Newsletter 16-34

Issue 16-34, September 9, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. DPS/EPSC WOMEN IN PLANETARY SCIENCE DISCUSSION HOUR 2016
  2. REMINDERS FOR UPCOMING DPS 48/EPSC 11 DEADLINES
  3. REQUEST FOR PLANETARY SCIENCE CONCEPTS FOR CUBESATS/SMALLSATS
  4. CALL FOR PROPOSALS FOR THE NASA INFRARED TELESCOPE FACILITY
  5. A WORKSHOP FOR EARLY–CAREER ASTRONOMERS WHO WANT TO DO BETTER OUTREACH
  6. ASTEROID REDIRECT MISSION VIRTUAL INDUSTRY DAY
  7. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

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DPS/EPSC WOMEN IN PLANETARY SCIENCE DISCUSSION HOUR 2016

 

Join us on Tuesday, Oct. 18th from 12:00-1:30 pm for the annual DPS/EPSC 

Women in Planetary Science event in room C106 of the Pasadena Convention 

Center (conference venue).  The discussion this year will focus on “Being an 

Ally” and related planetary science demographic information.  All are welcome!

 

Due to the generosity of the DPS committee we will be able to provide boxed l

unches this year.  Pre-registration at http://bit.ly/DPS_WIPS_2016 is required 

due to space limitations. 

 

Lunch orders must be placed by SEPTEMBER 15TH.  

 

Contact [email protected] with questions.  

 

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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 dates

 

– 14 September: Hotel Reservations Deadline

– 15 September: Women in Planetary Science Lunch Order Deadline

– 16 September: Dependent Care Grant Application Deadline

– 16 September: Late Registration Deadline

– 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

 

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REQUEST FOR PLANETARY SCIENCE CONCEPTS FOR CUBESATS/SMALLSATS

 

As Mike Seablom discussed during the August OPAG meeting, the NASA 

Space Mission Directorate, SMD, and STMD are surveying mission concepts 

for small satellites. If you have planetary science concepts that you could 

provide, that would greatly help him respond to OMB and OSTP (which 

could be good for us!). The concepts could include daughter-craft, swarms, 

formations, or stand-alone SmallSats/CubeSats.

 

For the survey, we want ideas at a fairly high level that are shared with the 

community and therefore should not be proprietary. These concepts do not 

have to be at the detailed level, so it is not in conflict with the SmallSat 

solicitation call that just came out, which will not be shared publicly.

 

To submit a concept, please use the format in the PowerPoint file provided

After completion, send the file to Patricia Beauchamp at

[email protected] no later than September 30, 2016. 

She will collect all the material and forward it to Mike.

 

A copy of this notice is also available on the OPAG website at

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/opag/request-cubesats-smallsats/.

 

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CALL FOR PROPOSALS FOR THE NASA INFRARED TELESCOPE FACILITY

 

DEADLINE: Monday 03 October 2016

 

NASA Infrared Telescope Facility Observing Proposals. The due date for the 

2017A semester (February 1, 2017 to July 31, 2017) is Monday, October 3, 2016. 

See our online submission form, which is available for proposal submission from 

12:00AM on September 01, 2016 until 5:00PM on October 03, 2016 HST. 

 

Available instruments include: (1) SpeX, a 0.7 – 5.3 micron cross-dispersed 

medium-resolution spectrograph (up to R=2,500) and imager; (2) MORIS, a 

512×512 pixel Andor CCD camera (60″x60″ field-of-view) mounted at the 

side-facing window of the SpeX cryostat that can be used simultaneously with 

SpeX; (3) iSHELL, a 1.1 – 5.3 micron cross-dispersed echelle spectrograph 

(up to R=70,000) and imager. Information on available instruments and 

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

 

PI-led visitor instruments (available on a collaborative basis with the instrument 

team) include: TEXES (5-20 micron high-resolution spectrograph; contact 

Matt Richter at [email protected] for more information), BASS 

(3-14 micron spectrometer; contact Ray Russell at [email protected])

and CELESTE (5-25 micron echelle spectrometer; contact Don Jennings at 

[email protected]).

 

Remote observing is available with SpeX, MORIS, and iSHELL. Requests 

for remote observing must be made in the proposal application – later requests 

will be considered if requested at least one month ahead of time. If you wish 

to observe from your home institution, you must comply with the requirements 

for video conferencing and instrument operation provided on the 

Remote Observers Information page. Observers are strongly encouraged to

contact Miranda Hawarden-Ogata ([email protected]) to set up a test 

of the video link and user interface at least one month prior to their observing 

run. We cannot guarantee a successful remote observing connection on short 

notice since we have no control of hardware and software compatibility on 

the user’s side. It is the responsibility of the PI to provide up to date observing

contact information.

 

To keep our bibliography up to date, and to ensure future funding of the 

IRTF, we ask that you send us citations to your latest IRTF publications. 

You can check your publications using our website bibliography page for 

refereed papers:

http://irtfweb.ifa.hawaii.edu/research/biblio/publications.html

 

Please send any missing references to Bobby Bus ([email protected]),

and please continue to include in your paper the acknowledgement to the 

IRTF and the name of the instrument used as described at:

http://irtfweb.ifa.hawaii.edu/research/acknowledge.php

 

Important Notice: A new policy regarding the public archiving of IRTF 

data has been put in place, effective August 1, 2016. Raw data files taken 

with IRTF facility instruments after August 1, 2016 will be made publicly 

available via an online archive after a proprietary period of 18 months 

from the date of observation. As part of the archive process, the abstract 

field on the proposal form has been increased to 300 words. This abstract 

should now include summaries of both the scientific and technical 

justifications for the observing program, and will be preserved as part 

of the public archive.

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

A WORKSHOP FOR EARLY-CAREER ASTRONOMERS 

WHO WANT TO DO BETTER OUTREACH

 

(Tuesday and Wednesday, Jan 3 & 4, 2017 at the start of the American 

Astronomical Society Meeting near Dallas, TX)

 

The American Astronomical Society is sponsoring a skill-building workshop 

— and an ongoing community — to support early-career astronomers (graduate 

students, post-docs, recent faculty) in doing effective outreach to schools, 

families, and the public.  Working with the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 

and other outreach organizations, the AAS Astronomy Ambassadors program 

(now in its fifth year) offers you two days of hands-on training, extensive 

resources and pre-tested activities (plus a like-minded group of peers.)  If you 

are a younger astronomer with an interest in spending a fraction of your time 

helping students or the public become more scientifically literate, this is an 

invitation to join the growing Ambassadors community. 

 

Among many other topics, we will discuss the opportunity for astronomy 

education represented by the Aug. 21, 2017 “All-American” eclipse of the 

Sun, and what programs, resources, and ideas are already being developed 

to help you do classroom and public outreach for it.

 

For now, some of the costs are being underwritten by the AAS Council (so 

registration and materials are free; and one night’s lodging can be provided).  

The workshop for the “Astronomy Ambassadors” program will be held on the 

day before and part of the first day of the January 2017 AAS meeting. 

Participants will spend two active days learning techniques, examining 

selected materials, and getting to know both each other and an existing 

community of astronomers who do and support outreach activities.  There will 

be sessions appropriate for those who have done outreach already and for 

those who are just beginners. No experience is required. We especially want 

to encourage participation by members of groups underrepresented in science.

 

Applications are due by no later than Oct. 17, 2016. 

 

For more about the program, see: 

http://aas.org/outreach/aas-astronomy-ambassadors-program

 

For more information about the 2017 workshop, visit: 

https://aas.org/meetings/aas229/aas-astronomy-ambassadors-workshop

 

To complete an online application, go to: 

https://aas.org/content/aas-astronomy-ambassadors-program-2017-application

 

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

ASTEROID REDIRECT MISSION VIRTUAL INDUSTRY DAY

 

On Sept. 14, 2016, NASA will host a live Asteroid Redirect Mission Virtual 

Industry Day at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. 

The event is open to the public for virtual participation only, and follows 

the Sept. 6 release of the Asteroid Redirect Mission Umbrella for Partnerships

(ARM-UP) Broad Agency Announcement (BAA), and its two appendices:

The Industry Day will provide an ARM status update, an introduction to the 

BAA and Appendices A and B, and also will include an overview of the mission’s 

progress since the last Asteroid Redirect Mission Community Update in Oct. 2015. 

The virtual event will be streamed live through Adobe Connect, and viewers will 

be able to ask questions throughout the event. 

 

The stream will be accessible starting at 12 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, Sept. 14: 

http://connect.arc.nasa.gov/arm-update-2016/.

 

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JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCHER IN PLANETARY SCIENCE

      Space Sector Department

      The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

      Laurel, Maryland

 

content/postdoctoral-researcher-planetary-science-0

 

B) TENURE-TRACK ASTRONOMER

     SCIENTIST

     Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI)

     Baltimore, Maryland

 

The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) has immediate openings for 
tenure-track Astronomer (50% research, 50% mission support) and Scientist 
(20% research, 80% mission support) positions. STScI operates the Hubble 
Space Telescope, will be the science operations center for the James Webb 
Space Telescope, and is involved in other observatories, missions and 
mission studies. Candidates must have a Ph.D. or equivalent degree in 
astronomy, planetary science, or a related field. Experience with space- 
or ground-based observations, observatory  systems, instruments, or data 
archives is particularly sought, and theoretical, computational and data 
analysis skills are also valuable. Applications are due Oct. 31, 2016. 
Further details may be found at: 

https://rn11.ultipro.com/SPA1004/JobBoard/listjobs.aspx?__VT=ExtCan 

Job # 16-0223 – Astronomer 
Job # 16-0224 – Scientist

 

C) TENURE TRACK ASSISTANT PROFESSOR

     Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences

     Massachusetts Institute of Technology

     Cambridge, Massachusetts

 

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/planetary_news/2016/09/05/job-opportunities-tenure-track-assistant-professor-at-mit/

 

———————————+

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 16-33

Issue 16-33, September 5, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. REMINDERS FOR UPCOMING DPS 48/EPSC 11 DEADLINES
  2. COMPUTATIONAL ADVANCES IN SOLAR SYSTEM STUDIES
  3. MAPSIT ASSESSMENT GROUP
  4. 32nd MEPAG MEEETING 2nd INFORMATION CIRCULAR
  5. BIG DATA CHALLENGES, RESEARCH, AND TECNOLOGIES IN THE EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCES
  6.  JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

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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 dates

 

– 14 September: Hotel Reservations Deadline

– 16 September: Dependent Care Grant Application Deadline

– 16 September: Late Registration Deadline

– 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

Space Science Institute

The University of Arizona Press

Universities Space Research Association (USRA)

VORTICES

 

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COMPUTATIONAL ADVANCES IN SOLAR SYSTEM STUDIES

 

Computing in Science & Engineering (CiSE) magazine announces an 

opportunity to contribute to a special issue about  Computational Advances i

n Solar System Studies. Submission deadline is November 1, 2016.

 

See the call for articles at:

https://www.computer.org/web/computingnow/cscfp4

 

Computing in Science & Engineering (CiSE) magazine features the 

latest computational science and engineering research in an accessible 

format, along with departments covering news and analysis, computational 

science and engineering in education, and emerging technologies.

 

See https://www.computer.org/web/peer-review/magazines for

general author guidelines.

 

Questions? Contact guest editors Lucy McFadden and 

Nargess Memarsadeghi at [email protected]    

 

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MAPSIT ASSESSMENT GROUP

MAPSIT, the Mapping and Planetary Spatial Information Team, is a new 
NASA Assessment Group that is seeking steering committee membership, 
including international. We consider all aspects of planetary data, 
from collection, to processing, to incorporation into regional and 
global products and maps, and finally to storage and accessibility. 
We seek to identify and prioritize community needs and to increase 
the utility of our international spacecraft data. We will accept 
nominations (including self-nominations) consisting of one paragraph 
about how your involvement will benefit MAPSIT, plus your CV, sent 
to [email protected] by 30 September 2016. The MAPSIT steering committee 
will decide between these nominations, considering how to retain 
expertise in tools and methods and to maintain balance between 
science, disciplines and institutions. Visit:

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/mapsit/ 

for more information on MAPSIT.

 

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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%20Information%20Circular_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

 

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BIG DATA CHALLENGES, RESEARCH, AND TECHNOLOGIES 

IN THE EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCES

http://geo-bigdata.github.io/

Part of IEEE International Big Data Conference 2016, Washington D.C.
Monday, December 5th, 2016

Paper submissions due September 25th, 2016

A new paradigm is needed in order to increase the productivity and 
effectiveness of scientific data analysis for Earth and planetary 
science investigation. This paradigm must recognize that architectural 
and analytical choices are interrelated, and must be carefully 
coordinated in any system that aims to allow efficient, interactive 
scientific exploration and discovery to exploit massive data 
collections, from point of collection to analysis and decision support.

Both observational systems and data centers will be needed as part 
of this new paradigm, which includes the significant increase in size 
and complexity of science data as well as new approaches across the 
entire data lifecycle from capture to management and analysis of 
the data.

This workshop builds off of two successful previous workshops that 
have merged to offer a comprehensive venue for all aspects of Big 
Data in the Earth and Planetary Sciences. We seek computational and 
data science experts to present on their research and discuss Big Data 
roadmaps, architectures, technologies, and methodologies for future 
Earth and planetary science data challenges emerging from both 
instrumentation and data access and analytics.
 

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JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ASTRONOMY

      Department of Astronomy

      Cornell University

      Ithaca, New York

 

content/assistant-professor-astronomy

 

B) POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCHER IN OBSERVATIONAL 

      STUDIES OF EXOPLANETS

     Centre for Space and Habitability

     University of Bern

     Bern, Switzerland

 

node/1708

 

C) PH. D. POSITIONS IN SOLAR SYSTEM SCIENCE

     International Max Planck Research School for Solar System Science

     Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research

     Gottingen, Germany

 

content/phd-positions-solar-system-science-göttingen-germany-deadline-15-november-2016

 

D) ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ASTRONOMY

     AND/OR PLANETARY SCIENCE

     Department of Physics and Astronomy

     Northern Arizona University

     Flagstaff, Arizona

 

content/assistant-professor-astronomy-andor-planetary-science     

 

E) LECTURESHIP/ASSISTANT PROFESSOR POSITIONS (3 POSTS)

     Department of Physics

     University of Warwick

     Warwick, United Kingdom

 

node/1711

 

———————————+

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: Students At DPS 48/EPSC 11

As we here at the DPS gear up for this Fall’s joint meeting in Pasadena, we’d like to extend a special invitation to students to attend and participate in the conference. I think that DPS is the most student-friendly annual planetary meeting.  We have a high proportion of abstracts that get oral talks, and a special category of dissertation talk to ensure that every student gets exposure prior to hitting the postdoc market.  We also hold special events specially targeted to students, starting with the Student & Postdoc Reception on Sunday night at 5:00PM before the official Opening Reception.  The Student Reception is your opportunity to relax with your peers, and to make the friendships and start the collaborations that will continue for your entire career.  And all of this without the pressure of needing to present yourself to potential future employers.  

On Tuesday morning we hold the Student Breakfast.  This one should be a no-brainer — a free hot breakfast for all early-career planetary scientists (students and postdocs).  All of the DPS Committee Leadership will attend the breakfast for the explicit purpose of hearing student concerns so that the society can respond to the needs of its most junior members.  Note that we no longer require registration for the Student Breakfast:  just show up at 7:30AM on Tuesday morning because it will be worth getting up early for.  

And finally on Wednesday evening we hold the annual Banquet, your chance to hob-nob with the field’s senior scientists over a social dinner.  To encourage student attendance at the Banquet this year the DPS Committee voted to offer a special student rate of just $55 (instead of the standard $80).  That discount puts the price of the banquet enough under Pasadena’s per diem ($64) for students to attend the banquet and still eat the rest of the day.  No more excuses about not being able to afford the Banquet, then!  We hope that this financial encouragement and the excitement of our second annual Open Mic night to follow will serve to reinvigorate junior member attendance at the Banquet.  

Along with Local Organizing Committee Chair Diana Blaney and the AAS Meetings staff I just returned from a site visit to the Pasadena Convention Center this past Monday. The team has a great meeting planned, and we hope to see all of you students there in Pasadena,  

Jason W. Barnes
DPS Chair

Message From The FRS: Call To Action This Week – Please Contact Your Members Of Congress

This week we are asking each member of the DPS to contact his/her members of Congress to encourage strong support for planetary science. In Fiscal Year 2016 Congress appropriated $1.63B for planetary science and we want to be sure that the FY2017 appropriation is at least at that level. While we hope that Congress can pass appropriations in regular order it is likely that there will be a continuing resolution of some duration passed by the end of this fiscal year. There is a lot of uncertainty there but Congressional support for planetary science has been very strong in recent years; we want to encourage that to continue. Congress is currently in August recess so staff members are less busy with the day-to-day demands of the Hill. When Congress reconvenes in September there will be a lot of activity surrounding current events, getting an FY2017 appropriation together, and the election. So this coming week gives us an opportunity to get out a positive message regarding support for planetary science. 

For details of this call to action please go to 

public-policy/action-alerts 

and if you have any questions please feel free to contact Makenzie Lystrup, and please distribute through social media and other avenues!

 

28 Aug 2016

Newsletter 16-32

Issue 16-32, August 28, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. MESSAGE FROM THE FRS: CALL TO ACTION THIS WEEK – PLEASE CONTACT YOUR MEMBERS OF CONGRESS
  2. MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: STUDENTS AT DPS 48/EPSC 11
  3. REMINDERS FOR UPCOMING DPS 48/EPSC 11 DEADLINES
  4. ANNOUNCEMENT OF SPECIAL ISSUE OF ADVANCES IN SPACE RESEARCH ON SMALL BODY SCIENCE AND EXPLORATION
  5. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES
  6. REGISTRATION OPEN FOR THE ACADEMIES’ SEARCH FOR LIFE WORKSHOP

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

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MESSAGE FROM THE FRS: CALL TO ACTION THIS WEEK – 

PLEASE CONTACT YOUR MEMBERS OF CONGRESS

 

This week we are asking each member of the DPS to contact his/her members 

of Congress to encourage strong support for planetary science. In Fiscal Year 

2016 Congress appropriated $1.63B for planetary science and we want to be 

sure that the FY2017 appropriation is at least at that level. While we hope that 

Congress can pass appropriations in regular order it is likely that there will be 

a continuing resolution of some duration passed by the end of this fiscal year. 

There is a lot of uncertainty there but Congressional support for planetary science 

has been very strong in recent years; we want to encourage that to continue. 

Congress is currently in August recess so staff members are less busy with the 

day-to-day demands of the Hill. When Congress reconvenes in September there 

will be a lot of activity surrounding current events, getting an FY2017 

appropriation together, and the election. So this coming week gives us an 

opportunity to get out a positive message regarding support for planetary science. 

 

For details of this call to action please go to 

public-policy/action-alerts 

and if you have any questions please feel free to contact Makenzie Lystrup at

[email protected].

And please distribute through social media and other avenues!

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: STUDENTS AT DPS 48/EPSC 11

 

As we here at the DPS gear up for this Fall’s joint meeting in Pasadena, we’d like 

to extend a special invitation to students to attend and participate in the conference.  

I think that DPS is the most student-friendly annual planetary meeting.  We have 

a high proportion of abstracts that get oral talks, and a special category of 

dissertation talk to ensure that every student gets exposure prior to hitting the 

postdoc market.  We also hold special events specially targeted to students, 

starting with the Student & Postdoc Reception on Sunday night at 5:00PM before 

the official Opening Reception.  The Student Reception is your opportunity to 

relax with your peers, and to make the friendships and start the collaborations 

that will continue for your entire career.  And all of this without the pressure of 

needing to present yourself to potential future employers.  

 

On Tuesday morning we hold the Student Breakfast.  This one should be a 

no-brainer — a free hot breakfast for all early-career planetary scientists 

(students and postdocs).  All of the DPS Committee Leadership will attend the 

breakfast for the explicit purpose of hearing student concerns so that the society 

can respond to the needs of its most junior members.  Note that we no longer 

require registration for the Student Breakfast:  just show up at 7:30AM on 

Tuesday morning because it will be worth getting up early for.  

 

And finally on Wednesday evening we hold the annual Banquet, your chance 

to hob-nob with the field’s senior scientists over a social dinner.  To encourage 

student attendance at the Banquet this year the DPS Committee voted to offer 

a special student rate of just $55 (instead of the standard $80).  That discount 

puts the price of the banquet enough under Pasadena’s per diem ($64) for 

students to attend the banquet and still eat the rest of the day.  No more excuses 

about not being able to afford the Banquet, then!  We hope that this financial 

encouragement and the excitement of our second annual Open Mic night to 

follow will serve to reinvigorate junior member attendance at the Banquet.  

 

Along with Local Organizing Committee Chair Diana Blaney and the AAS 

Meetings staff I just returned from a site visit to the Pasadena Convention 

Center this past Monday.  The team has a great meeting planned, and we 

hope to see all of you students there in Pasadena,  

 

Jason W. Barnes 

DPS Chair

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

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 dates

 

– 14 September 2016: Hotel Reservations Deadline

– 16 September 2016: Dependent Care Grant Application Deadline

– 16 September 2016: Late Registration 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

Space Science Institute

The University of Arizona Press

Universities Space Research Association (USRA)

VORTICES

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

ANNOUNCEMENT OF A SPECIAL ISSUE OF ADVANCES IN SPACE 

RESEARCH ON SMALL BODY SCIENCE AND EXPLORATION

                                                                                                      

Papers are invited for a special topical issue of Advances in Space Research 

(ASR) entitled “Past, Present and Future of Small Body Science and 

Exploration” that was proposed within the 41st COSPAR 2016 Scientific 

Assembly.

 

This special issue is open to all scientists that want to share their results with 

the scientific community about small body science connected to space exploration. 

The year 2016 has seen an incredible burst in the Space mission activities to 

minor bodies, leading to tremendous or surprising results. Huge amount of data 

are/were returned from investigations of a cometary nucleus by Rosetta, Ceres 

by Dawn, and Pluto by New Horizons. While space observatories HST, 

HERSCHEL, WISE, Gaia collect their large datasets on remote, Hayabusa-2

and OSIRIS-REx will be on their ways to primitive asteroids for sample returns 

and future missions are studied for Phobos, activated asteroids, Jupiter Trojans, 

binary asteroid, planetary defense, human exploration, etc. The present special 

issue welcomes contributions that have a Scientific, Technical or Instrumental 

focus and serves as a crossroad of recent results and future prospects of small 

body explorations.

 

Papers must be submitted electronically to http://ees.elsevier.com/asr. To ensure 

that all manuscripts are correctly identified for inclusion into the special issue, 

authors must select “Special Issue: Small Body Exploration” when they reach 

the “Article Type” step in the submission process.  The deadline for 

submissions is 31 January 2017.

 

Questions can be directed to Drs. Palomba, Hestroffer or to the Co-Editor 

for Special Issues, Dr. Peggy Ann Shea ([email protected]).

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) TENURE TRACK ASSISTANT PROFESSOR

      Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences

      Massachusetts Institute Of Technology

      Cambridge, Massachusetts

 

The Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences at the 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology invites qualified candidates to 

apply for a tenure track position at the assistant professor level beginning 

July 2017 or thereafter.  Applicants with research interests in Planetary 

Science are encouraged to apply. We seek an outstanding scientist with

interest in and potential for innovation and leadership in teaching at the 

undergraduate and graduate levels and research. The search is in the broad 

area of Planetary Science encompassing our Solar System as well as 

exoplanets, including theory, observation, and instrumentation.  However, 

we are especially interested in individuals whose research complements 

existing MIT expertise. 

 

Applicants must hold a Ph.D. in Planetary Science or related field by the

start of employment and must demonstrate ability to excel in teaching. A 

complete application must include curriculum vitae, two-page description 

of research and teaching plans and three letters of recommendations.

 

Applications are being accepted at Academic Jobs Online: 

https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/7724  To receive full consideration, 

complete applications must be received by:  December 1, 2016.

 

Search Contact: Ms. Karen Fosher, HR Administrator, EAPS, 54-924

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, 

Cambridge, MA 02139-4307, email: [email protected]

 

MIT is an equal employment opportunity employer. All qualified applicants 

will receive consideration for employment and will not be discriminated 

against on the basis of race, color, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, 

religion, disability, age, genetic information, veteran status, ancestry, or 

national or ethnic origin.

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

REGISTRATION OPEN FOR THE ACADEMIES’ SEARCH FOR LIFE WORKSHOP

 

The Space Studies Board of the National Academies of Sciences, 

Engineering, and Medicine is hosting a workshop and poster session to 

explore the current status of activities to detect extraterrestrial 

life in the solar system and extrasolar planetary systems. The 

workshop will feature presentations from experts on the environmental 

limits of life, habitable environments in the solar system and beyond, 

extraterrestrial biosignatures, and life detection techniques and 

instrumentation.

 

The workshop will take place at the Beckman Center in Irvine, CA on 

December 5-6, 2016.  To register as a poster presenter or participant 

and learn more about the workshop, please visit: 

 

http://SearchingForLife.eventbrite.com.  

 

The deadline for poster abstracts is November 7, 2016.

 

For those unable to attend in person, the live workshop webcast will 

be available at: 

 

https://livestream.com/accounts/15221519/events/6098927.

 

———————————+ 

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 16-31

Issue 16-31, August 24, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. REMINDERS FOR UPCOMING DPS48/EPSC 11 DEADLINES
  2. NEW HORIZONS KUIPER BELT EXTENDED MISSION SCIENCE PLANNING OPPORTUNITY
  3. ANNOUNCEMENT OF UPCOMING ASTEROID REDIRECT MISSION OPPORTUNITIES
  4. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES
  5. UPCOMING MEETINGS

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

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 dates

 

– 14 September 2016: Hotel Reservations Deadline

– 16 Septembar 2016: Dependent Care Grant Application Deadline

 

The DPS is grateful to our Meeting Sponsors:

 

The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory 

AURA

Nature Astronomy

Southwest Research Institute
Ball Aerospace

Nature Geoscience

Space Science Institute

The University of Arizona Press

Universities Space Research Association (USRA)

VORTICES

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

NEW HORIZONS KUIPER BELT EXTENDED MISSION 

SCIENCE PLANNING OPPORTUNITY

The centerpiece of the proposed New Horizons Kuiper Belt Extended 
Mission (NH-KEM) is the very close flyby of the 20-40 km wide KBO 
2014 MU69 on 1 January 2019. NH-KEM will also observe ~20 other KBOs 
at phase angles and/or at resolutions not otherwise possible, 
producing a unique database of KBO phase curves, satellite searches, 
and ring searches.

On July 1 NASA approved the NH-KEM, which included plans to reach 

out to the planetary community for ideas to optimize the scientific return.

The NH Project is holding two KEM WebEx workshops, one from 1-3 pm EDT

on Sep 13 and one from 1-4 pm EDT on Oct 10, to discuss potential community 

involvement in planning the NH-KEM. If you’re interested in participating in 

these workshops, please send an email ASAP to the NH Project Scientist, 

Hal Weaver ([email protected]). He will then provide you with further 

details about these workshops.

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

ANNOUNCEMENT OF UPCOMING ASTEROID REDIRECT MISSION 

OPPORTUNITIES

 

NASA’s Asteroid Redirect Mission Umbrella for Partnerships (ARM-UP) Broad 

Agency Announcement (BAA) will seek proposals in research areas including 

partner-provided investigations through systems or payloads to be hosted on the 

robotic segment of the ARM; collaboration through the ARM Investigation 

Team to support definition of additional mission investigations; studies to define 

mission partnership opportunities toward NASA’s planned crewed mission to 

the multi-ton asteroid boulder; and opportunities for access and experimentation 

at the asteroid boulder after the crewed mission. 

 

The full BAA Solicitation, with two appendices, is expected to be issued in 

early September. The ARM-UP BAA will remain open until August 2018, 

with additional opportunities announced as appendices with their own applicable 

requirements and milestones. 

 

The first two appendices issued under the omnibus solicitation will be released 

at the same time as the umbrella BAA. Synopses of the appendices are available 

on FedBizOpps at:

 

 

 

NASA plans to host a virtual industry forum Sept. 14, 2016 to provide more information. 

Details will be made available on the ARM and on the NSPIRES web pages.

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) COMETS/ROSETTA INFRARED DATA

     Observatory of Paris

     Meudon, France

     Deadline: September 25, 2016

 

content/cometsrosetta-infrared-data

 

B) POSTDOCTORAL POSITION IN EXOPLANETARY SCIENCES

     University of Amsterdam

     Amsterdam, Netherlands

     Deadline: September 1, 2016

 

node/1705

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

UPCOMING MEETINGS

 

A) USHERING IN THE NEW AGE OF MICROLENSING FROM SPACE

 

21st International Microlensing Conference

February 1-3, 2017

Pasadena, CA

 

½ Day Microlensing Workshop

January 31, 2017

Pasadena, CA

 

http://nexsci.caltech.edu/conferences/2017/microlensing/

 

B) USER TRAINING IN JWST DATA ANALYSIS WORKSHOP

 

November 9-11, 2016

Space Telescope Science Institute

Baltimore, Maryland

 

https://jwst.stsci.edu/events/events-area/stsci-events-listing-container/user-training-in-jwst-data-analysis-ii?mwc=4

 

———————————+ 

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 16-30

Issue 16-30, August 10, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. REMINDER: REGISTRATION DEADLINE FOR DPS 48/EPSC 11
  2. OPAG MEETING WEBEX AND TELEPHONE INFORMATION
  3. NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES SPACE STUDIES BOARD REVIEW OF NASA’S PLANETARY SCIENCE DIVISION’S RESTRUCTURED RESEARCH AND ANALYSIS PROGRAM
  4. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES
  5. UPCOMING MEETINGS

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

REMINDER: REGULAR REGISTRATION DEADLINE FOR DPS 48/EPSC 11

 

The Regular Registration Deadline is Friday, August 12, 2016.  

 

Full Registration for Full DPS Members increases from $622 to $719 if you 

register after August 12.

 

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

https://aas.org/meetings/dps48

 

* Important dates

 

12 August 2016 DPS 48/ EPSC 11 Regular Registration Deadline

https://aas.org/meetings/dps48/registration

 

And also:

– 14 September 2016: Hotel Reservations Deadline

– 16 Septembar 2016: Dependent Care Grant Application Deadline

 

The DPS is grateful to our Meeting Sponsors:

 

AURA

Southwest Research Institute
Ball Aerospace

Nature Geoscience

Space Science Institute

The University of Arizona Press

Universities Space Research Association (USRA)

VORTICES

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

OPAG MEETING WEBEX AND TELEPHONE INFORMATION

 

Outer Planets Assessment Group (OPAG) Meeting

 

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/opag/

 

Thursday, August 11, 2016 to Friday, August 12, 2016

8:00 AM Mountain Time (Arizona, GMT-07:00)(same as Pacific time)

 

Join WebEx meeting

Meeting number: 999 237 745

Meeting password: )P@GN@S@123

 

Join by phone

Conf number 1-877-971-7311

Participant Code: 5395257

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES SPACE STUDIES BOARD                    

REVIEW OF NASA’S PLANETARY SCIENCE DIVISION’S RESTRUCTURED 

RESEARCH AND ANALYSIS PROGRAM

 

The Space Studies Board has convened an ad hoc committee to examine the 

program elements of NASA’s Planetary Science Division (PSD) Research 

and Analysis (R&A) programs, as they currently exist following restructuring, 

for their consistency with past advice from the Academies. The committee will

hold its second meeting August 16-18, 2016 in Washington, DC. 

 

Agenda and webex information can be found here :

http://sites.nationalacademies.org/cs/groups/ssbsite/documents/webpage/ssb_173667.pdf

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR IN PHYSICAL CLIMATE SCIENCE

     University of Oxford

     Oxford, UK

     Deadline: September 28, 2016

 

node/1698

 

B) POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWSHIP IN PLANETARY HYDROLOGY

     Lunar and Planetary Institute

     Houston, TX

     Deadline: October 17, 2016

 

node/1699

 

C) POSTDOCTORAL SCIENTIST : PLANETARY ATMOSPHERIC 

     CHEMISTRY MODELING

     Columbia University

     New York, NY

     Deadline: October 9, 2016

 

content/postdoctoral-scientist-planetary-atmospheric-chemistry-modeling

 

D) PLANETARY ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY POSTDOCTORAL POSITION

     Columbia University

     New York, NY

     Deadline: October 1, 2016

 

node/1701

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

UPCOMING MEETINGS

 

A) EUROPA-ENCELADUS PLUMES MEETING

 

We will be hosting a Europa-Enceladus Plumes Meeting at Caltech all day 
on Saturday 15th October 2016. The purpose of the meeting will be to compare 

Enceladus and Europa plumes and their sources, and in particular to consider 

how our understanding of Enceladus’ activity can be applied to Europan plumes, 
and observations of them by the Europa mission. 

If you would like to present a talk at this meeting, please submit a 
brief (<250 word) abstract to http://goo.gl/forms/9hgFhoySVa7O9nEf2 by 
5pm PST on 15th August 2016. Given the limited time and number of 
people attending, and because we want to have adequate time for 
discussion, we cannot guarantee that everyone who asks will be able to 
talk. If we have to be selective, we will pick talks that most directly 
address the major theme of comparing Enceladus and Europa plumes and 
their sources, and/or how our understanding of Enceladus’ activity can 
be applied to Europan plumes, and observations of them by the Europa 
mission. 

Carly Howett, Matt Hedman, John Spencer and Scott Edgington.

 

B) 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 7-13, 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].

 

———————————+

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 16-29

Issue 16-29, August 4, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: DPS 2016 ELECTION RESULTS
  2. REMINDER: REGISTRATION DEADLINE FOR DPS 48/EPSC 11
  3. SHOEMAKER IMPACT CRATERING AWARD

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: DPS 2016 ELECTION RESULTS

 

I know that you, like I, have been obsessively hitting ‘reload’ at fivethirtyeight.com

to see the latest election predictions.  Well, no more!  The results of the DPS 

election are in.

I am pleased to announce that your new vice-chair-elect is Cathy Olkin, and 

that your new Committeemembers-elect are Catherine Neish and Britney Schmidt.  

Please join me in congratulating them for joining the DPS Leadership.

Thanks in equal measure are due to those who were willing to stand for election

but who did not happen to win the day this year. I really like that our Bylaws 

require multiple candidates for each position:  it makes for elections that mean 

something.  But it also means that each year we also pass over excellent people.  

Thanks to those candidates for running.

With our crop of fresh recruits, I am again renewed in my optimism about the 

future of our organization.  We will all be in good hands next year with 

Lucy McFadden as Chair and on into the future.

Jason W. Barnes
DPS Chair

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

REMINDER: REGULAR REGISTRATION DEADLINE FOR DPS 48/EPSC 11

 

The Regular Registration Deadline is Friday, August 12, 2016.  

 

Full Registration for Full DPS Members increases from $622 to $719 if you 

register after August 12.

 

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

https://aas.org/meetings/dps48

 

* Important dates

 

12 August 2016 DPS 48/ EPSC 11 Regular Registration Deadline

https://aas.org/meetings/dps48/registration

 

And also:

– 14 September 2016: Hotel Reservations Deadline

– 16 Septembar 2016: Dependent Care Grant Application Deadline

 

The DPS is grateful to our Meeting Sponsors:

 

AURA

Southwest Research Institute
Ball Aerospace

Nature Geoscience

Space Science Institute

The University of Arizona Press

Universities Space Research Association (USRA)

VORTICES

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

SHOEMAKER IMPACT CRATERING AWARD

 

Applications for the GSA Planetary Geology Division’s Eugene M. Shoemaker 

Impact Cratering Award are due August 26, 2016.

 

The Eugene M. Shoemaker Impact Cratering Award is for undergraduate or 

graduate students, of any nationality, working in any country, in the disciplines 

of geology, geophysics, geochemistry, astronomy, or biology. The award, 

which will include $2500, is to be applied for the study of impact craters, either 

on Earth or on the other solid bodies in the solar system. Areas of study may

include but shall not necessarily be limited to impact cratering processes; the

bodies (asteroidal or cometary) that make the impacts; or the geological, chemical, 

or biological results of impact cratering. Details about the award as well as an 

application form for interested students can be found at

 

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/science/kring/Awards/Shoemaker_Award/

 

Shoemaker Impact Cratering Award Flyer

 

Send questions about the award to David Kring, [email protected]

———————————+

Send submissions to:

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

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

To change your address email [email protected].

DPS 2016 Election Results

I know that you, like I, have been obsessively hitting ‘reload’ at fivethirtyeight.com to see the latest election predictions. Well, no more! The results of the DPS election are in.

I am pleased to announce that your new vice-chair-elect is Cathy Olkin, and that your new Committeemembers-elect are Catherine Neish and Britney Schmidt. Please join me in congratulating them for joining the DPS Leadership.

Thanks in equal measure are due to those who were willing to stand for election but who did not happen to win the day this year. I really like that our Bylaws require multiple candidates for each position:  it makes for elections that mean something. But it also means that each year we also pass over excellent people. Thanks to those candidates for running.

With our crop of fresh recruits, I am again renewed in my optimism about the future of our organization.  We will all be in good hands next year with Lucy McFadden as Chair and on into the future.

Jason W. Barnes
DPS Chair

Newsletter 16-28

Issue 16-28, July 30, 2016

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. REMINDER: PLEASE VOTE IN THE 2016 DPS ELECTION
  2. REMINDER: REGISTRATION DEADLINE FOR DPS48/EPSC 11
  3. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES
  4. UPCOMING MEETINGS

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

REMINDER: PLEASE VOTE IN THE 2016 DPS ELECTION

 

DEADLINE FAST APPROACHING: ONLY ONE DAY LEFT!

 

The 2016 election for DPS Vice-Chair and Committee is now open, and will 

close on July 31st 2016. 

 

Please remember to vote! Your colleagues on this year’s ballot would greatly 

appreciate all DPS members taking the time to vote in this year’s election. 

Thank you to those that have already voted.

 

Go to https://aas.org/vote/

You will need your AAS member login ID (which defaults to your membership 

number), and your password. 

 

If you have trouble voting on line, the AAS can do a proxy vote and vote on your 

behalf (send an e-mail to [email protected]). You will still get an automated email 

confirmation and a separate manual email, both with who you voted for and a 

confirmation number. 

 

You should vote for one of the two candidates for Vice-Chair: 

o Catherine Olkin, Southwest Research Institute

o Harold Reitsema, Retired

 

The elected Vice-Chair will take his/her functions in October 2016 and will 

become the DPS Chair in October 2017.

 

You should also vote for two of the five candidates for DPS Committee: 

o Ashley Davies, Jet Propulsion Laboratory

o Karl Hibbitts, The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

o Catherine Neish, University of Western Ontario

o Britney Schmidt, Georgia Institute of Technology

o Maria Womack, University of South Florida

 

The successful candidates will serve on the Committee for three years after 

October 2016.

 

The detailed vitae and position statements for each of the candidates is linked 

from the main election page,

https://aas.org/vote/

 

It is very important for all DPS Members to participate to these elections, so 

please take a moment to vote!

 

Thank you!

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

REMINDER: REGULAR REGISTRATION DEADLINE FOR DPS 48/EPSC 11

 

The Regular Registration Deadline is Friday, August 12, 2016.  

 

Full Registration for Full DPS Members increases from $622 to $719 if you 

register after August 12.

 

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

https://aas.org/meetings/dps48

 

* Important dates

 

12 August 2016 DPS 48/ EPSC 11 Regular Registration Deadline

https://aas.org/meetings/dps48/registration

 

And also:

– 2 August 2016: Late Abstract Submission Deadline – 9:00pm ET

– 14 September 2016: Hotel Reservations Deadline

– 16 Septembar 2016: Dependent Care Grant Application Deadline

 

The DPS is grateful to our Meeting Sponsors:

 

AURA

Southwest Research Institute
Ball Aerospace

Nature Geoscience

Space Science Institute

The University of Arizona Press

Universities Space Research Association (USRA)

VORTICES

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES
 

A) TWO POSTDOCTORAL POSITIONS IN MODELING

     AND OBSERVATION OF EXOPLANET ATMOSPHERES 

    

    Bordeaux Laboratory for Astrophysics

    University of Bordeaux

    Bordeaux, France

 

    node/1694

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

UPCOMING MEETINGS

 

A) AGU 2016 SESSION P004: COMETARY PROCESSES 

     IN THE LIGHT OF ROSETTA

Conveners: Bonnie Buratti, Mathieu Choukroun, Matt Taylor, and Nicolas Altobelli

The European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft will make an unprecedented 

controlled crash onto comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in late September 

2016, providing close scrutiny of the comet until the very end. This session will 

focus on scientific results from this final stage of Rosetta’s life. The session will 

also include correlative studies among instruments from all phases of the mission; 

studies that incorporate ground-based observations for better temporal coverage 

and perspective; theoretical modeling of cometary processes; and interrelationships 

among comets and other small bodies.

AGU abstracts are due no later than 3 August.

 

B) AGU SESSION P026 SOLAR SYSTEM SMALL BODIES: 

RELICS OF FORMATION AND NEW WORLDS TO EXPLORE

 

We would like to invite you to submit an abstract to our session entitled 

“Solar System Small Bodies: Relics of Formation and New Worlds to Explore” 

scheduled at the AGU Fall Meeting at San Francisco, December 12-16 2016.

 

Abstract deadline: 3 August 23:59 EDT/03:59 +1 GMT.

https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm16/preliminaryview.cgi/Session13304

 

The composition and physical properties of Small Solar System Bodies 

(SSSBs), remnants of the formation of planets, are key to better understand 

our solar system. Increased knowledge of their surface properties and their 

potential as resources are also necessary to prepare for robotic and human 

exploration. Hints about the internal structure and composition of SSSBs 

have been acquired recently thanks to flyby/rendezvous data from space 

missions, study of complex multiple asteroid systems, or close encounter

between asteroids. This session welcomes abstracts on the results bringing 

information on the internal structure and composition of SSSBs based on 

space and ground-based data, numerical models, as well as instrument/mission 

concepts in the prospect of future exploration.

 

Conveners:  

Franck Marchis (SETI Institute & Iris AO), Julie C. Castillo (NASA Jet 

Propulsion Laboratory) and Padma A Yanamandra-Fisher (Space Science 

Institute)

 

C) AGU SESSION P006: DETECTION AND DIRECT IMAGING OF 

HABITABLE EXOPLANETS: PROGRESS AND FUTURE

 

We would like to invite you to submit an abstract to our session entitled 

“Detection And Direct Imaging Of Habitable Exoplanets: Progress And Future” 

scheduled at the AGU Fall Meeting at San Francisco, December 12-16 2016.

 

Abstract deadline: 3 August 23:59 EDT/03:59 +1 GMT.

https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm16/preliminaryview.cgi/Session13664

 

This session consists in a discussion on the potential of new and future facilities 

and modeling efforts designed to detect, image and characterize habitable 

exoplanets, studying their formation, evolution and also the existence of

possible biospheres.  Topics to be covered in this session include signs of 

exoplanet habitability and global biosignatures that can be sought with

upcoming instrumentation; instrument requirements and technologies to 

detect these markers; strategies for target selection and prioritization; and 

impacts of planetary system properties, ground-based and space telescope 

architectures, and impacts of instrument capabilities on the yield of potentially 

inhabited exoplanets.

 

Conveners: Franck Marchis (SETI Institute), Ramses M. Ramirez (Cornell 

University), Douglas Caldwell (SETI Institute)

 

———————————+

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].