S. The second award will 
be to a graduate student working on his or her Ph.D. at an institution 
outside of the U.S. This is to support travel to a planetary science 
related meeting within the U.S. These include general meetings that 
have planetary-focused sessions such as the AGU, GSA, EGU and IAG.

The award will consist of a certificate and up to $2000US.

Additional information and application materials are available at:
http://www.psi.edu/pista

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

MARS EXPLORATION SCIENCE MONTHLY NEWSLETTER FOR NOVEMBER 2016

Please find the November 2016 edition of the Mars Exploration Science 
Monthly Newsletter at:

http://mepag.jpl.nasa.gov

This contains a new announcement and recently released information for 
upcoming calendar events.

 

7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

  1.  

POSITION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLORIDA 

 

The Department of Physics (physics.cos.ucf.edu) at the University of 

Central Florida (UCF) and the Florida Space Institute (FSI) invite 

applications for a post-doctoral position as part of the Center for Lunar 

and Asteroid Surface Science (CLASS) of the NASA Solar System 

Exploration Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI). We seek candidates 

with interests in exploration-related planetary science including, but not 

limited to, primitive asteroid mineralogy, regolith processes, and in-situ 

resource utilization. Applicants must have a Ph.D. at the time of 

appointment in Geological Sciences, Planetary Sciences, or a closely 

related discipline. The successful applicant is expected to be involved 

in CLASS projects related to the physical properties of asteroidal 

materials, development of asteroid regolith simulants, and asteroid 

regolith processes.  Interested individuals should provide include a 

cover letter, curriculum vitae, summary of research, and a list of three 

professional references with contact information to 

Dr. Daniel Britt ([email protected]). 
Screening of applications will continue until the position is filled.

 

B) ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PLANETARY SCIENCE – CU BOULDER

The Department of Astrophysical & Planetary Sciences invites 
applications for a tenure-track Assistant Professor position to begin 
August 2017. The search is open to all areas of planetary science. 
Areas of interest to the APS department include giant planets, 
planetary magnetospheres, icy bodies and the distant outer solar 
system, ocean worlds, observations of small bodies, the origin and 
dynamics of the solar system, comparative planetology, planetary 
evolution, and remote sensing. This position requires a commitment 
to teaching in our undergraduate and graduate programs and the ability 
to develop and conduct an independent research program. Applicants 
should hold a PhD and have research and teaching experience 
commensurate with the appointment level. Review of applications 
will begin December 1.

For more information on our department, see:

http://www.colorado.edu/aps/

For more information on the job and application process see:

https://www.cu.edu/cu-careers

and specifically job #06668.

 

C) UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE, KNOXVILLE

     FACULTY POSITION IN PLANETARY

     MINERALOGY/PETROLOGY/GEOCHEMISTRY 

 

The Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences at The University of Tennessee 

seeks to fill a faculty position in mineralogy/ petrology/geochemistry with emphasis

in planetary geoscience at the rank of Assistant Professor.  The position begins 

August 1, 2017.  The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, is a Research I University 

and the flagship campus of the UT system.  The Department (http://eps.utk.edu

focuses on geology and has an active emphasis on planetary research, including the 

study of terrestrial analogs, through its Planetary Geosciences Institute 

(http://web.utk.edu/~pgi).  Requirements for the position are:  Ph.D. in geology or a 

related field, and demonstrated research experience in planetary/terrestrial geoscience. 

 

The successful candidate is expected to conduct a robust, funded program of 

planetary/terrestrial research, mentor graduate students, effectively teach courses in 

mineralogy and/or petrology at the undergraduate and graduate levels, and collaborate 

in department research dealing with mineralogy, petrology, geochemistry, and solar 

system exploration.  Salary and benefits are competitive and commensurate with 

experience.  The Knoxville campus of the University of Tennessee is seeking candidates 

who have the ability to contribute in meaningful ways to the diversity and intercultural 

goals of the University. 

 

To apply, please email the following to [email protected], with the subject line 

“Planetary faculty application”: C.V., cover letter describing research and teaching 

experience and plans, and names of 4 references with contact information.  Applications 

received by November 15, 2016, are ensured review, but earlier submission is encouraged.

The position will remain open until filled.  Questions about the position should be 

directed to J. Moersch. 

 

The University of Tennessee is an EEO/AA/Title VI/Section 504/ADA/ADEA 

institution in the provision of its education and employment programs and services. 

All qualified applicants will receive equal consideration for employment without 

regard to race, color, national origin, religion, sex, pregnancy, marital status, sexual 

orientation, gender identity, age, physical or mental disability, or covered veteran status.

 

———————————+

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 16-43

Issue 16-43, November 6, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. IN MEMORIAM: MARK ALLEN (1949-2016)
  2. 2017 AMERICAN ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY DIVISION OF DYNAMICAL ASTRONOMY MEETING (AAS-DDA)
  3. ACCRETION, DIFFERENTIATION AND EARLY EVOLUTION OF THE TERRESTRIAL PLANETS
  4. MOVIE OF JUNO’S APPROACH TO JUPITER
  5. NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE DIVISION SEEKING REVIEWERS FOR C.23 SMALLSAT STUDIES
  6. FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT OF ASTROBIOLOGY 2017
  7. ANNOUNCING FEBRUARY OPAG MEETING DATES
  8. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

IN MEMORIAM: MARK ALLEN (1949-2016)
 

Mark Allen, 67, died on October 22 of complications from ALS (Lou Gehrig’s 

Disease). Mark was born in New York City on September 29, 1949, graduated 

Summa Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Columbia College of Columbia 

University in New York City and received his PhD from Caltech, both in 

chemistry. He spent nearly all of his 37-year career at Caltech and JPL, where 

he was a principal scientist, developing chemical models to study the atmospheres 

of the earth, planets, comets, interstellar space, and exoplanets. Working with 

his then postdoctoral advisor Prof. Yuk Yung of Caltech,  Mark was the principal 

architect, builder, and keeper of the comprehensive chemical code KINETICS 

which has become of the best-known models for simulating chemical processes 

in planetary atmospheres.  Mark was a team member of the NASA Astrobiology 

Institute (NAI) Virtual Planet Lab, Principal Investigator for the “Titan as a 

Prebiotic System” node of the NAI, and was involved in a number of NASA and 

ESA missions and mission concepts. He is survived by his wife of 34 years, 

Emily Bergman; children Boh Allen, Philip Allen, and daughter-in-law, Andrea 

Allen; mother Lucille Allen; and sister, Barbara Peterson. His research continues 

in the work of his colleagues and former graduate students and postdocs. 

Donations in his memory may be made to Columbia College at Columbia 

University, or the California Institute of Technology.

 

Jonathan Lunine, Yuk Yung, Julianne Moses, Bonnie Buratti, and Glenn Orton

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

2017 AMERICAN ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY

DIVISION OF DYNAMICAL ASTRONOMY MEETING (AAS-DDA)

 

Sunday June 11 – Thursday June 15, 2017 at

Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom. 

 

The annual DDA Meeting brings together researchers in astronomy,

astrophysics, planetary science, and astrodynamics for discussions and

talks on all aspects of dynamics in the space sciences. Prof. Rosemary

F. G. Wyse (FRAS) will be honoured at the 2017 meeting with the AAS-DDA

Brouwer Award.  The DDA meeting features invited talks on a range of topics,

contributed talks (with no parallel sessions), and posters that can be displayed

throughout the entire conference.  The 2017 DDA meeting is being co-sponsored

by the Royal Astronomical Society. 

 

We hope to see you in London next June. 

 

Additional details can be found on the conference web site:

https://dda.aas.org/meetings/2017 

 

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ACCRETION, DIFFERENTIATION AND EARLY EVOLUTION OF THE 

TERRESTRIAL PLANETS 

 

Dear Colleagues,

 

We have great pleasure in announcing an international interdisciplinary workshop on

« Accretion, Differentiation, and Early Evolution of the Terrestrial Planets » 

(Nice, May 29 to June 3, 2017).

 

This workshop will be a follow up to the one that we organized in Nice in May 2014. 

We expect around 120 participants, including a significant number of students and 

young scientists. The topics to be discussed include, but are not limited to:

 

1) Chemistry of small bodies in the early solar system and their relation to meteorites

2) Early dynamos in small bodies

3) Dynamical models of terrestrial planet formation and evolution of the Earth-Moon 

    angular momentum

4) Moon formation models 

5) Core-mantle differentiation

6) Delivery of volatile elements, including water

7) Nature and timing of the “late veneer”

8) Consequences of impacts 

9) Geodynamics in early terrestrial planets including the onset of the geodynamo, 

    mantle convection and plate tectonics. 

10) Geophysics of extra-solar Earths and super-Earths

 

The workshop will be held at Le Saint Paul Hotel which is located on the sea front 

close to downtown Nice – see http://lesaintpaul-hotel.fr/. Participants will arrive on 

Monday May 29, 2014 and depart on Saturday June 3, so that scientific sessions (talks 

and posters) will be scheduled over a period of 4 days. The aim is, of course, to have 

lots of productive discussions!

 

Limited funding will be available from our ERC “ACCRETE” project 

(http://www.accrete.uni-bayreuth.de/) and from the Transregional Collaborative 

Research Center TRR 170 

(http://www.geo.fu-berlin.de/en/geol/fachrichtungen/geochemhydromin/geochemie/forschung/TRR-170-Late-Accretion/index.html ) which we will use mainly to provide support, when necessary,

for young scientists. 

 

We have invited a number of scientists who have made major contributions to a range 

of scientific disciplines within the overall theme of the workshop. The following have 

confirmed that they will attend: C. Alexander, H. Becker, M. Bizarro, J. Day, C. Dorn, 

L. Elkins-Tanton, L. Hallis, J. Hernlund, M. Hirschmann, T. Kruijer, S. Labrosse, S. Lock, 

S. Marchi, B. Marty, S. Mojzsis, S. Mukhopadhyay, M. Nakajima, F. Nimmo, 

J. O’Rourke, S. Raymond, J. Siebert, A.Shahar, P. Tackley, T. Gerya, N. Tosi, J. Wade, 

B. Weiss, B. Wood, H. Palme.

 

The total number of participants is limited to 120. Scientists who wish to attend the 

workshop (including invited speakers) should complete an application form 

(https://www-n.oca.eu/morby/Accrete.html ) and return it to [email protected] 

as soon as possible. Upon being accepted as a participant, a registration fee of 100 Euros 

must be paid in order to confirm registration.. 

 

Abstract deadline is 28th February 2017.

 

Accommodation is available at Le Saint Paul Hotel with rooms costing 115 euros/night 

(sea view) or 95 euros/night (garden view). Each room is a double room and they have 

40 rooms total (in the case of sharing, the cost per person is 50% of the above figures). 

Alternatively, participants can book accommodation in nearby hotels.

 

With best regards

 

Dave Rubie and Alessandro Morbidelli

 

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MOVIE OF JUNO’S APPROACH TO JUPITER

 

Below is a link to the YOUTUBE movie of Juno approaching Jupiter and the 

Galilean moons.  This movie shows for the first time, the Galilean satellites 

orbiting Jupiter, literally the motion of the spheres.  The unique set of images 

were captured by Juno in June 2016 on approach to Jupiter.  Images were taken 

about every 15 minutes for a couple of weeks and are minimally processed for 

this movie.  Galileo observed these moons to change position with respect to 

Jupiter over the course of a few nights. From this observation he realized that the 

moons were orbiting mighty Jupiter, a truth that forever changed humanity’s 

understanding of our place in the cosmos. Earth was not the center of the Universe. 

For the first time in history, we can look upon these moons as they orbit Jupiter 

and share in Galileo’s revelation. 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpsQimYhNkA

 

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NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE DIVISION SEEKING REVIEWERS FOR 

C.23 SMALLSAT STUDIES

 

The Planetary Science Division is seeking reviewers for ROSES-2016 program 

element C.23 Planetary Science Deep Space SmallSat Studies. Volunteers may 

sign up using the new form at

https://science.nasa.gov/researchers/volunteer-review-panels/roses-2016-c23-planetary-science-deep-space-smallsat-studies.

 

The landing page with links to all of our current volunteer forms may be found at: 

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

 

Questions regarding this program element may be directed to Carolyn Mercer at [email protected].

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT OF ASTROBIOLOGY 2017

November 26 – December 1, 2017
Coyhaique, Chile

http://www.astrobiology2017.org/

Astrobiology is an interdisciplinary subject at the frontier of
science. Current research in astrobiology draws researchers from the
fields of astronomy, space science, chemistry, biology, geology,
humanities, sociology and ethical issues.

Many astronomers in the subfields of star formation, solar system
studies, astrochemistry and others, tend to gather around
Astrobiology. Science goals of new generation telescopes such as ALMA,
SKA, TMT, GMT, E-ELT include search for prebiotic molecules, and
detection of bio-signatures in the ever growing sample of extrasolar
planets, many of which reside in the habitable zones. Even dedicated
flagship space missions have been commissioned, such as the wildly
successful Kepler mission, which alone has discovered about 2,000
extrasolar planets, or the soon to be launched TESS and CHEOPS
missions.

The IAU Commission F.3 (Astrobiology) will meet again in the beautiful
town, Coyhaique, Chile in November, 2017. This key meeting fosters
interdisciplinary collaborations for the advancement of Astrobiology,
welcoming researchers from disciplines as diverse as astrophysics,
biology, geology, humanities, and sociology, among others.

Those who are interested in Astrobiology 2017 are kindly requested to
keep your schedule!

Masatoshi Ohishi
Vice-President, IAU Commission F.3
SOC’s chairman

7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7

ANNOUNCING FEBRUARY OPAG MEETING DATES

Dear Colleagues,

 

The next OPAG meeting will be held February 22–23, 2017, at Georgia Tech in Atlanta.

 

Updates will be posted on the OPAG website at http://www.lpi.usra.edu/opag/.

 

8———8———8———8———8———8———6———8———8———8

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE, KNOXVILLE 

     FACULTY POSITION IN PLANETARY

     MINERALOGY/PETROLOGY/GEOCHEMISTRY

 

The Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences at The University of Tennessee 

seeks to fill a faculty position in mineralogy/ petrology/geochemistry with emphasis

in planetary geoscience at the rank of Assistant Professor.  The position begins 

August 1, 2017.  The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, is a Research I University 

and the flagship campus of the UT system.  The Department (http://eps.utk.edu

focuses on geology and has an active emphasis on planetary research, including the 

study of terrestrial analogs, through its Planetary Geosciences Institute 

(http://web.utk.edu/~pgi).  Requirements for the position are:  Ph.D. in geology or a 

related field, and demonstrated research experience in planetary/terrestrial geoscience. 

 

The successful candidate is expected to conduct a robust, funded program of 

planetary/terrestrial research, mentor graduate students, effectively teach courses in 

mineralogy and/or petrology at the undergraduate and graduate levels, and collaborate 

in department research dealing with mineralogy, petrology, geochemistry, and solar 

system exploration.  Salary and benefits are competitive and commensurate with 

experience.  The Knoxville campus of the University of Tennessee is seeking candidates 

who have the ability to contribute in meaningful ways to the diversity and intercultural 

goals of the University. 

 

To apply, please email the following to [email protected], with the subject line 

“Planetary faculty application”: C.V., cover letter describing research and teaching 

experience and plans, and names of 4 references with contact information.  Applications 

received by November 15, 2016, are ensured review, but earlier submission is encouraged.

The position will remain open until filled.  Questions about the position should be 

directed to J. Moersch. 

 

The University of Tennessee is an EEO/AA/Title VI/Section 504/ADA/ADEA 

institution in the provision of its education and employment programs and services.  

All qualified applicants will receive equal consideration for employment without 

regard to race, color, national origin, religion, sex, pregnancy, marital status, sexual 

orientation, gender identity, age, physical or mental disability, or covered veteran status.

 

B) THREE POSTDOCTORAL POSITIONS

     REACTION DYNAMICS GROUP

     DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY

     UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI’I AT MANOA

 

The Reaction Dynamics Group, Department of Chemistry, University of Hawai’i

at Manoa, invites applications for three postdoctoral positions. The appointment 

period is initially for one year, but can be renewed annually based on avail­a­b­ility 

of funds and satisfactory progress. The salary is competitive and commensurate 

with experience. Successful applicants should have a strong background in one or 

more of the following: experimental reaction dynamics, molecular beams, combustion 

chemistry, low temperature condensed phase, UHV tech­nology, pulsed laser systems, 

four wave mixing schemes, pulsed lasers, labview. 

1 Position: Reaction Dynamics & Combustion Chemistry (Gas Phase). The prime 

directive of the experiments is to investigate the formation of carbonaceous molecules 

(PAHs) in combustion systems exploiting crossed molecular beams along with mass

spectrometry and ion imaging (Hawaii) and a pyrolytic micro reactor (Advanced 

Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory). 

1 Position: Astrochemistry (Condensed Phase). The goal of these experiments is 

to probe the formation of complex organic molecules (COMs) in star forming regions 

via the interaction of ionizing radiation (charged particles; VUV) with ices exploiting 

a surface science machine along with reflectron time of flight mass spectrometry 

(Re-TOF); structural isomers are identified selectively by utilizing single photon 

tunable vacuum ultraviolet light generated by four wave mixing processes. 

1 Position: Planetary Sciences (Condensed Phase). The primary interest of these 

studies is to explore the formation and destruction of water on the Moon via 

interaction of the Solar Wind with silicates. 

Solid communication skills in English (written, oral), a publication record in 

internationally circulated, peer-reviewed journals, and willingness to work in a 

team are man­da­to­ry. Only self-motivated and energetic candidates are encouraged 

to apply. Please send a letter of interest, three letters of recommendation, CV, and 

publication list to Prof. Ralf I. Kaiser, De­partment of Chemistry, University of 

Hawai’i at Manoa, Honolulu, HI 96822-2275, USA 

[email protected] . Applicants must demonstrate 

their capability to prepare manuscripts for publications independently. The review 

of applications will start January 1, 2017, and continues until the position is filled. 

A description of our current research group can be found at 

http://www.chem.hawaii.edu/Bil301/welcome.html.

 

C) POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH SCHOLAR IN IMPACT CRATER 

     STUDIES ON SMALL SOLAR SYSTEM BODIES

 

The Department of Physics and Astronomy at Northern Arizona University is 

seeking a Post-doctoral Scholar to utilize spacecraft data available through the 

Planetary Data System to investigate the formation and/or modification of impact 

craters on small Solar System bodies (dwarf planets, moons, and/or asteroids). 

Minimum qualifications are an earned PhD in Planetary Science, Astronomy, 

or an appropriate related field conferred no earlier than August 31, 2013. 

Preferred qualifications include prior research experience analyzing impact 

craters and record of publication of in peer-reviewed literature.

 

This position has guaranteed funding for two years. Continued employment 

after that time period would depend on funding, satisfactory performance, and

department need. This is a full-time position located at the NAU campus in 

Flagstaff, AZ. Applications are being accepted until January 5, 2017. Apply 

through http://nau.edu/Human-Resources/Careers/Staff-Welcome-Page/, search 

on position number 602871, and then select “Apply” on that page. Please include 

a curriculum vita and statement of research interests. Only complete application

packets submitted through the NAU HR website will be reviewed. Candidates must 

be eligible and available to begin the Post-Doctoral Scholar appointment at NAU 

between July 1, 2017 and September 5, 2017. NAU is an AA/EO/MWDV Employer.

 

———————————+ 

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].

Mark Allen 1949-2016

Mark AllenMark Allen, 67, died on October 22 of complications from ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease). Mark was born in New York City on September 29, 1949, graduated Summa Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Columbia College of Columbia University in New York City and received his PhD from Caltech, both in chemistry. He spent nearly all of his 37-year career at Caltech and JPL, where he was a principal scientist, developing chemical models to study the atmospheres of the earth, planets, comets, interstellar space, and exoplanets. Working with his then postdoctoral advisor Prof. Yuk Yung of Caltech,  Mark was the principal architect, builder, and keeper of the comprehensive chemical code KINETICS which has become of the best-known models for simulating chemical processes in planetary atmospheres.  Mark was a team member of the NASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI) Virtual Planet Lab, Principal Investigator for the “Titan as a Prebiotic System” node of the NAI, and was involved in a number of NASA and ESA missions and mission concepts. He is survived by his wife of 34 years, Emily Bergman; children Boh Allen, Philip Allen, and daughter-in-law, Andrea Allen; mother Lucille Allen; and sister, Barbara Peterson. His research continues in the work of his colleagues and former graduate students and postdocs. Donations in his memory may be made to Columbia College at Columbia University, or the California Institute of Technology.

Jonathan Lunine, Yuk Yung, Julianne Moses, Bonnie Buratti, and Glenn Orton

Message from the Chair

Thank you Jason and greetings to my fellow DPS members. It is both a pleasure and an honor to serve as DPS chair for the coming year.

I want to thank Jason Barnes, Bonnie Buratti and the DPS committee for their volunteered time and commitment to the division. We welcome Cathy Olkin as Vice-Chair and Britney Schmidt and Catherine Neish as new Committee members. A special thanks to Bonnie Buratti for her just completed, 3- years’ service to our community.

I agreed to run for this position after researching the chair’s responsibilities, assessing my available time, consulting previous division chairs, and reflecting on my motives to serve. I can manage the responsibilities, have time to lead, as the Dawn mission, for which I’m a co-investigator, is in its last, extended-mission year. And my motivation for taking on this responsibility is to serve the DPS community because you are my academic family. I have grown personally and professionally with many of you for my entire career as a planetary scientist. I joined DPS as a graduate student in 1974, and have made career-long friends and colleagues. We’ve generated ideas for investigations, written proposals and then papers together, weathered proposal rejections and funding cuts, then celebrated the triumphs of successful NASA missions and participated in the transformation of knowledge that is now part of our world and civilization. When I come to meetings today, I see old friends and I continue to meet interesting, extremely intelligent, talented members who are carrying forward our charge to explore the solar system and other planetary systems and you want to make a difference in our world today.

In the coming year, the DPS committee and I will assess the community’s relationship with our publishers who make our scientific results available and I want to be sure they are accessible to everyone.

I will reinforce our professional community’s values treating each other with respect and care. Next year, we’ll host our annual meeting in Provo, UT and with AAS meeting organizers’ we are committed to hosting a meeting that is welcoming and safe for everyone. I ask you to embrace those values (respect and care) and to present and discuss your research, be open to critique of your results so that they are robust, critically reviewed, clearly presented and archived.

Our standing committees from who you’ve just heard will continue in the coming year with reviewed and renewed charges from the Committee.

Please encourage your colleagues and students to join the AAS and the DPS and enjoy the opportunities for professional growth that our division provides.

With that I want to open the meeting to questions.

Lucy McFadden
Pasadena, CA
October 19, 2016

 

Newsletter 16-42

Issue 16-42, October 23, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. IN MEMORIAM: EWEN WHITAKER (1922-2016)
  2. TRICK-OR-TREAT AND TELESCOPES
  3. PLANETARY SCIENCE VISION 2050 WORKSHOP
  4. SMALL SATELLITES FOR SPACE RESEARCH (COSPAR 2017)
  5. 42ND SCIENTIFIC ASSEMBLY OF THE COMMITTEE ON SPACE RESEARCH (COSPAR 2018)
  6. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

IN MEMORIAM: EWEN WHITAKER (1922-2016)

Ewen was a British-born astronomer specializing in lunar studies since
1951. During WWII he was part of the secret PLUTO project (Pipe Line 
Under The Ocean) to supply Allied vehicles in France with gasoline 
after the Normandy invasion. After meeting Gerard Kuiper at an IAU 
meeting in Dubline in 1955, he was invited to join the Lunar Project
at Yerkes to produce a high-quality photographic atlas of the moon, 
and subsequently moved with Kuiper to Tucson, Arizona, where this 
project ultimately resulted in the establishment of the Lunar and 
Planetary Laboratory. He provided valuable input into the planning and 
operations of Apollo operations on the Moon. Ewen was much beloved by 
his colleagues and is remembered for his knowledge, friendliness and 
charm.

Rememberances:

 

http://tucson.com/news/local/ewen-whitaker-moon-mapper-dies/article_dd048c21-2438-5d3d-b3ab-f9414a5042bf.html
 

http://www.planetary.org/blogs/jason-davis/2016/20161021-remembering-ewen-whitaker.html

https://sservi.nasa.gov/articles/ewen-a-whitaker-1922-2016/

 

http://www.skyandtelescope.com/astronomy-news/remembering-ewen-whitaker-1922-2016/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ewen_Whitaker

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

TRICK-OR-TREAT AND TELESCOPES

 

Based on an activity that DPS member Richard Schmude Jr. has been doing 

for years, with over 5000 children reached, DPS is initiating the program 

Trick-or-Treat and Telescopes. We are encouraging people to put out their 

telescopes during trick-or-treat time on Halloween, in their own lawns or in a 

neighbor’s lawn with better viewing (or more traffic). The following website 

gives advice and connections to resources. 

 

education/trick-or-treat-and-telescopes

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

PLANETARY SCIENCE VISION 2050 WORKSHOP 

 

NASA’s Planetary Science Division (PSD) is planning to host a community 

workshop at NASA headquarters in Washington, DC on February 27-28 and 

March 1, 2017. This workshop is meant to provide PSD with a very long-range 

vision of what planetary science may look like in the future. The workshop is to 

gather the leading experts in Solar System planetary science and related 

disciplines,together with experts in space technologies, to identify potential 

science goals and enabling technologies that can be implemented by the end 

of the 2040s and would support the next phase of Solar System exploration.

 

For further information and to register your interest in participating visit the 

website at:

http://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/V2050/

           

James Green, PSD Director

Stephen Mackwell, SOC Chair

Doris Daou, SOC Executive Secretary

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

SMALL SATELLITES FOR SPACE RESEARCH (COSPAR 2017)

First announcement for the 3rd Symposium of the Committee on Space 
Research (COSPAR): Small Satellites for Space Research “COSPAR 2017”

Date: 18-22 September 2017

Place: Jeju Island, South Korea

Contact:                                               

COSPAR Secretariat 
2 place Maurice Quentin 
75039 Paris Cedex 01, France

Tel: +33 1 44 76 75 10
Fax: +33 1 44 76 74 37

http://[email protected]

http://cospar.kasi.re.kr/cospar-symposium-2017/

Host Organizations:
Korea Astronomy and Space Science Inst. (KASI)
Korean Space Science Society

Scientific Program Chair: Dr. Dong-Hun Lee, Kyung Hee Univ.

Abstract Deadline: 31 March 2017

Topics: 

– New ideas for upper atmosphere research with micro- and 
  nano-satellites
– Interaction of solar wind and Earth’s bow shock: Recent progress 
  in observations and modelling
– Dynamics of the magnetospheric process through coordinated 
  experiment and modelling
– Advances in astrophysical research with small satellites
– Planetary exploration of the solar system
– Enabling technologies
 
Selected papers published in Advances in Space Research and Life 
Sciences in Space Research, fully refereed journals with no deadlines 
open to all submissions in relevant fields.

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

42ND SCIENTIFIC ASSEMBLY OF THE COMMITTEE ON SPACE RESEARCH 
(COSPAR 2018)

14-22 July 2018
Pasadena, CA, USA

Contact:                                               
COSPAR Secretariat, 2 place Maurice Quentin, 75039 Paris Cedex 01, 
France
Tel: +33 1 44 76 75 10
Fax: +33 1 44 76 74 37
[email protected]

http://www.cospar-assembly.org

Host Organization: Caltech, home of JPL
Scientific Program Chair: Prof. Thomas Prince, CalTech

Abstract Deadline: 9 February 2018

Topics:

Approximately 125 meetings covering the fields of COSPAR 

Scientific Commissions (SC) and Panels:

– SC A:  The Earth’s Surface, Meteorology and Climate 

– SC B:  The Earth-Moon System, Planets, and Small Bodies of the Solar System

– SC C:  The Upper Atmospheres of the Earth and Planets Including Reference Atmospheres

– SC D:  Space Plasmas in the Solar System, Including Planetary Magnetospheres 

– SC E:  Research in Astrophysics from Space 

– SC F:  Life Sciences as Related to Space 

– SC G:  Materials Sciences in Space 

– SC H:  Fundamental Physics in Space 

– Panel on Satellite Dynamics (PSD)

– Panel on Scientific Ballooning (PSB)

– Panel on Potentially Environmentally Detrimental Activities in Space (PEDAS)

– Panel on Radiation Belt Environment Modelling (PRBEM) 

– Panel on Space Weather (PSW)

– Panel on Planetary Protection (PPP)

– Panel on Capacity Building (PCB)

– Panel on Education (PE)

– Panel on Exploration (PEX)

– Panel on Interstellar Research (PIR)

– Special events:  interdisciplinary lectures, round table, etc.

Selected papers published in Advances in Space Research and Life 
Sciences in Space Research, fully refereed journals with no deadlines 
open to all submissions in relevant fields.

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) LECTURER IN THEORETICAL PLASMA PHYSICS 

     AND/OR SPACE SCIENCE AT IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON

Closing Date: 5th December 2016 (midnight BST)

Applications are invited for a Lecturer in Theoretical Plasma Physics 
and/or Space Science, based in the Department of Physics. We are 
seeking candidates from a broad range of related topics, including 
theoretical plasma physics and space plasma physics. The ability to 
span several complementary areas of research will be a distinct 
advantage.

Informal enquiries are welcomed and should be directed to Professors 
Roland Smith (Head of the Plasma Physics Group, 
[email protected]), Michele Dougherty (PI, Cassini and JUICE, 
[email protected]) or Tim Horbury (PI, Solar Orbiter, 
[email protected]). Please note that this post is open for 
applicants with expertise in data analysis, modelling or theory 
related to Solar Orbiter and JUICE as well as all space plasma physics.

For the full advert, job description, person specification and 
application instructions, please look at the online advertisement at:

 

http://www.jobs.ac.uk/job/AUU664/lecturer-in-theoretical-plasma-physics-and-or-space-science/

 

B) ASSISTANT PROFESSOR

     DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY

     ROWAN UNIVERSITY

     GLASSBORO, NEW JERSEY

 

The School of Earth & Environment at Rowan University is seeking an 
Assistant Professor for the Department of Geology. We seek outstanding 
candidates who hold a Ph.D. (by Sept 1, 2017) in Geology/Geoscience, or 
a closely related discipline. The successful candidate will have 
demonstrated early success at research and publication. Postdoctoral 
experience is desirable. We seek candidates who have a global focus – 
established international collaborations are a plus. The areas of 
expertise are open, however, preference will be given to applicants 
engaged in the following research: nearterm and/or long-term 
paleoclimate studies (biotic or abiotic), sea level science and coastal 
sustainability, geohazards, polar research, Earth systems processes, 
and planetary science in general, however, the science of impacts or 
the dynamical evolution of airless planetary bodies would be of 
particular interest.

 

https://rowanuniversity.hodesiq.com/jobs/assistant-professor-geology-glassboro-new-jersey-job-5352608

 

C) ASSISTANT PROFESSOR

     DEPARTMENT OF ASTRONOMY

     UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA

     CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA

 

The Department of Astronomy at the University of Virginia invites 

applicants for a tenure-track Assistant Professor position. The candidate 

will join a diverse department with expertise in theoretical and observational 

astronomy and astrochemistry. Applicants, either observers or theorists,

 who will strengthen the collaboration between the Department of Astronomy 

and NRAO are encouraged to apply. The Headquarters of the National Radio 

Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) and the North American ALMA Science 

Center are located on the campus of the University of Virginia.

 

content/assistant-professor-astronomy-1

 

———————————+

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].