Newsletter 17-27

Issue 17-27, July 9, 2017

 

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  1. MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: DPS ELECTIONS AND 2017 AAS BY-LAWS VOTING
  2. AGU SESSION 23711: GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS OF SMALL SOLAR SYSTEM BODIES
  3. AGU SESSION 23322: DETECTION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF HABITABLE EXOPLANETS: PROGRESS AND FUTURE
  4. AGU SESSION 24396: THE ORIGIN, EVOLUTION, AND FATE OF COMETS: NEW INFORMATION FROM ROSETTA (P044)
  5. SHOEMAKER IMPACT CRATERING AWARD DEADLINE
  6. JWST SOLAR SYSTEM OBSERVATION PLANNING WORKSHOPS
  7. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

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MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: DPS ELECTIONS AND 2017 AAS BY-LAWS VOTING

 

Greetings, I hope this message finds you enjoying your summer and I hope it 

includes focused time for scientific exploration as well as time off with friends 

and family.  I write now to remind you that July is voting time for DPS members. 

Please vote for DPS Vice-Chair and DPS committee members.  You’ll need your 

AAS membership number and password to vote.

 

While you are voting, it is also important to cast your vote related to

 AAS 2017 Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws. The AAS Governance Task 

Force chaired by former AAS President, David Helfand, has worked hard in the 

past year to make AAS governance more efficient, transparent and involving 

Divisions and Committees more directly in the course of Society business. You 

may view the new documents at https://vote.aas.org/ballot/ballot_view/38 where 

you will also need your AAS membership number and password to vote.

 

As always, I am available to discuss issues related to the Division for Planetary Sciences.

 

Lucy McFadden

DPS Chair

 

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AGU SESSION 23711: GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS OF SMALL SOLAR SYSTEM BODIES

Abstract deadline: August 2, 2017

https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm17/preliminaryview.cgi/Session23711

 

We invite you to submit your abstract to our session to be held at the Fall 2017 

AGU Meeting, described below:

 

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 geophysical processed, the internal structure 

and the composition of SSSBs based on space and ground-based data, numerical 

models, as well as instrument/mission concepts in the prospect of future exploration.

 

Franck Marchis (SETI Institute)

Amanda Hendrix (PSI)

Julie C. Castillo (JPL)

Krishan K. Khurana (UCLA)

 

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AGU SESSION 23322: DETECTION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF HABITABLE 

EXOPLANETS: PROGRESS AND FUTURE

 

Abstract deadline: August 2, 2017

https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm17/preliminaryview.cgi/Session23322

 

We invite you to submit your abstract to our session to be held at the Fall 2017 

AGU Meeting, described below:

 

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.

 

Franck Marchis (SETI Institute)

Douglas A. Caldwell (SETI Institute)

Ramses M. Ramirez (Cornell University)

 

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AGU SESSION 24396: THE ORIGIN, EVOLUTION AND FATE OF COMETS: 

NEW INFORMATION FROM ROSETTA (P044)

 

Comets are among the primitive building blocks of the planets, but as they enter

into the inner Solar System, they become dynamical bodies, almost transient in

nature. Some comets have broken up completely (S/L-9 for example), while 

others have given up a little of themselves. The recent and up-close study of 

67/P Churyumov –Gerassimenko during its 2015 perihelion passage has revealed 

in close detail the types of changes comets undergo as they are heated by the sun.

 

This session will cover the dynamical nature of the nucleus and coma of 67P/ 

as seen from Rosetta and ground-based observations. The session will also 

include comparisons between the results from Rosetta and other missions on 

how comets evolve through time. Broader topics such as the chemistry of 

comets and what that reveals about their origin and diversity are also welcome.

 

Convenors: Bonnie J Buratti, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California 

Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, United States; Mathieu Choukroun, 

Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA, United States and Matt Taylor, 

European Space Agency, Villanueva De La Can, Spain

https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm17/preliminaryview.cgi/Session24396

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SHOEMAKER IMPACT CRATERING AWARD DEADLINE

 

Dear Colleagues,

 

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

Impact Cratering Award are due August 25, 2017.

 

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/

 

Thank you,

 

David A. Kring, Ph.D.

Center for Lunar Science & Exploration: http://www.lpi.usra.edu/nlsi/

USRA – Lunar and Planetary Institute

 

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JWST SOLAR SYSTEM OBSERVATION PLANNING WORKSHOPS

 

Two 2.5 day workshops will be held this Fall for those interested in
proposing solar system observations with the James Webb Space Telescope
(JWST). The first (Nov. 13-15, 2017) will be at the Space Telescope 
Science Institute (STScI), in Baltimore Maryland. The second (Dec. 
13-15, 2017) will be held at the European Space Research Technology 
Center (ESTEC), in Noordwijk, the Netherlands.

Each workshop will include a mixture of presentations about 
the promise of JWST for solar system science, specifics on observer 
planning tools and observatory capabilities, and hands-on training 
and Q&A with the planning tools. Observations of solar system targets 
approved for guaranteed-time observers (GTOs) and through the Early 
Release Science (ERS) program will be summarized. The workshop is 
timed to support JWST cycle-1 open time proposals, which are expected 
to be due in February, 2018. 

To express interest in either or both of these workshops and receive 
future emails, please send a blank email as follows.

STScI workshop: 
   To: [email protected]

ESTEC Workshop:
    To: [email protected]

As further details become available, they can be found here:
STScI workshop:
    http://tinyurl.com/JWST-SS-Workshop

ESTEC Workshop:
    https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/jwst-ssws-2017

 

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JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) SENIOR SUPPORT SCIENTIST, NASA ASTROPHYSICS DIVISION 

 

Arctic Slope Technical Services (ASTS) is seeking a Senior (Sr.) Support 

Scientist to support programs in the Astrophysics Division (APD) of NASA’s 

Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters.

 

Roles/Responsibilities:

 

The full time Sr. Support Scientist will have the following major roles in the 

execution of his/her duties in this position.

 

The Sr. Support Scientist has broad responsibility for developing and maintaining 

scientific research grants programs; serving as the Headquarters science lead for 

one or more missions; and overseeing NASA’s concept studies for the 2020 Decadal 

Survey.

 

The position may involve work in multiple areas of the Astrophysics Division 

activities, which include the following:

Carry out the functions of Program Scientist for an operating mission, ensuring

that Guest Observer programs are properly managed, and that data flows for the 

benefit of the science community;

Carry out the functions of Program Scientist for a mission under development,

providing scientific leadership to the mission by assuring that the mission leads 

to the science objectives being met and providing leadership for project science 

teams and science competitions;

Carry out the functions of Discipline Scientist for a research and analysis program, 

assisting in the conduct of peer reviews, recommending portfolios of proposals for 

selection, and ensuring the health of an astrophysics discipline; and

Carry out the functions of Program Scientist for a mission concept study, ensuring

that compelling and executable mission concepts are prepared for the 2020 decadal 

Survey; 

In addition to the above tasks, the Sr. Support Scientist will be expected to be 

available during business hours, be responsive to management and to proposers, 

attend appropriate NASA meetings, and perform other science duties as assigned, 

including travel to attend scientific and or management meetings, and bilateral 

and other international meetings. 

 

It is expected that the position will be located at NASA HQ.

 

Summary of Requirements:

 

  • Demonstrated experience in the science operations of NASA Astrophysics missions.
  • A Ph.D. or equivalent Advanced Degree in Astrophysics, together with at least 10 years of relevant scientific research work experience.
  • Disciplinary expertise in one or more areas of the astrophysics program (e.g., theory, data analysis, technology and instrument development, mission formulation and development).
  • Experience in the development of international space science partnerships is preferred
  • Strong written and interpersonal communication skills.
  • The candidate must be able to pass a basic background screening for admission into a Federal facility.

 

The selected Sr. Support Scientist will be required to sign a non-disclosure 

agreement (NDA) and strictly adhere to a conflict of interest avoidance and 

mitigation plan. It is expected that the Sr. Support Scientist will not participate 

in the development of or be a member on proposal teams. The Sr. Support Scientist 

must openly disclose and identify any and all matters that give rise to a potential 

conflict of interest. This includes the appearance of bias created by involvement 

of a spouse or family member in any part of the proposal process. The candidate

must identify any recent employment and science collaborations that present a 

potential conflict of interest and/or may create an appearance of bias towards 

certain proposers. 

 

If interested in applying, go to:       

http://www.asrcfederal.com/careers/jobs, type in 17001368 in the Job Number field 

and click the “Search for Jobs” button.  At this site, you can read the position 

description as well as apply on-line.

 

B) POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN NEAR EARTH OBJECTS 

     AT LAS CUMBRES OBSERVATORY

 

Las Cumbres Observatory (LCO) and University of California, Santa Barbara 

(UCSB) seek a postdoctoral scientist to work on the follow up of Near Earth 

Objects (NEOs) and the creation of a citizen science program.  The ideal candidate 

should have demonstrated expertise in observations of Solar System objects and 

experience with software development, although candidates from other astrophysical 

fields with a software background are also encouraged.

This position is funded by a grant from NASA to:
1) develop and exploit the LCO global network of robotic telescopes for NEO follow-up;
2) lead photometric and spectroscopic characterization of NEOs; and
3) assist in the creation of a web-based citizen science environment for Solar System 

investigations by the general public.

LCO currently operates ten 1 meter and two 2 meter robotic telescopes, which 

will be used in this program.  The 2 meter Faulkes Telescopes in Haleakala, Hawaii, 

and Siding Spring, Australia feature both imagers and robotic FLOYDS low-resolution 

spectrographs.  The 1 meter telescopes have imagers and are located at McDonald 

Observatory in Texas, CTIO in Chile, Siding Spring in Australia, and SAAO in 

South Africa.

Applicants should submit a CV, cover letter, and research statement, and should

arrange to have three letters of reference sent to [email protected]. Applications 

complete by August 4, 2017 will receive full consideration and the preferred start 

date is October 1, 2017. A Ph.D. in astronomy, physics, or a related discipline is 

required. The term of this position is 1 year, with a possibility of extension pending 

a successful funding outcome. 

 

Applications should be sent to Sarah Rettinger ([email protected]); inquiries can 

be sent to Dr. Tim Lister ([email protected])

 

C) PROGRAM COORDINATOR EDUCATION AND PUBLIC OUTREACH

 

New Mexico State University is seeking a program coordinator to manage the 

education and public outreach program at the Sunspot Astronomy Visitor’s Center.

 

Duties include: Oversees operations of public access to exhibits and daily tours 

around Sunspot Observatories. Initiates and provides local tours, plans and 

operates star parties: Coordinates visits from local schools and interested groups; 

Ensures visitor center facility is staffed during operational periods for visitors 

and tours as needed;  Develops a  business plan to ensure visitor center solvency; 

Manages gift shop including stock ordering, pricing and design and/or selection 

of gift shop merchandise; Manages exhibits including coordination of repairs 

and updates as needed; Responsible for fiscal management of Visitor’s Center;  

and may require grant writing and cooperative agreements with other local tourist 

attractions and of state and federal agencies.  Manage staff as required.

 

A bachelor’s degree and/or a strong background in and knowledge of astronomy 

is preferred.

 

Job Closing Date: 08/31/2017

Targeted Start Date: 10/01/2017

 

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Send submissions to: 

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

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