Ewen Whitaker 1922-2016

Ewen WhitakerEwen 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

Final Message From The Chair

As I pass the gavel to incoming Chair Lucy McFadden at today’s Members’ Meeting, I am struck anew by the breadth of pure science that you do. It’s been easy to get caught up in the details of the meeting organizing. So it is particularly refreshing to see all of the great results and discussions taking place in Pasadena this week!

Particular thanks are due to this year’s Local and Scientific Organizing Committees, particularly LOC Chair Diana Blaney and SOC Chair Kevin Baines. One of the special pleasures of the job as DPS Chair is to see so many great volunteers from our community working toward common goals. So thank you to the DPS Committee, our subcommittees, and to our friends at the AAS for all of your service.

For the future, this year we have worked through a deliberate process to establish meeting locations beyond 2018. You heard from our EPSC colleague Manuel Grande on Monday that the 2019 DPS will be a joint meeting with EPSC in Geneva, Switzerland. In keeping with my promise to find cost-effective mid-sized cities in which to meet we have also penciled in Spokane, Washington for 2020 and Providence, Rhode Island for 2021. Together with Provo, Utah next year and Knoxville, Tennessee in 2018 these choices will lower the total cost of meeting attendance moving forward.

It’s been an exciting year, and I thank all of you for having been given the opportunity to serve. I hope to see you all at the Members’ Meeting at noon today,

DPS Chair
Jason W. Barnes

Newsletter 16-41

Issue 16-41, October 18, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. FINAL MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

FINAL MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR
 

As I pass the gavel to incoming Chair Lucy McFadden at today’s Members’ 

Meeting, I am struck anew by the breadth of pure science that you do.  

It’s been easy to get caught up in the details of the meeting 

organizing.  So it is particularly refreshing to see all of the great 

results and discussions taking place in Pasadena this week!

 

Particular thanks are due to this year’s Local and Scientific Organizing 

Committees, particularly LOC Chair Diana Blaney and SOC Chair Kevin 

Baines.  One of the special pleasures of the job as DPS Chair is to see 

so many great volunteers from our community working toward common goals.  

So thank you to the DPS Committee, our subcommittees, and to our friends 

at the AAS for all of your service.

 

For the future, this year we have worked through a deliberate process to 

establish meeting locations beyond 2018.  You heard from our EPSC 

colleague Manuel Grande on Monday that the 2019 DPS will be a joint

meeting with EPSC in Geneva, Switzerland.  In keeping with my promise to 

find cost-effective mid-sized cities in which to meet we have also 

penciled in Spokane, Washington for 2020 and Providence, Rhode Island 

for 2021.  Together with Provo, Utah next year and Knoxville, Tennessee 

in 2018 these choices will lower the total cost of meeting attendance 

moving forward.

 

It’s been an exciting year, and I thank all of you for having been given 

the opportunity to serve.  I hope to see you all at the Members’ Meeting

at noon today,

 

DPS Chair

 

Jason W. Barnes

———————————+

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 16-40

Issue 16-40, October 16, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. REMOTE PARTICIPATION FOR JWST WORKSHOP AND PROPOSAL TUTORIAL
  2. DIVISION FOR PLANETARY SCIENCES ANNOUNCEMENTS OF PLENARY
  3. ALAN STERN AND NEW HORIZONS TEAM RECEIEVE COSMOS AWARD
  4. NSF RELEASES DEAR COLLEAGUE LETTER ON ARECIBO OBSERVATORY
  5. JAPANESE SOCIETY FOR THE PROMOTION OF SCIENCE (JSPS) CORE-TO-CORE PROGRAM PLANET2 SYMPOSIUM 2017 PROGRAM PLANET2 SYMPOSIUM 2017

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

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REMOTE PARTICIPATION FOR JWST WORKSHOP AND PROPOSAL TUTORIAL

JWST will be hosting a workshop on the new Early Release Science Program 

and proposal preparation at the DPS this Sunday, October 16 from 1-4 pm PDT.

Remote participation is available for those that are not in attendance.  See 

details below and here: http://jwst.stsci.edu/events/jwst-at-dps-epsc

 

Workshop on the JWST Early Release Science (ERS) Program

  • Sunday, Oct. 16, 1pm – 4pm PDT (Room C106, Conference Building)
  • JWST Project Status
  • Description of the JWST Director’s Discretionary Time Early Release Science Program 
    • Goals of the program
    • Proposal requirements
  • ERS vs. Guaranteed Time programs
  • Proposal planning tools overview
  • Remote participation via Webex:

Join webex meeting here 

Meeting number (access code): 641 227 642
Meeting password: JWSTdps!
 
Join by phone
1-855-244-8681 Call-in toll-free number (US/Canada)
1-650-479-3207 Call-in toll number (US/Canada)

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

DIVISION FOR PLANETARY SCIENCES ANNOUNCEMENT OF PLENARY

 

Addressing Unconscious Bias

 

Patricia Knezek

Wednesday, October 19th, 2016: 2:00-2:20 PM, Ballroom D

 

 

Abstract: Unconscious bias reflects expectations or stereotypes that influence 

our judgments of others (regardless of our own group). Everyone has 

unconscious biases. The end result of unconscious bias can be an accumulation 

of advantage or disadvantage that impacts the long-term career success of 

individuals, depending on which biases they are subject to. In order to foster a 

professional culture and climate, being aware of these unconscious biases and 

mitigating against them is a first step. This is particularly important when 

judgments are needed, such as in cases for recruitment, choice of speakers for 

conferences, and even reviewing papers submitted for publication. This 

presentation will cover how unconscious bias manifests itself, what evidence 

exists to demonstrate it exists, and ways it can be addressed.

 

http://womeninastronomy.blogspot.com/2016/10/dps-professional-culture-climate.html

 

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ALAN STERN AND NEW HORIZONS TEAM RECEIVE COSMOS AWARD

Congratulations to DPS Member Alan Stern and the New Horizons team, 

winners of the 2016 Cosmos Award from The Planetary Society.  Alan 

and team will be presented the award at Agency night on Monday and 

again at the public lecture on Thursday night here at DPS in Pasadena.  

For more info see:
http://www.planetary.org/blogs/guest-blogs/2016/1012-alan-stern-new-horizons-team-cosmos-award.html

 

http://www.planetary.org/press-room/releases/2016/alan-stern-new-horizons.html
 

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NSF RELEASES DEAR COLLEAGUE LETTER ON ARECIBO OBSERVATORY

 

NSF has released a Dear Colleague Letter NSF 16-144 

(https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2016/nsf16144/nsf16144.jsp ) announcing its intent 

to release a Solicitation in the first quarter of Fiscal Year 2017 regarding future 

continued operations of Arecibo Observatory under substantially reduced funding 

commitment from NSF.

 

The 2012 Portfolio Review Committee of the NSF Division of Astronomical 

Sciences (AST) recommended that NSF AST’s involvement in Arecibo Observatory

be re-evaluated later in the decade, “in light of the science opportunities and budget 

forecasts at that time.” In August 2016, the National Academies’ Committee on the 

Review of Progress on the Decadal Survey Vision recommended that NSF should 

implement the recommendations of the Portfolio Review, which the Committee 

deemed as essential to sustaining the scientific vitality of the U.S. ground based 

astronomy program as new facilities come into operation. This recommendation 

followed numerous Committee Findings that commented on the AST budget.

 

NSF is currently preparing an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) to evaluate 

potential effects of proposed changes to operations at Arecibo Observatory 

(see https://www.nsf.gov/mps/ast/env_impact_reviews/env_rev_arecibo.jsp ). 

The upcoming Solicitation will run concurrently with preparation of the EIS

with the intent of informing the decision-making process for future operations 

of Arecibo Observatory.

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

JAPANESE SOCIETY FOR THE PROMOTION OF SCIENCE (JSPS) CORE-TO-CORE 

PROGRAM PLANET2 SYMPOSIUM 2017

 

Symposium web site: https://www-n.oca.eu/michel/JSPSPlanet2_2017/

 

The JSPS Core-to-Core Program Planet2 Symposium 2017 will take place on 

February 20-23, 2017 in Villefranche Sur Mer (France) on the Côte d’Azur.

The Symposium aims at reviewing recent ongoing and upcoming space 

missions and observations and recent progress in planet formation theories. 

Also we will discuss how we should synthesize these observational constraints 

to improve our understanding of planetary formation inside and outside the 

solar system. Topics will include remote-sensing observations of small bodies 

from a spacecraft or from ground-based observatories, microanalyses of 

samples from small bodies, observations of exoplanets from both space-based 

and ground-based telescopes, and planetary formation theories (from disk 

formation/evolution to current planetary system properties). Opportunities 

for international exchanges of young scholars in this field of science will 

also be discussed.

 

Registration and abstract submission will open soon and will be announced 

in the next announcement. Please save the dates if you’re interested. 

 

Pr. Seiji Sugita and Dr. Patrick Michel (SOC chairs); 

please contact: [email protected] and [email protected] for questions.

 

———————————+

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 16-39

Issue 16-39, October 9, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. TMT WORKSHOP AT DPS 48/EPSC 11
  2. NASA ASTROPHYSICS ASSETS TOWN HALLS I & II AT DPS 48/EPSC 11
  3. AAS ORAL HISTORY PROJECT AT THE UPCOMING DPS MEETING IN PASADENA
  4. THE THIRD WORKSHOP ON EXTREMELY PRECISE RADIAL VELOCITIES (EPRV III)
  5. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

TMT WORKSHOP AT DPS 48/EPSC 11

 

The Thirty-Meter-Telescope (TMT) International Observatory will organize 

a DPS workshop on Tuesday October 18 at noon (Room C102). The aim of 

this workshop is to provide the community of future TMT users with a status 

update on the search for an alternative construction site. 

 

Lunch will be provided and to help with the head-count, please send an email 

to the workshop organizer ([email protected]) before October 13 to confirm 

your interest in participating in this workshop.

 

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NASA ASTROPHYSICS ASSETS TOWN HALLS I & II AT DPS 48/EPSC 11

 

I = Monday, 17 October at 12:30pm-2:00pm

II = Thursday, 20 October at 12:00pm-1:30pm

Location: Ballroom C (Pasadena Convention Center)

Agenda and Abstracts

 

NASA Planetary Science and Astrophysics Assets Town Hall I

Monday, 17 October at 12:30pm-2:00pm

Organizer(s): Doris Daou (Planetary Science Division, NASA HQ)

12:30 PM – 2:00 PM; Ballroom C (Pasadena Convention Center)

 

The K2 mission makes use of the Kepler spacecraft and expands on its 

groundbreaking discoveries. The fields observed by K2 are close to the 

ecliptic and hence are rich in Solar System objects including planets, 

asteroids and trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs).  K2 has already performed 

observations of Neptune and its large moon Triton, Uranus, 68 Trojan and 

Hilda asteroids, 5 TNOs (including Pluto) and Comet C/2013 A1 (Siding 

Spring). Thousands of main-belt asteroids that fell into the pixel masks of 

stars have been have been serendipitously observed. Observations of 

moving bodies as bright as Jupiter and as faint as V=23 have proved 

successful. K2 has an ongoing funded Guest Observer program which has 

been successfully proposed to by members of the planetary science community. 

We will present K2’s plans and capabilities for solar system science.   

 

The Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy makes observations 

at far-infrared wavelengths possible. A suite of cameras and spectrometers 

covers infrared wavelengths from 1 to 300 microns. A high-speed visible-

wavelength photometer is also available to observe stellar occultations by 

Solar System objects. In particular, the range of wavelengths from 30-300 

microns is nearly completely obscured form the ground, including our best 

mountaintop observatories. By flying in the stratosphere above 95% of 

atmospheric water vapor, access is opened to photometric, spectroscopic, 

and polarimetric observations of Solar System targets including small bodies 

through the major planets. We will brief the professional planetary science 

community on the capabilities of the observatory and its scientific 

instrumentation, the operation of the observatory, the proposal and planning 

process, and opportunities for involvement in the observatory itself.

 

The Spitzer Space Telescope is NASA’s Infrared Great Observatory and 

will operate until mid-2019.   The IRAC instrument provides unparalleled 

sensitivity at 3.6 and 4.5 microns that will only be superseded by JWST. 

For solar system observations Spitzer supports non-sidereal tracking rates 

of up to 1 arcsec per second, as well as the ability to do shadow observations 

for moving targets.  We will present Spitzer’s capabilities, future plans, 

and some science results from previous and ongoing planetary programs.  

 

NASA Planetary Science and Astrophysics Assets Town Hall II

II = Thursday, 20 October at 12:00pm-1:30pm

Organizer(s): Doris Daou (Planetary Science Division, NASA HQ)

12:00 PM – 1:30 PM; Ballroom C (Pasadena Convention Center)

 

The two W.M. Keck Observatory 10m telescopes regularly observe 

the increasingly dynamic and diverse body of objects in our solar system. 

Every US member of the solar system community has the opportunity to 

apply for time on the Keck telescopes through NASA’s call for proposals 

each March and September.  We will present Keck’s current and future

instrument capabilities as well as recent solar system science highlights 

from high spatial and spectral resolution imaging and spectroscopy. 

Although much information has been gained through spectroscopy of 

planets, comets, and Kuiper belt objects, many current solar system 

observers also take advantage of the adaptive optics systems on both 

Keck 1 and Keck 2 to determine rotation axes and pinpoint orbits with 

high astrometric precision. We will also provide information on how 

you can gain access to the NASA portion of Keck time, the only way 

that PIs from non Keck-member institutions can gain access, and highlight 

resources that are available for your use in the proposal planning process.

 

The NASA Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) is a dedicated observatory 

for mission support and planetary science research, with 50% of the telescope 

time allocated to solar system observations.  Instruments currently 

available include SpeX (a low to moderate spectral resolution 1-5.3 micron

spectrograph and imager), MORIS (a CCD camera used in conjunction 

with SpeX), iSHELL (a high spectral resolution 1.2-5.3 micron spectrograph 

and imager), and visitor spectrographs covering 5-24 microns.  We are also 

upgrading MIRSI, our 8-26 micron camera, and it should be available during

2017B.  The IRTF offers remote observing from any site with adequate internet 

connection, flexible scheduling (time slots as short as one hour), and daytime 

observing. 

 

The Infrared Science Archive (IRSA) is the repository for science products 

from NASA’s infrared and submillimeter missions, including many large-area 

and all-sky surveys. IRSA’s scientist will describe our tools and datasets of 

interest to the DPS community, including: how to get moving object 

observations out of the Spitzer and WISE archives, the WISE Co-Adder 

(which can sum up (NEO)WISE observations of moving targets), and the 

moving object “Pre-covery” tool.  

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

AAS ORAL HISTORY PROJECT AT THE UPCOMING DPS MEETING IN PASADENA

 

As part of the ongoing AAS Oral History Project, we are soliciting 

planetary scientists to be interviewed at the DPS meeting in Pasadena, 

CA. We are looking for DPS members from all stages of career from 

undergraduate to emeritus and everything in between. Each interview 

takes about two hours and will become part of an oral history archive 

in partnership with the AIP Niels Bohr Library Oral History Archive. 

Of particular interest to the interviewers are:

 

– Those involved with astronomy/planetary science education

– Members of “astronomy families,” such as dual-career couples, 

  single parents, and astronomers with a parent or child who is also 

  an astronomer (The interviewers would like to speak with the parent 

  or child, too, if possible.)

– Scientists who work in team collaborations

– Instrumentation designers and builders

– Scientists working with big data

– Researchers using small telescopes

 

Please sign up now at: 

 

http://tinyurl.com/OralDPS2016 

 

or by emailing Sanlyn Buxner ([email protected]).

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

THE THIRD WORKSHOP ON EXTREMELY PRECISE RADIAL 

VELOCITIES (EPRV III)

Please save the date for the Third Workshop on Extremely Precise Radial 

Velocities (EPRV III), at the Pennsylvania State University, University 

Park, PA, USA, during the week of August 14-17, 2017.

This workshop is for teams around the world to share techniques for advancing 

precise radial velocity work towards 10 cm/s precision in coming years. 

Building on the success of the first two workshops at Penn State in 2010 

and Yale in 2015, the focus on this workshop will be on the performance 

of the next generation of precise Doppler instruments, including hardware, 

statistical techniques for signal extraction and interpretation, and stellar 

jitter modeling and mitigation.

Please send questions or inquiries to Dr. Jason Wright at [email protected].

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) JUNO-SUPPORTING POSTDOC POSITION

 

The California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Postdoctoral Scholars 

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

a postdoctoral research position in JPL’s Planetary Science Section.

The research will involve coordination of Earth-based supporting 

observations for the Juno mission and Juno observations themselves. 

Dr. Glenn Orton, in JPL’s Planetary and Exoplanetary Atmospheres 

Group, will serve as JPL postdoctoral advisor to the selected candidate. 

The appointee will carry out research in collaboration with the JPL 

advisor, resulting in publications in the open literature. 

Candidates should have a recent PhD in planetary science with a 

strong background in atmospheres. Experience in radiative transfer 

and spacecraft observations is highly desirable. Candidates who have 

received their PhD within the past five years since the date of their 

application are eligible. Postdoctoral Scholar positions are awarded 

for a minimum of one-year period and may be renewed up to a 

maximum of three years.

Please send a letter describing your research interests, a curriculum 

vitae, a list of three references (with telephone numbers, postal and 

email address) and arrange the reference letters to be sent to:

Name: Glenn Orton
Address: Jet Propulsion Laboratory
4800 Oak Grove Drive, MS 183-501, Pasadena, CA 91109
Telephone: 818-354-2460
Fax: 818-393-5555
E-Mail: [email protected]

Caltech and JPL are equal opportunity/affirmative action employers. 

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

 

http://postdocs.jpl.nasa.gov/researchapplicants/jobpostings/index.cfm?FuseAction=ShowJobPosting&JobPostingID=693

 

B) 3-YEAR POSTDOCTORAL POSITION

 

Institut d’Astrophysique Spatiale, Universite Paris-Sud

Orsay, France

 

content/3-year-postdoctoral-position

 

———————————+ 

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 16-38

Issue 16-38, October 2, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. 32nd MEPAG MEETING 2nd INFORMATION CIRCULAR
  2. 2017 LABORATORY ASTROPHYSICS DISSERTATION PRIZE
  3. NASA SMD SEEKS VOLUNTEER REVIEWERS, ESPECIALLY FOR COLD TECH
  4. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

32ND MEPAG MEETING 2ND INFORMATION CIRCULAR

Members of the Mars community,

I cordially invite you to participate in the 32nd meeting of the Mars 
Exploration Program Analysis Group (MEPAG), scheduled as a virtual 
meeting on October 6th, 2016, 8:30am-12:30pm PDT.

Adobe Connect information and current draft agenda are posted at:

 

http://mepag.nasa.gov/meeting/2016-10/meeting32_2nd Information Circular_v3.pdf
 
Key discussion topics will include:
* Reports from the Mars Exploration Program on budget, current 
  missions, and studies for future Mars missions;
* Updates on Human Exploration and Operations (HEO) activities;
* Report on the planetary science community-wide survey of 
  Participating Scientist programs;
* New membership within the MEPAG Goals and Executive Committee;
* Report from the recent conference on “Biosignature Preservation 
  and Detection in Mars Analog Environments”;
* Upcoming MEPAG activities, including the next face-to-face 
  MEPAG meeting (No. 33) in early 2017.

The meeting is open to all members of the Mars science community 
including our international colleagues. I look forward to your
participation.

Sincerely,
Dr. Jeffrey R. Johnson
MEPAG Chair

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

2017 LABORATORY ASTROPHYSICS DISSERTATION PRIZE

 

The Laboratory Astrophysics Division (LAD) of the American Astronomical 
Society (AAS) invites nominations for the 2017 Laboratory Astrophysics 
Dissertation Prize.  The field of laboratory astrophysics encompasses 
all fundamental theoretical and experimental research into the 
underlying processes that drive the cosmos. 

The Dissertation Prize is presented, normally on an annual basis, to 
recognize an outstanding doctoral dissertation (or the equivalent) in 
laboratory astrophysics.  The prize will be awarded to an individual who 
has completed their Ph.D. or equivalent degree in any of the three 
calendar years immediately preceding the award year.  The prize will 
include a cash award, a citation, and an invited lecture by the 
recipient at a meeting of the Division. 

The recipient for 2017 will be announced in early 2017 and the 
presentation made at the June 2017 LAD meeting.  Any nominee not 
selected will be automatically considered in the next two consecutive 
years, or as long as the nominee is eligible, whichever is less. 

The nomination package for the Dissertation Prize must include: 
a. A three-page summary of the thesis (not to exceed 5 pages total 
including figures and bibliography). 
b. A nomination letter. 
c. Two additional letters of recommendation. 
d. A statement from the nominee’s university stating that the Ph.D. or 
equivalent degree has been awarded. 
e. A curriculum vitae. 
f. A publication list. 

Nominators, letter writers, and candidates need not be AAS or LAD 
members. Self-nominations are allowed.  The deadline for receipt of the 
nomination package and supporting letters is Saturday 31 December 2016. 

Attracting and serving a diverse and inclusive membership worldwide is a 
primary goal for LAD.  In calling for nominations, we wish to remind you 
how important it is to give full consideration to qualified women, 
members of underrepresented minority groups, and scientists from outside 
the United States. 

All nomination material should be sent by the deadline directly to the 
LAD Secretary ([email protected]). 

Additional information can be found at https://lad.aas.org/prizes 

Daniel Wolf Savin 
LAD Secretary

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

NASA SMD SEEKS VOLUNTEER REVIEWERS, ESPECIALLY FOR COLD TECH

NASA’s Science Mission Directorate is seeking subject matter experts 
to serve as mail-in and/or panel meeting reviewers of proposals to 
ROSES and other solicitations. The landing page all of these forms 
may be found at: 

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

but potential volunteers are especially encouraged to fill out the 
form for Concepts for Ocean Worlds Life Detection Technology because 
that was lost in the mover to the new web page and hence was not seen 
as many people. Go to:

https://science.nasa.gov/researchers/volunteer-review-panels/roses-2016
-c20-concepts-ocean-worlds-life-detection-technology 

To fill out the forms just click the boxes to indicate the topics in 
which you consider yourself to be a subject matter expert. If your 
skills match our needs we will contact you to discuss scheduling. 

Max Bernstein

SMD Research Lead

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) TENURE-TRACK ASSISTANT PROFESSOR

     Department of Astronomy

     Cornell University

     Ithaca, New York

 

The Cornell University Astronomy Department invites applications for a 
tenure-track assistant professor appointment to begin July 1, 2017. We
will consider applications from observers, experimentalists and 
theorists working in any area of astronomy, but particular areas of 
interest are cosmology, extragalactic astronomy, extrasolar and solar 
system planetary science, and relativistic astrophysics, including 
gravitational wave astronomy and astrophysics. Applicants should upload 
their applications, including a CV, list of publications, statement of 
research interests, and statement on teaching plans and philosophy to: 

https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/7615 

Applicants should also arrange to have three letters of recommendation 
submitted to Academic Jobs Online. 

Inquiries may be sent to Ira Wasserman ([email protected]), Chair 
of the department.

We will begin reviewing applications November 1, 2016.

Cornell University is an Equal Opportunity/Armative Action Employer.

 

 

B) TENURE-TRACK ASSISTANT PROFESSOR 

     IN ASTRONOMY OR PLANETARY SCIENCE
     Northern Arizona University

     Flagstaff, Arizona

The Department of Physics and Astronomy at Northern Arizona University
is seeking excellent candidates for a tenure-track position in
astronomy and/or planetary science at the Assistant Professor level
beginning in August 2017 to help launch its new Ph.D. program
(www.physics.nau.edu/AstroPhD). The minimum qualification is an earned
doctorate in astronomy, planetary science, or a related field.
Preferred qualifications include demonstrated interest or ability to
develop a research program that involves undergraduate and graduate
students; a demonstrated record of publications and/or extramural
funding in astronomy and/or planetary science; evidence of high
quality teaching and commitment to student success at the graduate and
undergraduate levels; expertise in exoplanets, astro-informatics,
astro-chemistry, astronomical instrumentation, and/or observational
astronomy specializing in Solar System objects, exoplanets, or related
topics; and the ability to work with students, colleagues, and
community members from diverse cultures. The screening committee will
begin reviewing applications on October 24, 2016.

https://jobregister.aas.org/job_view?JobID=54717

 

C) POST-DOCTORAL POSITION IN GIANT PLANET MODELLING 

     AT LABORATOIRE DE METEOROLOGIE DYNAMIQUE, 

     UNIVERSITE PIERRE ET MARIE CURIE, PARIS, FRANCE 

A 15-month post-doctoral position in planetary atmospheric science is 

opened at Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique (LMD), starting in 

early 2017. The position is opened by Centre National de la Recherche 

Scientifique and hosted on the campus of Université Pierre et Marie 

Curie in the heart of Paris. 

More details here: 

[http://www.lmd.jussieu.fr/~aslmd/post-doc-position-LMD.pdf

Applications and information requests should be sent via email to 

Dr Aymeric SPIGA ([email protected]). The closing date is 

November 8th, 2016. Late applications might be considered, until 

the position is filled.

 

D) ASSISTANT/ASSOCIATE SCIENTIST(S)

     NATIONAL RADIO ASTRONOMY OBSERVATORY

     Charlottesville, Virginia

 

The North American ALMA Regional Center (NA ARC) is 

recruiting for multiple NRAO Assistant/Associate Scientist positions. 

The NRAO is seeking several qualified candidates to work with 

and lead teams within the NA ARC. Currently, there are four 

teams within the NA ARC: Telescope Interface and Diagnostics, 

ALMA Software Support & Testing, Science Community Interface 

and Science Data Services and Archive. The staff scientists 

recruited for these positions are expected to facilitate and 

enable cutting-edge science by community members and to 

work to enhance the observing capabilities for ALMA. 

 

For consideration please apply at www.nrao.edu ,

click on the “Careers” button. Please refer to job number 3361.

 

Please direct inquiries to [email protected].

 

E) HIRISE SPACECRAFT OPERATIONS ENGINEER POSITIONS

HiRISE (uahirise.org) is hiring two Spacecraft Operations Engineers 
to work at the HiRISE Operations Center on the University of Arizona’s 
Tucson campus. This is a full-time position working with HiRISE team 
scientists and JPL and other MRO instrument operations staff to plan 
and command high resolution images of Mars. 

The successful candidates will support HiRISE personnel in carrying 
out operational activities including the following: Plan observation 
sequences and perform command load generation for HiRISE. Interact 
and collaborate with HiRISE and MRO scientists and technicians to 
choose targets and plan the observation sequences in detail, including 
choosing camera settings with a detailed understanding of the MRO 
mission, the HiRISE camera and Mars. Verify that the imaging carried 
out during a planning cycle was properly commanded, identify potential 
problems, and implement solutions. 

An educational background in geosciences or remote sensing, or 
experience with flight operations for remote sensing instruments is 
preferred. Due to federal regulations, the position is restricted to 
U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents.

The University of Arizona encourages diverse candidates to apply, 
including people of color, women, veterans, and individuals with 
disabilities.

Apply at:

https://uacareers.com/postings/13857

(job number A21171)

 

F) MARS MISSION SCIENTIST AT JSC

The Astromaterials Research Office, part of the Astromaterials Research 
and Exploration Science (ARES) Division of the Exploration Integration 
and Science Directorate, NASA Johnson Space Center, seeks to fill a 
GS-13 Planetary Scientist civil service position with expertise in 
Mars-related research and mission science. This emphasis may include 
studies of astromaterials and/or analogs; generation and/or 
interpretation of Mars landed or remotely-sensed mission datasets; 
experimental studies of martian atmospheric, surficial, and/or interior 
processes; or combinations of these. The selectee will be expected to 
attract funds through peer-reviewed proposals, and/or through 
involvement in NASA planetary missions, especially those to Mars. 
Contributions to other ARES enterprises, such as research that advances 
curation knowledge for Mars sample return.
 
All candidates must use the USAJobs.gov website to prepare and submit 
applications, and United States citizenship is required to be eligible 
for this civil service position. Please go to:
 
https://www.usajobs.gov/GetJob/ViewDetails/451675100
 
to apply for this position. Applications will be accepted from 
6 to 26 October 2016. Interested parties may direct informal inquiries 
to Dr. David Draper, Manager, Astromaterials Research Office, 
[email protected]. A how-to guide for preparing responsive 
applications using the USAJobs.gov site, prepared by JSC Human 
Resources, will be provided upon request.

 

G) POST-DOC POSITION AT INAF-IAPS

A  post-doc position at INAF-IAPS is now open. The scope is to work on
spectral measurements of planetary analogues in support of EXOMARS and 
Dawn missions. 

For more information about the position application:

 

http://www.inaf.it/it/lavora-con-noi/assegni-di-ricerca/assegno-di-ricerca-dal-titolo-spectral-measurements-and-analysis-of-samples-analogues-of-planetary-surface201d
 

People interested in having more info can write 
Maria Cristina De Sanctis ([email protected]).

 

H) ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PLANETARY MATERIALS

     Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences

     Purdue University

     West Lafayette, Indiana

 

content/assistant-professor-planetary-materials

 

———————————+

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: Where Do My Registration Fees Go?

With the Pasadena DPS/EPSC meeting forthcoming in just a month now, I thought that I might throw out some numbers with respect to where your money goes when you register for a DPS meeting. The Full Member, early registration this year was $588. It was $478 for the previous Pasadena DPS, in 2010. That’s a bit above inflation (which would have sent it at $536), but not too far off. However registration at the 2006 Pasadena meeting was just $225! What happened between 2006 and 2010?

We grew. It used to be that a DPS meeting was small enough that a volunteer Local Organizing Committee (LOC) Chair could run the whole meeting. The LOC Chair used to negotiate contracts with venues, hotels, and such. As the DPS attendance has grown, the LOC Chair job became too big.  It is just too much to ask for a scientist to volunteer a year of their time to keep registration costs down.

Since then we have professionalized DPS meeting planning. Our parent organization, the American Astronomical Society (AAS), now has a team of people whose job it is to run meetings. They take care of us here at the DPS as well as the AAS Summer and Winter meetings. This professionalization comes at a price, of course:  just under a quarter of the total meeting allocation ($144,000, or $156 per person) goes to the AAS in exchange for running the meeting (staff time, travel, and overhead).

I think that this cost is money well spent:  I want meeting professionals bearing the brunt of the burden for planning the DPS meeting, and I want our scientists doing as much science as they can with their time. We get significant value from the AAS’ organizational skills, too, including a huge increase in the amount of sponsorships to over $95,000 this year that we receive from our generous sponsors but also due in large part to the diligence of Debbie Kovalsky, the Sponsorship Coordinator up at the AAS.

The single biggest meeting expense that we have is food.  You wouldn’t believe how much planetary scientists eat! We have budgeted over $192,000 ($207 per person) this year for catering alone — itself almost as much as the entire 2006 meeting cost us ($199,390). Catering is where meeting spaces make their money; technically the facility rental was just $35,000 for the Pasadena Convention Center, provided we spent enough on food.

The rest of our estimated $650,000 meeting budget this year derives from ‘small’ charges: $25,000 for internet; $62,500 for A/V; $35,000 for the exhibition setup contractor. Security, program books, credit card processing fees. It all adds up.

As the vast majority of our revenue comes from your registration fees, the DPS Committee will be making a minor change to our fees policy moving forward. We have started adding in an on-site registration surcharge as insurance. The idea is to offset the possibility that all of you NASA folks who don’t get travel approval until 2 days before the meeting end up having to cancel your plans due to a government shutdown (at least 5% probability I think).

Thanks to Kelly Clark, the AAS CFO, for her help providing the budget numbers for this Fall’s meeting and for inspiring this Message. I look forward to seeing you all in Pasadena.

Jason W. Barnes
DPS Chair

Newsletter 16-37

Issue 16-37, September 25, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: WHERE DO MY REGISTRATION FEES GO?
  2. IMPORTANT UPDATES TO NSF GRANT PROGRAMS
  3. DPS 48/EPSC 11 EARLY CAREER PRESENTER’S REVIEW
  4. TRICK-OR-TREAT AND TELESCOPES
  5. UPCOMING MEETINGS AND WORKSHOPS
  6. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: WHERE DO MY REGISTRATION FEES GO? 

 

With the Pasadena DPS/EPSC meeting forthcoming in just a month now,

I thought that I might throw out some numbers with respect to where your

money goes when you register for a DPS meeting.  The Full Member, early

registration this year was $588.  It was $478 for the previous Pasadena DPS,

in 2010.  That’s a bit above inflation (which would have sent it at $536), but

not too far off.  However registration at the 2006 Pasadena meeting was just

$225!  What happened between 2006 and 2010? 

 

We grew.  It used to be that a DPS meeting was small enough that a volunteer

Local Organizing Committee (LOC) Chair could run the whole meeting.  The

LOC Chair used to negotiate contracts with venues, hotels, and such.  As the

DPS attendance has grown, the LOC Chair job became too big.  It is just too

much to ask for a scientist to volunteer a year of their time to keep registration

costs down. 

 

Since then we have professionalized DPS meeting planning.  Our parent

organization, the American Astronomical Society (AAS), now has a team of

people whose job it is to run meetings.  They take care of us here at the DPS

as well as the AAS Summer and Winter meetings.  This professionalization

comes at a price, of course:  just under a quarter of the total meeting allocation

($144,000, or $156 per person) goes to the AAS in exchange for running the

meeting (staff time, travel, and overhead).   

 

I think that this cost is money well spent:  I want meeting professionals

bearing the brunt of the burden for planning the DPS meeting, and I want

our scientists doing as much science as they can with their time.  We get

significant value from the AAS’ organizational skills, too, including a huge

increase in the amount of sponsorships to over $95,000 this year that we

receive from our generous sponsors but also due in large part to the diligence

of Debbie Kovalsky, the Sponsorship Coordinator up at the AAS. 

 

The single biggest meeting expense that we have is food.  You wouldn’t

believe how much planetary scientists eat!  We have budgeted over $192,000

($207 per person) this year for catering alone — itself almost as much as the

entire 2006 meeting cost us ($199,390).  Catering is where meeting spaces

make their money; technically the facility rental was just $35,000 for the

Pasadena Convention Center, provided we spent enough on food. 

 

The rest of our estimated $650,000 meeting budget this year derives from

‘small’ charges:  $25,000 for internet; $62,500 for A/V; $35,000 for the

exhibition setup contractor.  Security, program books, credit card processing

fees.  It all adds up. 

 

As the vast majority of our revenue comes from your registration fees, the

DPS Committee will be making a minor change to our fees policy moving

forward.  We have started adding in an on-site registration surcharge as

insurance.  The idea is to offset the possibility that all of you NASA folks

who don’t get travel approval until 2 days before the meeting end up having

to cancel your plans due to a government shutdown (at least 5% probability

I think).   

 

Thanks to Kelly Clark, the AAS CFO, for her help providing the budget

numbers for this Fall’s meeting and for inspiring this Message.  I look

forward to seeing you all in Pasadena, 

 

Jason W. Barnes

DPS Chair

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

IMPORTANT UPDATES TO NSF GRANT PROGRAMS

 

Below, the NSF Division of Astronomical Sciences (AST) provides information 

regarding a number of our individual investigator funding opportunities. 

For all programs, prospective proposers should pay close attention to the changes 

this year in the Grant Proposal Guide, NSF 16-1 

(http://www.nsf.gov/publications/pub_summ.jsp?ods_key=gpg),

which describes all requirements except for those superseded specifically 

in an individual solicitation:

 

·      AST is beginning a pilot “no-deadline” program for proposals in solar and 

planetary astronomy. Proposals that address topics related to planetary systems

— including exoplanets, our own solar system, and solar physics — should be 

submitted in response to the new “Solar and Planetary Research Grants (SPG) 

solicitation NSF 16-602 (http://nsf.gov/pubs/2016/nsf16602/nsf16602.htm.

These proposals may be submitted at any time.  Previously, these proposals

were submitted to the Astronomy and Astrophysics Research Grants (AAG) 

program (see below).  Although SPG proposals may be submitted any time 

throughout the year, proposals submitted to SPG after November 15, 2016, 

but judged to be more appropriate for the AAG program may be returned 

without review. If you are unsure whether your proposed research fits into 

SPG, please contact one of the program officers listed in the SPG solicitation 

website.

·      The Astronomy & Astrophysics Research Grants program (AAG) considers 

proposals in support of observational, theoretical, laboratory, and archival data 

studies in all other areas of astronomy and astrophysics. Proposals submitted by

November 15, 2016 (5 PM local time of the submitting institution) will be

considered for funding in FY2017.  Please see the solicitation NSF 16-574 

(http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2016/nsf16574/nsf16574.htm ).

·      Proposals for the Advanced Technologies and Instrumentation (ATI) program

are due by November 1, 2016, also at 5 PM local time of the submitting institution. 

See http://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=5660 .

·      The Partnerships in Astronomy and Astrophysics Research and Education (PAARE) 

      program is not accepting new proposals this year.  For a description of the PAARE 

      program, please see http://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=501046 .

·      NSF will not issue a second solicitation for the Theoretical and Computational 

      Astrophysics Networks (TCAN) program.  Given the realized budgets so far this 

decade, any funding for TCAN would come from a matching reduction in AAG

funding, which would be contrary to the 2010 decadal survey recommendation. 

Prospective TCAN proposers should instead propose to the AAG or SPG programs

described above.  They may wish to designate their proposal as being responsive to the 

NSF emphasis area of Computational and Data-Enabled Science and Engineering 

(CDS&E) if the proposal satisfies one or more of the special CDS&E criteria.  See 

http://nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=504813 for a description of CDS&E.

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

DPS 48/EPSC 11 EARLY CAREER PRESENTER’S REVIEW

Are you an early career scientist preparing to present your research 
at the DPS 48/EPSC 11 meeting? Are you nervous? Are you looking for 
advice? Join others like you to receive feedback from seasoned 
presenters! Participants in the Early Career Presenters Review have 
the opportunity to present their DPS 48/EPSC 11 oral or poster 
presentation and receive feedback before presenting during the 
regular meeting. In addition to presenting their research, 
participants have the opportunity to network with their peers and 
future colleagues. The review will be held Sunday, October 16 
from 1-5pm in Conference Building C107. Register at:

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/dps2016_early_career

The deadline to register is 5:00pm Central Time, October 12, 2016. 
Registration is limited to 20 presenters. Scientists wishing to 
participate by providing feedback to the early career presenters 
should contact Andy Shaner at [email protected].

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

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 

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

UPCOMING MEETINGS AND WORKSHOPS
 

A) DAP-2017 CALL FOR ABSTRACTS

The Dust, Atmosphere and Plasma environment of the Moon and Small 
Bodies (DAP-2017) workshop will be held at LASP in Boulder, Colorado on 
January 11-13, 2017. The workshop will be a forum to (i) discuss 
current understanding of the surface environment of the Moon, the moons 
of Mars, and comets and asteroids, (ii) share new results from past and 
ongoing missions to airless bodies and comets, and (iii) describe 
expectations for planned upcoming missions to airless bodies and 
comets. The meeting web site is hosted at: 

http://impact.colorado.edu/dap_meeting.html

DAP-2017 is a NASA/SSERVI follow up on two previous NASA/NLSI-SSERVI 
workshops, LDAP-2010 and DAP-2012. Contributions to LDAP-2010 and 
DAP-2012 were published in special issues of Planetary and Space 
Sciences. A similar volume is planned to report the contributions to 
DAP-2017.

The workshop is hosted by M. Horanyi and A. Stern, and supported by 
NASA’s Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI): 
Institute for Modeling Plasma, Atmospheres, and Cosmic Dust 
(IMPACT), the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP), and 
the Center for Integrated Plasma Studies (CIPS) of the University of 
Colorado.

The DAP-2017 abstract deadline is Sept. 30th, 2016; submit your 
abstract to [email protected]

 

B) NASA ADVISORY COUNCIL PLANETARY SCIENCE 

     SUBCOMMITTEE (PSS) MEETING

     September 29-30 2016

 

The meeting will be open to the public up to the capacity of the room.  

The meeting will be available telephonically and by WebEx.  

 

Any interested person may call the USA toll free conference call 

number 1-877-918-9234, passcode 4532334, on both days, to participate

in this meeting by telephone. A toll number also is available, 

1-630-395-0299, passcode 4532334, on both days. 

 

The WebEx link is https://nasa.webex.com/

the meeting number on September 29 is 996 721 448, password is PSS@Sep29; 

and the meeting number on September 30 is 999 540 202, password is PSS@Sep30. 

 

C) BREAKTHROUGH LISTEN WORKSHOP

 

The Breakthrough Listen Project and the Green Bank Observatory

(GBO) are sponsoring a Breakthrough Listen North American Community

Workshop that will  be held 5-6 October 2016 at the GBO in Green Bank,

West Virginia, USA. This  Workshop will discuss the goals, strategies and

capabilities of the  Breakthrough Listen Project, including commensal and

ancillary science  opportunities, and will broadly explore the search for

extraterrestrial  intelligence in the modern era. 

 

To attend, please register by 30 September at the Breakthrough Listen

Workshop website:

http://go.nrao.edu/breakthrough_listen 

 

The Breakthrough Listen Initiative was launched 20 July 2015 at the

Royal Society in London, U.K., with a charge to conduct the most

comprehensive and sensitive search for advanced life in humanity’s

history. Observations are currently being conducted at radio and optical

wavelengths, in part using the Green Bank Telescope from 0.3 – 100 GHz. 

 

We look forward to seeing you in Green Bank!

 

D) ARIZONA – JAXA WORKSHOP 2016

 

The Institute of Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS) of the Japan 

Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and the Lunar and Planetary 

Laboratory (LPL) of the University of Arizona will hold a workshop 

dedicated to planetary science enabled by missions launched by the 

Epsilon launcher of JAXA on November 15 and 16, 2016, at LPL in 

Tucson, Arizona. 

 

Given the nature of the workshop described below, participation will be

limited to the first 50 registrants. 

 

ISAS has defined three mission classes by which space science will be 

pursued systematically. 

(A) ISAS strategic L-class missions to be launched by the H-IIA/III 

       launcher (such as the Martian Moons eXplorer (MMX), the mission 

       under consideration to return samples from Phobos);

(B) ISAS competitive M-class missions to be launched by the Epsilon 

       launcher (the topic of this workshop); and

(C) Participation in large-class missions to be led by foreign agencies.

 

 

The focus of this workshop is to exchange ideas on how to make the 

Epsilon class missions fruitful for the world-wide planetary science 

community. The planned cadence of these small missions is a launch 

every other year. Due to resource limitations (launch capability, budget,

technology for a key instrument not available in Japan), however, it is 

not necessarily easy to construct a good planetary mission plan if a team 

is to be limited to domestic members. Before fully internationalizing 

M-class missions, ISAS wants to evaluate whether the Epsilon-class 

planetary missions are attractive to the international communities. 

 

Three specific mission candidates in different phases will be subject to 

discussion among the participants of the workshop. The Epsilon-class 

missions to be discussed are:

 

SLIM is a small-scale technology demonstration mission of precise 

(100m-level) landing on the lunar surface. It has been selected already

and is planned for launch in FY2019. The severe limitation in resources 

allows only a multi-band camera to be onboard for scientific observations. 

 

In APPROACH (Advanced Penetrator PRObes Applied for a Challenge 

of Hard-landing), two miniaturized penetrators would be dropped to the 

lunar surface at 100-300 m/s for technology demonstration as well as for 

three months of seismic and heat flow observations.

 

The DESTINY+ (Demonstration and Experiment of Space Technology 

for INterplanetary voYage, Phaethon fLyby with reusable probe) mission 

would fly by asteroid 3200 Phaethon, the parent body of the Geminid 

meteor shower. During the cruising phase, physical and chemical properties 

of background dust (interplanetary and interstellar dust particles) and 

meteoroid dust in the dust stream will be measured in-situ. In-situ dust 

measurements will also be made near Phaethon. 

 

To register, or to see more details of the workshop plans and objectives, 

please see the workshop website at 

https://jaxaworkshop2016.lpl.arizona.edu/

 

E) ICES IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM WORKSHOP

23-27 January 2017 at the European Space Astronomy Center (ESA/ESAC), 
near Madrid, Spain. Even if you have done a pre-registration to this 
workshop, you need officially register at: 

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

Abstract submission deadline: November 15th 
Session program available: November 29th

Note that there may be the possibility to include your contribution 
into a special workshop publication issue.

Sponsorship for students, in the form of lump sum payment, 
will be available, upon review of the submitted abstract 
by the Science Organizing Committee. See details at:

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

 

F) ASTROMETRY AND ASTROPHYSICS IN THE GAIA SKY

IAU Symposium 330
24-28 April 2017
Nice, France

http://iaus330.sciencesconf.org/

The first release of the Gaia data has been made publicly available 
on September 14, 2016. Besides a catalogue of 1.1 billion source 
positions and broad-band G-magnitudes, this DR1 also includes the 
positions, G-magnitudes, parallaxes, proper motions for 2 million 
stars in common between the Tycho-2 Catalogue and Gaia (TGAS). Light 
curves for 3194 Cepheids and RR Lyrae are also part of the release 
as well as a special astrometric solution for 2152 ICRF quasars.

The goal of this IAU symposium is to ensure the world-wide sharing of
the Gaia mission results that will cover the following topics:
astrometry and reference frames, Milky Way galaxy and stellar physics
and the Solar system bodies. 

The next close deadlines are:

November 1st: IAU grant application
December 4: Abstract submission

Registration to the symposium is open. Space is limited.

More details are available at the conference website: 

http://iaus330.sciencesconf.org/

Alejandra Recio-Blanco, Anthony Brown and Timo Prusti (for the SOC)
Patrick de Laverny (for the LOC)

Contact: [email protected]

 

G) VEXAG MEETING #14 – Call FOR PRESENTATIONS 

    AND REGISTRATION
    
Venus Exploration Analysis Group (VEXAG) Meeting #14 will be held 
on Tuesday-Thursday, November 29 – December 1, 2016 at NASA 
Headquarters, James E. Webb Memorial Auditorium, 300 E Street SW, 
Washington, DC.

Current plans are:
November 29, 2016 (Tuesday) – NASA and Mission reports 
                              Poster/Social Event (PM)
November 30, 2016 (Wednesday) – Venus Science and Technology reports
December 1, 2016 (Thursday) – VEXAG activities (adjourn at mid-day)

Presentations on all aspects of Venus science and technology are 
solicited. Presentations on upcoming Venus mission opportunities 
and high-temperature operations are of particular interest. Please 
email your title, a short summary, preference for oral or poster 
presentation to Bob Grimm [email protected], and Tommy 
Thompson, [email protected], by October 28th. Posting of the 
full program is anticipated in early November.

If you’ll be attending in person and haven’t done so already, please 
enter your name on the Meeting Registration/Intent to Attend Form 
on the VEXAG Web-Site:

https://www.hou.usra.edu/meeting_portal/registration/index.cfm?mtg=vexag2016

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ASTRONOMY

     University of Maryland

     College Park, Maryland

 

content/assistant-professor-astronomy-0

 

B) 2017 EXPLORATION POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWSHIP

     IN EARTH AND SPACE SCIENCE

     School of Earth and Space Exploration

     Arizona State University

     Tempe, Arizona

 

content/2017-exploration-postdoctoral-fellowship-earth-and-space-science

 

C) ASSISTANT OR ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR – 

     EXPERIMENTAL SPACE PHYSICS
     University of Iowa

The Department of Physics and Astronomy (http://www.physics.uiowa.edu/)
at the University of Iowa seeks a space physics experimentalist with a 
record of involvement in spaceflight hardware.

Interested applicants should apply at:

http://jobs.uiowa.edu/ 

and refer to requisition #69613. The Department and the College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences are strongly committed to diversity; the
strategic plans of the University and College reflect this commitment. 
All qualified applicants are encouraged to apply and will receive 
consideration for employment free from discrimination on the basis of 
race, creed, color, national origin, age, sex, pregnancy, sexual 
orientation, gender identity, genetic information, religion, 
associational preference, status as a qualified individual with a 
disability, or status as a protected veteran. The University of Iowa 
is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer.

 

D) RESEARCH POSITION AT THE SWEDISH INSTITUTE 

     OF SPACE PHYSICS

The Solar System Physics and Space Technology research programme at 
the Swedish Institute of Space Physics (IRF) invites applications 
for a temporary research position in Space Physics, related to the 
ESA Rosetta mission to comet 67P Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Applications 
are invited both for a 2-year post-doc position and for shorter 
periods for senior guest scientists.

The advertised position is a research position for studies of the 
cometary plasma environment and its interaction with the solar wind 
primarily using ion data from the Ion Composition Analyzer on board 
Rosetta but also using data from the other instruments that form the 
Rosetta Plasma Consortium (RPC).

Previous experience of working with plasma and/or particle data from 
space missions is required. The position, placed in Kiruna, is 
funded by the Swedish Research Council. Post-doc candidates should 
have completed a PhD during 2013 or later. Candidates planning to 
obtain their PhD degree no later than January 2017 can also apply. 
A post-doc candidate should not currently be an active researcher 
at IRF.

Closing date is 7 October 2016.
Ref: 2.2.1-235/16

More information: 

http://www.irf.se/Topical/Vacancies/?group=P3&vacid=22

 

———————————+ 

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 16-36

Issue 16-36, September 21, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. DPS 48/EPSC 11: DEADLINES EXTENDED FOR LATE REGISTRATION AND HOTELS
  2. NASA SCIENCE MISSION DIRECTORATE SEEKING VOLUNTEER REVIEWERS

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

DPS 48/EPSC 11: DEADLINES EXTENDED FOR LATE REGISTRATION AND HOTELS

 

Pasadena, CA, 16-21 October 2016 at the Pasadena Convention Center

https://aas.org/meetings/dps48

 

* Important dates

 

The DPS is grateful to our Meeting Sponsors:

 

ESA

Europlanet

NASA

The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory 

AURA

Nature Astronomy

Southwest Research Institute
Ball Aerospace

Nature Geoscience

Planetary Science Institute

The Planetary Society

Space Science Institute

The University of Arizona Press

Universities Space Research Association (USRA)

VORTICES

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

NASA’S SCIENCE MISSION DIRECTORATE IS SEEKING 

VOLUNTEER REVIEWERS

 

NASA’s Science Mission Directorate is seeking subject matter experts to 

serve as mail-in and/or panel meeting reviewers of proposals to ROSES 

and other solicitations. Just follow the links below to the volunteer review 

forms and click the boxes to indicate the topics in which you consider yourself 

to be a subject matter. If your skills match our needs for this review we will 

contact you to discuss scheduling. 

 

We are currently seeking reviewers for:

 

Concepts for Ocean worlds Life Detection Technology

Earth Science Applications : Ecological Forecasting

Mars Data Analysis

Planetary Science and Technnology Through Analog Research

Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI)

 

The names of the programs above should contain links to those individual 

review forms, but the landing page all of these forms may be found at:

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

 

———————————+

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 16-35

Issue 16-35, September 18, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. DPS LOGO SHIRTS AT LANDS’ END
  2. REMINDERS FOR UPCOMING DPS 48/EPSC 11 DEADLINES
  3. JWST EVENTS AT DPS 48/EPSC 11
  4. NASA SCIENCE MISSION DIRECTORATE SEEKING VOLUNTEER REVIEWERS
  5. DAP-2017 CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
  6. MID-CYCLE OBSERVATIONS WITH HST
  7. AGU-JPGU JOINT MEETING MAY 20-25, 2017
  8. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

DPS LOGO SHIRTS AT LANDS’ END 

For those of you who want to sport pride in your professional society at this fall’s 

meeting, you can now order Lands’ End apparel festooned with the DPS logo.  

To do so, login or register at business.landsend.com and use the logo #1479609 

and the customer #4348569.  They usually turn orders around in 2 weeks or so, 

so there’s still time to have orders delivered before you leave for Pasadena!

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

REMINDERS FOR UPCOMING DPS 48/EPSC 11 DEADLINES

 

Pasadena, CA, 16-21 October 2016 at the Pasadena Convention Center

https://aas.org/meetings/dps48

 

* Important date

 

– 21 September: Open Mic Submissions Deadline

 

The DPS is grateful to our Meeting Sponsors:

 

ESA

Europlanet

NASA

The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory 

AURA

Nature Astronomy

Southwest Research Institute
Ball Aerospace

Nature Geoscience

Planetary Science Institute

The Planetary Society

Space Science Institute

The University of Arizona Press

Universities Space Research Association (USRA)

VORTICES

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

JWST EVENTS AT DPS 48/EPSC 11

 

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is scheduled to launch in October 2018, 

and the first proposal deadlines are quickly approaching over the next 18 months. 

The project and STScI are working on a series of workshops and events to help

 prepare the community with proposal tools, capabilities, opportunities, and deadlines.

 

At the DPS 48/EPSC 11 Meeting, the JWST will host two events as follows:

 

Sunday, October 16 from 1:00pm-4:00pm there will be a JWST Early Release 

Science (ERS) Program Workshop in C106 at the Pasadena Convention Center.  

This workshop will help prepare the community for ERS proposals with proposal

preparation demonstration and community discussion.  ERS proposals will be due 

in the Spring 2017! The workshop will be available to individuals unable to attend 

the meeting via WebEx and connection details will be posted soon here:

https://jwst.stsci.edu/science-planning/science-corner/planetary-systems-and-the-origin

 

On Tuesday, October 18  from 12:00pm-1:30pm JWST will hold a Townhall event 

“Observing the Solar System with the JWST”  in C107 at the Pasadena Convention 

Center.  Lunch will be provided to the first 50 participants (Registration for the event 

is not required) – sponsored by Ball Aerospace.  A special presentation will be given 

by Will Grundy (Lowell Observatory) as well as status and updates for solar system 

observations.

 

STScI has already begun a series of webinars which have been recorded and are 

available here along with a future schedule:

https://confluence.stsci.edu/display/JWSTLC/JWST+Community+Webinars.

To receive future announcements and reminders, please send a blank email to 

[email protected].  

Subscribers will receive an email back with a link to click to confirm their intent 

to join.  If you have any questions, please feel free to contact Stefanie Milam 

(Stefanie.n.milam  nasa.gov).

___________________________________________________________________________

Mission Concept Briefing on the Far-IR Surveyor

 

Latest updates on the mission concept for the Far-IR Survey will be presented 

at the upcoming DPS 48/EPSC 11 Meeting on Monday, October 17 from 

12:30pm-2:00pm in Ballroom F at the Pasadena Convention Center.  

 

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://asd.gsfc.nasa.gov/firs/) and has a charter to deliver a competitive mission 

concept for the next Astrophysics decadal survey.

Members of the Solar System Community are encouraged to participate in this 

meeting to hear about the anticipated mission architecture, key science goals, and 

future activities to help define a competitive mission concept for the next 

generation space observatory. 

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

NASA’S SCIENCE MISSION DIRECTORATE IS SEEKING 

VOLUNTEER REVIEWERS

 

NASA’s Science Mission Directorate is seeking subject matter experts to 

serve as mail-in and/or panel meeting reviewers of proposals to ROSES 

and other solicitations. Just follow the links below to the volunteer review 

forms and click the boxes to indicate the topics in which you consider yourself 

to be a subject matter. If your skills match our needs for this review we will 

contact you to discuss scheduling. 

 

We are currently seeking reviewers for:

 

Concepts for Ocean worlds Life Detection Technology

Earth Science Applications: Ecological Forecasting

Mars Data Analysis

Planetary Science and Technology Through Analog Research

Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI)

 

The names of the programs above should contain links to those individual 

review forms, but the landing page all of these forms may be found at:

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

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

DAP-2017 CALL FOR ABSTRACTS

The Dust, Atmosphere and Plasma environment of the Moon and Small 
Bodies (DAP-2017) workshop will be held at LASP in Boulder, Colorado on 
January 11-13, 2017. The workshop will be a forum to (i) discuss 
current understanding of the surface environment of the Moon, the moons 
of Mars, and comets and asteroids, (ii) share new results from past and 
ongoing missions to airless bodies and comets, and (iii) describe 
expectations for planned upcoming missions to airless bodies and 
comets. The meeting web site is hosted at: 

http://impact.colorado.edu/dap_meeting.html

DAP-2017 is a NASA/SSERVI follow up on two previous NASA/NLSI-SSERVI 
workshops, LDAP-2010 and DAP-2012. Contributions to LDAP-2010 and 
DAP-2012 were published in special issues of Planetary and Space 
Sciences. A similar volume is planned to report the contributions to 
DAP-2017.

The workshop is hosted by M. Horanyi and A. Stern, and supported by 
NASA’s Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI): 
Institute for Modeling Plasma, Atmospheres, and Cosmic Dust 
(IMPACT), the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP), and 
the Center for Integrated Plasma Studies (CIPS) of the University of 
Colorado.

The DAP-2017 abstract deadline is Sept. 30th, 2016; submit your 
abstract to [email protected]

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

MID-CYCLE OBSERVATIONS WITH HST 

Proposers are reminded of the upcoming deadline for Mid-Cycle GO 
proposals. Mid-Cycle GO proposals MUST meet the following prime 
criteria: 

1. Proposers must provide an explanation of why the proposal could not 
have been submitted in response to the standard annual Call for 
Proposals: for example, the target source may have been identified 
subsequent to the most recent proposal deadline. 

2. Proposers must provide a clear description of the scientific urgency 
of these observations and why they should be executed in the present 
cycle. 

Mid-Cycle GO proposals will also have the following characteristics: 

· Proposals are limited to requesting no more than 10 orbits; 

· Observations should have minimal constraints to maximize scheduling 
flexibility; 

· Observations taken for accepted programs will have a proprietary 
period of no more than 3 months; 

· Proposals may request only HST time – joint proposals are not 
permitted; 

· Proposers may apply for all available instruments. Proposals must be 
compliant with the technical restrictions described in the Cycle 24 Call 
for Proposals. 

PROPOSAL SUBMISSION AND REVIEW 

Proposals should be submitted via the Astronomer’s Proposal Tool (APT) 
as type GO, using the Mid-Cycle template for the pdf attachment. 
Proposals may be submitted by 23:59 pm on September 30, 2016; valid 
proposals submitted after that deadline will be held over for the second 
mid-cycle Cycle 24 review in February 2017. The proposals will be 
distributed for review by members of the community, with the results 
released by mid-November. There are no restrictions on re-submitting 
unsuccessful proposals in response to the Cycle 25 Call, which has a 
deadline of April 7, 2017. 

Full details are found at: 
http://www.stsci.edu/hst/proposing/mid-cycle-submission [1]. 

Links: 
—— 
[1] http://www.stsci.edu/hst/proposing/mid-cycle-submission 
[2] https://proper.stsci.edu/proper/subscriptions/optout/odtb_1ht

 

7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7

AGU-JPGU JOINT MEETING MAY 20-25, 2017
 

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

Geophysical Union will be held from May 20-25, 2017 in Chiba, Japan 

(http://www.jpgu.org/index-e/). The meeting covers frontier research in all 

areas of Space and Planetary Science, Solid Earth, Atmosphere and 

Hydrosphere Science, Biogeoscience, and Human Geoscience.  The program 

committee, consisting of members from both Unions, welcomes you to submit 

your session proposals at http://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2017/.

 

The call is open from Sept. 1 – Oct. 13, 2016 5 PM JST.  

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

 

8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) FACULTY POSITION IN PLANETARY 

     MINERALOGY/PETROLOGY/GEOCHEMISTRY

     Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences

     University of Tennessee

     Knoxville, Tennessee

 

content/faculty-position-planetary-mineralogypetrologygeochemistry

 

B) CO-INVESTIGATOR NEEDED FOR NEO FOLLOW-UP PROJECT

http://www.tenagraobservatories.com

Must have good telescope skills and experience, especially hands on 
with sub 1.0-m telescopes of all kinds and a variety of CCD cameras, 
extensive experience in astrometry of MPs (especially NEOs). Must be 
able to stand in for PI, manage data analyst and programmer as well as 
manage 3 telescopes, two on-site in S. Arizona and one remote in the 
Sierra Nevada in California. Must live local to S. Arizona and have 
own car. Experience in programing, especially Visual Basic and FORTRAN, 
a definite plus. This is a VERY hands-on position requiring learning 
Tenagra Observatories’ NEO nightly triage and tools for morning 
analysis output from moving body detection system as well as trouble 
shooting 3 telescopes. Candidates must have a high level of 
independence and creative solutions from hardware to software. Some 
overseas travel necessary.

Position begins 1/1/17 and ends 12/31/20.

Contact: Michael Schwartz, [email protected]

 

C) CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: IMPRS PHD POSITIONS 

     IN SOLAR SYSTEM SCIENCE IN GÖTTINGEN, GERMANY

     DEADLINE NOVEMBER 15, 2016

Dear colleague,

The International Max Planck Research School for Solar System Science
at the University of Göttingen ( http://www.solar-system-school.de )
invites applications for several PhD positions.

I would be grateful if you could distribute the announcement below to
your institute’s mailing list and specifically bring it to the attention
of students.

If you wish, you can also download and post the announcement as well as
our poster from

https://www.mps.mpg.de/phd/applynow

Files:
https://www.mps.mpg.de/phd/solar-system-school-call-2016.pdf
https://www.mps.mpg.de/phd/solar-system-school-poster-2016.pdf
https://www.mps.mpg.de/phd/solar-system-school-poster-imprs-2016.jpg

or share the facebook post at https://www.facebook.com/MPSGoettingen

Thank you very much for your consideration,
Sonja Schuh

 

D) TENURE TRACK W2/W3 PROFESSORSHIP IN EXPERIMENTAL 

     PLANETOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF BAYREUTH

 

The University of Bayreuth is a research-oriented university with 

internationally competitive and interdisciplinary profile fields in 

research and teaching. At the Bavarian Research Institute of 

Experimental Geochemistry & Geophysics (Bayerisches Geoinstitut) of 

the University of Bayreuth applications are invited for a tenure 

track W2/W3 professorship in Experimental Planetology.

 

The position will be initially filled at the associate professor level 

(W2) but can be converted to a full professorship (W3) upon successful 

demonstration of excellence in research and teaching. The Bayerisches 

Geoinstitut is seeking an outstanding scientist with broad experience 

in experimental methods to investigate aspects of planetary formation, 

evolution and tectonic processes. Candidates are sought from the fields 

of experimental petrology, geochemistry and geophysics whose research 

interests embrace the study of the origin, composition, structure and 

dynamics of planets and, in particular, planetary interiors. 

 

Please send your cover letter, CV, a publications list, a list of

courses taught, your certificates, and a description of your research 

to the Dean of the Faculty of Biology, Chemistry and Earth Sciences by 

26.10.2016. Please also submit an identical copy of your application 

as a single PDF file (up to 30 MB) to [email protected].

 

E) GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY ASSISTANT/ASSOCIATE 

     PROFESSOR, EXTRASOLAR PLANETS

 

The George Mason University (htt://www.gmu.edu/) Department of Physics 

and Astronomy invites candidates a tenure-track faculty position in 

Extrasolar Planets. George Mason University has a strong institutional 

commitment to the achievement of excellence and diversity among its 

faculty and staff, and strongly encourages candidates to apply who 

will enrich Mason’s academic and culturally inclusive environment. 

 

Responsibilities: 

The successful candidate is expected to carry out a vigorous and 

externally funded research program; teach courses at the undergraduate 

and graduate levels; and provide service activities. 

 

Qualifications: 

Applicants must have completed a Ph.D. in physics, astronomy, or a 

closely related field, prior to the first day of this appointment. 

Well-qualified candidates will have postdoctoral research experience 

and show promise for developing an independent and externally funded 

research program. Consideration for expertise in observational and 

theoretical studies of extrasolar planets including detection, 

characterization and formation and evolution. 

 

For a complete listing of duties and qualifications, and to apply for 

position F9967z, go to: 

 

http://jobs.gmu.edu/ 

 

George Mason University is an EO/AA employer. All qualified applicants 

will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, 

color, religion, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, national 

origin, disability, or protected 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].