Message from the Chair: DPS 50 Meeting Recap and Remindor to Fill Out DPS Exit Survey

The 50th DPS meeting last month was an exciting milestone for our organization. More than 750 registered attendees participated in the meeting throughout the week. Thanks to the Science Organizing Committee, led by Devon Burr, for putting together a great scientific program and thanks to all of you for sharing your scientific results. The Local Organizing Committee led by Josh Emery put together fun activities including Saturday field trips to the Blue Spring Cave and to the Smoky Mountains to view their geology, and the DPS banquet. Thank you, Josh, and the LOC!

  

DPS EXIT SURVEY (see Oct. 31st AAS 50th DPS email):  We want to hear from you about this year’s meeting as we look ahead to next year’s joint EPSC-DPS meeting in Geneva, Switzerland.  Please fill out the survey about your experiences at the 50th annual DPS meeting.  Let us know what you liked and what we can do better.  All responses are anonymous and confidential.

 

The survey link was first sent to meeting attendees on October 31st  in an email from the American Astronomical Society. If you have not yet responded, you may have also received subsequent emails from AAS.  We want to hear from you!

 

Linda Spilker

DPS Chair

9 Nov 2018

Newsletter 18-46

Issue 18-46, November 9, 2018

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: DPS 50 MEETING RECAP AND REMINDER TO FILL OUT DPS EXIT SURVEY
  2. MESSAGE FROM FRS CHAIR KURT RETHERFORD
  3. ICARUS SPECIAL ISSUE DEVOTED TO CASSINI RESULTS
  4. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR: DPS 50 MEETING RECAP AND

REMINDER TO FILL OUT DPS EXIT SURVEY

 

The 50th DPS meeting last month was an exciting milestone for our organization. 

More than 750 registered attendees participated in the meeting throughout the week. 

Thanks to the Science Organizing Committee, led by Devon Burr, for putting

together a great scientific program and thanks to all of you for sharing your

scientific results. The Local Organizing Committee led by Josh Emery put

together fun activities including Saturday field trips to the Blue Spring Cave

and to the Smoky Mountains to view their geology, and the DPS banquet.

Thank you, Josh, and the LOC!

  

DPS EXIT SURVEY (see Oct. 31st AAS 50th DPS email):  We want to hear

from you about this year’s meeting as we look ahead to next year’s joint

EPSC-DPS meeting in Geneva, Switzerland.  Please fill out the survey about

your experiences at the 50th annual DPS meeting.  Let us know what you liked

and what we can do better.  All responses are anonymous and confidential.

 

The survey link was first sent to meeting attendees on October 31st  in an

email from the American Astronomical Society. If you have not yet responded,

you may have also received subsequent emails from AAS. 

We want to hear from you!

 

Linda Spilker

DPS Chair

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

MESSAGE FROM FRS CHAIR KURT RETHERFORD

 

The AAS/DPS Federal Relations Subcommittee (FRS) encourages you to

take advantage of AGU’s coordinated Congressional Visits Day (CVD) on

14 December 2018 for those of us planning to attend the Fall Meeting in

Washington D.C. this year. Meetings with legislators throughout the week

are encouraged for those unable to “blitz” the Hill on Friday.

 

Sign-ups to learn more about this AGU CVD process close 14 November

https://sciencepolicy.agu.org/agu-congressional-visits-day-2/.

 

Other opportunities exist the week of AGU to drop in and learn more in their

Science Policy Sharing Science Room: 

https://fallmeeting.agu.org/2018/science-policy-sharing-science/.

Our AAS resources and FRS members are also at your disposal any time:  

https://aas.org/policy/advocacy-resourcespublic_policy.

Be sure to thank your representatives and encourage Congress’s continuing

support.

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

ICARUS SPECIAL ISSUE DEVOTED TO CASSINI RESULTS

 

Dear colleagues and attendees of the Cassini Science Symposium in Boulder,

August 2018:

 

This is to confirm a special Icarus issue devoted to Cassini results.

We call for papers on the latest Cassini Science results. All topics related to

Cassini results are welcome to this Special Issue, including those presented

at the Final Cassini Science Symposium in Boulder in 2018.

 

First submission date:

1         November 2018.

 

All papers should be submitted to the Guest Editors for review through

the EES submission site:

15     January 2019.

 

All manuscripts to be fully reviewed and final decisions made on all

manuscripts:

15     July 2019.

 

The date the Special Issue is expected to be published:

1         November 2019.

 

To submit your paper, go to the Icarus/EES site, click Start New Submission.

 

To begin, select the issue from the dropdown list: Cassini Mission Science Results

 

 

Sincerely,

Larry Esposito

Phil Nicholson

Linda Spilker

Guest Editors

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) TENURE TRACK FACULTY MEMBER

     DEPARTMENT OF ASTRONOMY

     NEW MEXICO STATE UNIVERSITY

 

The Department of Astronomy at New Mexico State University invites

applications for a tenure-track faculty member at the level of Assistant

Professor beginning in August 2019.   We are especially interested in

candidates with a demonstrated research record and continuing research

programs related to the targeted area of hire, which is planetary system

science (solar system and/or extrasolar), including planetary atmospheres, 

interiors, surfaces, formation, and environments, and including research

programs that are observational or theoretical in nature.  The NMSU

Astronomy Department is committed to creating an environment that

affirms and supports diversity across a variety of axes, including ethnicity,

race, class, ability, gender identity and expression. We particularly welcome

applicants who can contribute to such an environment through their

scholarship, teaching, mentoring, and professional service.

 

Please see the job ad (https://jobregister.aas.org/ad/8e66ce6b) for more

details and direct all inquiries to [email protected].  

The application deadline is January 7, 2019.

 

B) DEPARTMENT CHAIR IN PHYSICS & ASTRONOMY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT SAN ANTONIO

 

https://jobs.utsa.edu/postings/10633

 

The Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Texas at

San Antonio (UTSA) is seeking a dynamic Chair that can lead the department

to preeminence in an extraordinarily diverse University that is focused on a

significant expansion of its research mission. This is an exemplary opportunity

for a leader to strengthen partnerships with premier research institutions in San

Antonio such as the Southwest Research Institute, Air Force Research Laboratory,

UT Health San Antonio, and others. Areas of research excellence within the

department include astrophysics, biophysics, computational physics, condensed

matter, materials science, nanotechnology, and space and planetary science.

Several interdisciplinary research and educational opportunities are ongoing

with Environmental Sciences, Biology, Chemistry and the College of

Engineering among others. The Department has a joint Ph.D. degree with the

Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) allowing its faculty and Ph.D. students

access to over $400M of research projects that include leadership roles in

NASA’s space physics and planetary missions. UT San Antonio’s future will

focus on student success and building one of the nation’s most diverse research

intensive universities. The Department Chair will play a critical role in linking

the Department to this growth and success. UT San Antonio also benefits from

being in a major metropolitan area that retains the attributes of smaller

neighborhoods, excellent schools, and an extremely welcoming environment.

Required qualifications: a Ph.D. in physics, astronomy or related area of 

physical science or engineering; an active research program with a distinguished

publication record and a strong international reputation. Preferred qualifications:

commitment to excellence in teaching at all levels including Ph.D.; leadership

and administrative experience; and an active, high-profile research program in

an area of physics and/or astronomy. Responsibilities include a commitment to

the development and growth of the Physics and Astronomy program, as well as

teaching, supervising student research at all levels, and maintaining an externally

funded research program. Descriptions of current departmental research efforts

can be found at http://www.utsa.edu/physics/.

UTSA, the third largest academic institution of the University of Texas

System, has an enrollment of nearly 31,000 students. Ph.D. students have

access to world-class facilities at UTSA and SwRI that includes advanced 

microscopy, spectroscopy, optical and particle instrument calibration and

MEMS laboratories. Screening of completed applications will begin

immediately and will continue until the position is filled.

 

 

C) CIVIL SERVICE SCIENTIST POSITION IN OCEAN WORLDS SCIENCE AT NASA GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER

 

The Science & Exploration Directorate, Solar System Exploration

Division, Planetary Environments Laboratory (Code 699) is seeking a

scientist to conduct research on the habitability and exobiology of

planetary environments in support of long-term science goals related to

the existence and distribution of life on Ocean Worlds. The call for

this position will close on Monday, November 26, 2018. 

 

Direct Link to USAJobs:

 

http://www.usajobs.gov/GetJob/ViewDetails/513617000  

 

For additional information contact: Dr. William Brinckerhoff,

[email protected]; or Dr. Melissa Trainer,

[email protected]

 

D) POSTDOCTORAL POSITION IN PLANETARY SCIENCE AT MIT

 

content/postdoctoral-position-planetary-science-mit

 

The MIT Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences

invites applications for a Postdoctoral Associate to join Professor

de Kleer’s planetary astronomy group. The de Kleer group utilizes

cutting-edge astronomical facilities at optical, infrared, and radio

wavelengths to study a diverse array of Solar System topics including

planetary and satellite atmospheres, satellite surfaces and geophysics,

and small bodies. Applicants are sought from a broad range of research

areas within astronomy and planetary science that overlap with or

complement ongoing work in the group, including both Solar System

and extrasolar planets. Observational experience is beneficial but not

required. The successful candidate will have opportunities to mentor

graduate and undergraduate students, and will benefit from the dynamic

and interdisciplinary environment within the EAPS department and

across the Institute

 

A PhD degree in a related field (e.g. physics, astrophysics, chemistry,

geology, planetary science) is required. Applicants must submit a 1-3

page research statement, CV, and three letters of recommendation.

The research statement should indicate how the applicant’s research

interests align with areas of ongoing work in the group 

(http://web.gps.caltech.edu/~dekleer/research.html).

 

Applications are being accepted at Academic Jobs Online:

https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/12702

 

The appointment starts on or after July 2019 and is initially for one year,

with renewal for up to two additional years. The position offers a

competitive salary and annual research budget. Consideration of

applications will begin on January 10, 2019, and applications will

be considered until the position is filled. Please contact Professor

Katherine de Kleer at [email protected] with questions.

 

E) ASSISTANT PROFESSOR IN GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES

     UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO

 

content/assistant-professor-geological-sciences

 

The successful candidate is expected to establish a vigorous, externally

funded research program that expands the scope of our departmental

capabilities while complementing and integrating with our existing

strengths. This position requires a Doctorate in planetary geosciences

or a related field at time of application. Salary range: $67,725 – $75,250

annually. For more information or to apply visit

http://apptrkr.com/1320648 by 12/20/2018.

Announcement #F000734P. EOE/AA/M/F/D/V

 

———————————+

Send submissions to: 

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

You are receiving this email because you are a DPS member.

To unsubscribe or update your information, please send your request

to [email protected]. The more general AAS privacy policy is available

online at https://aas.org/about/policies/privacy-policy.

Newsletter 18-45

Issue 18-45, October 30, 2018

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. TRICK OR TREAT AND TELESCOPES
  2. PUBSPACE RESOURCES AVAILABLE ON DPS WEBSITE
  3. THE NASA ROADMAP TO OCEAN WORLDS
  4. ASTRODATA2020S WORKSHOP: SCIENCE OPPORTUNITIES WITH ASTROPHYSICS ARCHIVES OF THE NEXT DECADE
  5. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

TRICK-OR-TREAT AND TELESCOPES

 

DPS is continuing its Trick-or-Treat and Telescopes Program. Put out your

telescopes – or even binoculars – during trick-or-treat time on Halloween, in

your own lawn or in a neighbor’s lawn with better viewing (or more traffic).

The following website gives advice and connections to resources. If you have

any pictures of your event, please send them to bonnie.buratti(at)jpl.nasa.gov

education/trick-or-treat-and-telescopes

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

PUBSPACE RESOURCES AVAILABLE ON DPS WEBSITE

 

Resources presented at the 2018 DPS meeting on public access policies and

PubSpace are available at  publications 

 

Thanks to Ross Beyer and Gerald Steeman for making their presentations available.

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

THE NASA ROADMAP TO OCEAN WORLDS 

 

We would like to bring to your attention the publication of a paper in

Astrobiology, written by the OPAG Roadmaps to Ocean Worlds (ROW)

team. This is a community-based assessment of science questions to be

addressed, and priorities of, a NASA Ocean Worlds program. 

 

https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/ast.2018.1955

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

ASTRODATA2020S WORKSHOP: SCIENCE OPPORTUNITIES WITH 

ASTROPHYSICS ARCHIVES OF THE NEXT DECADE
 

December 4–7, 2018
Pasadena, CA
https://meeting.ipac.caltech.edu/astrodata2020s
Early Registration deadline: October 31

Aimed at facilitating community preparation for the 2020 Astronomy and 

Astrophysics Decadal Survey, this meeting will provide a forum for discussing

the major science drivers in the next decade that will require an evolution in

community access to computing, networking, and data archiving tools and

facilities. In addition, we will bring together people involved in data creation,

dissemination, and consumption to identify community needs surrounding

astronomy data in the 2020s. The meeting is intended to lead to the formulation

or coordination of science white paper submissions (due Jan 18) to the

Decadal Survey.

The Science Themes considered in the Decadal Call for Proposals are:
Planetary Systems
Star and Planet Formation
Stars and Stellar Evolution
Formation and evolution of compact objects
Resolved stellar populations and their environments
Galaxy Evolution
Cosmology and Fundamental Physics
Multi-Messenger Astronomy and Astrophysics

More details about the science white papers can be found here:
http://sites.nationalacademies.org/cs/groups/ssbsite/documents/webpage/ssb_187932.pdf

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) DIRECTOR OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN INSTITUTE FOR

     GEOPHYSICS

 

content/director-university-texas-austin-institute-geophysics

 

The Institute for Geophysics at The University of Texas at Austin (UTIG), one

of the three principal units in the Jackson School of Geosciences, seeks applications

for the position of Director, which may include a concurrent faculty appointment

in the Department of Geological Sciences (qualifications for faculty position must

be commensurate with rank). UTIG is a world leader in expeditionary-scale

geophysical research, numerical modeling and computational-enabled discovery,

conducting research in four broad themes: climate; energy; marine geosciences,

seismology and tectonophysics; and polar and planetary geophysics. It has a staff

of about 75 research scientists and support staff. Both graduate and undergraduate

students play important roles in the UTIG research mission. The science vision of

the Institute is described in more detail at http://ig.utexas.edu/utig-science-vision-plan/.

 

An accomplished leader is sought to provide strategic vision and outstanding

operational management, to foster high-quality research programs, and to guide

the UTIG community to the next level of accomplishment and impact.  The UTIG

Director will maintain and strengthen the culture of collaboration and innovation

in the Jackson School of Geosciences, expand the reputation of the institute,

promote diversity within the institute and demonstrate commitment to a

high-quality student experience.

 

The ideal candidate will possess a Ph.D. in a relevant scientific field (e.g.,

geology, geophysics, oceanography, planetary sciences, etc.), and will have

experience in the administration of complex organizations and research

programs, a demonstrated record of high-quality research and publications,

and excellence in people management and communication skills. Involvement

in international and/or large federal programs, and leadership in academic and

professional activities is desired.

 

An applicant should submit a letter of interest, a vision statement (including

your perspectives on how to advance both scholarly excellence and diversity

in the workplace at UTIG), CV, and list of four references (with titles and email

addresses) electronically to https://apply.interfolio.com/56029. Additionally a

resume must be submitted at the UT Austin Jobs website: 

https://utdirect.utexas.edu/apps/hr/jobs/nlogon/180920010382.

Questions should be directed to Dr. Gail Christeson or Dr. Sean Gulick, co-chairs,

UTIG Director Search Committee at [email protected] and [email protected].

References will only be contacted with permission of the candidates.

 

Review of applications will commence on Jan. 15, 2019; however, applications

will be accepted until the position is filled. The desired target date for the new

director to assume duties is Sept. 1, 2019.

 

———————————+

Send submissions to: 

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

You are receiving this email because you are a DPS member.

To unsubscribe or update your information, please send your request

to [email protected]. The more general AAS privacy policy is available

online at https://aas.org/about/policies/privacy-policy.

Newsletter 18-44

Issue 18-44, October 20, 2018

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. WEBEX CONNECTION INFO FOR DPS JUNO WORKSHOP
  2. COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS AT THE DPS MEETING
  3. LOOKING FOR SCIENTISTS TO VOLUNTEER FOR THE DPS MEETING
  4. DPS NOMINATING SUBCOMMITTEE MEMBER ELECTION DURING DPS 50
  5. CENTAUR EXPLORATION WORKSHOP: THE ROOTS OF ACTIVITY

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

WEBEX CONNECTION INFORMATION FOR DPS JUNO WORKSHOP

 

WebEx meeting: Juno and Juno-supporting Jupiter Atmospheric Results

Sunday, Oct 21, 1:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT

When it’s time, join the meeting from here:
https://meetings.webex.com/collabs/meetings/join?uuid=M7KUF0L45HO3V5299T0G3I2X2N-Y94

 

WebEx Online Meeting number: 194 826 279

Meeting password: This meeting does not require a password.

Audio Connection Voice connection via computer (VoIP)

Can’t access your meeting? Get help: https://meetings.webex.com/collabs/#/support

 

JUNO AND JUNO-SUPPORTING JUPITER ATMOSPHERIC RESULTS

Sun Oct 21, 2018, 1:00-6:00pm Room 301 B (Knoxville Convention Center)

 

This is immediately prior to the 50th AAS/DPS meeting, but no DPS registration

is required to attend this meeting.

 

The workshop is intended to foster collaboration and discussion between the 

Juno science team and the Earth-based observation community. We will have 

people from the Juno project present mission updates and members of the Earth-based 

community present updates on their observations. The structure of the meeting 

will be informal in order to encourage interactions between all participants.

 

There is no registration required for this workshop, but please send us an email 

([email protected] and/or [email protected])

if you intend to give a brief talk relating to Juno or Jupiter. This will help our 

organization. 

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS AT THE DPS MEETING 

 

DPS will try something new in the program at this year’s meeting. We have

allotted 5 minutes at the beginning of the plenary sessions for oral announcements

about items  of broad interest to our community.  If you would like to make a

very short announcement  (no longer than 2 minutes), please send a short

description of your topic to [email protected]  for coordination and approval

by DPS leadership.

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

LOOKING FOR SCIENTISTS TO VOLUNTEER FOR THE DPS MEETING

Consider giving an hour of your time to support early career scientists and 

undergraduate students

We are looking for DPS members to volunteer for two events being sponsored 

by DPS at the upcoming meeting in Knoxville.

1) We are looking for scientists to give feedback to early career scientists as 

they preview their presentations for the meeting – 
Sunday October 21st at 3pm
Monday October 22nd at lunch
Monday October 22nd at 4pm

2) We are looking for scientists to spend one hour with undergraduate students 

in local intro planetary science courses (Exploring the Planets) mostly freshmen 

and sophomores. We want to make sure that each group of students meet and 

become comfortable with several scientists. There will be a faculty member and 

TA with each group so that you can spend time talking to students. Your 

commitment is one hour in each time slot (not the entire time). 

  • Tuesday, Oct 23rd, 11:15 am – 1:45 pm
  • Wednesday, Oct 24th, 8:00 am – 10:30 am
  • Wednesday, Oct 24th, 12:15 pm – 2:45 pm
  • Wednesday, Oct 24th, 2:45 pm – 5:15 pm
  • Thursday, Oct 25th, 1:30 pm – 4:00 pm
  • Friday, Oct 26th, 12:30 pm – 3:00 pm

Please contact Sanlyn Buxner, [email protected] if you are willing to volunteer your 

time for either (or both!) events

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

DPS NOMINATING SUBCOMMITTEE MEMBER ELECTION DURING DPS 50

  

Our DPS by-laws allow for the election of a member to the Nominating Sub-committee 

each year at the members meeting – this year’s Members Meeting takes place 

on Wednesday Oct. 24, 12:30 pm. 

 

Nominations of subcommittee candidates are made in person at the Members

Meeting and will not close until at least three members are nominated. Please

consider nominating those you think would be good for the position. The

membership will then vote at the meeting and elect one person to work with

the other two subcommittee members for a 3 year term. 

 

This position is important because they seek candidates to run for the elected

offices of Vice-Chair and Committee members. The division’s leadership is

responsible for our annual meetings and carrying out the activities of the

division including managing the division’s funds, carrying out its elections,

federal relations, education, press activities, web maintenance, providing

professional development programs, ensuring a climate conducive to collegial

and productive scientific exploration and enabling publication of our scientific

results. The main activities for this committee are generally conducted in the

spring semester in preparation for summer DPS elections. If you have questions

about the tasks please feel free to contact the outgoing nominating subcommittee

chair (Kelsi Singer; [email protected]), the incoming chair (Yvonne 

Pendelton, [email protected]) or other current/past members.  

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

CENTAUR EXPLORATION WORKSHOP: THE ROOTS OF ACTIVITY

 

A workshop addressing the scientific importance and space exploration

relevance of active centaurs, with a specific focus on mapping knowledge

gaps and paths forward.

April 1-3, 2019, at the Florida Space Institute, University of Central Florida, 

Orlando, FL.

Workshop URL: https://cew2019.arc.nasa.gov/

 

Please note:

In-situ participation will be capped at 40, so please consider registering and 

submitting an abstract/notice-of-intent early.

Online (virtual) participation will be available. It will still require registration 

and a notice of intent.

 

Important dates:

Pre-registration opens: October 31, 2018.

Abstracts/NOIs submission deadline: December 31, 2018.

Registration deadline: January 15, 2019.

Acceptance notifications: January 31, 2019.

 

This workshop will be held in at the University of Central Florida (Orlando, FL),

under the auspices of the Florida Space Institute, the Center for Lunar and

Asteroid Surface Science and SSERVI Central. The workshop’s impetus is

two-fold: Advance our understanding of how small bodies originate, evolve

and become active beyond Jupiter’s orbit; Planning of exploration strategies –

Both Earth-based observations and Space-based measurements – aimed at

representative objects of the Centaur population. The former serves as our

science rationale and context, while the latter will help focus our workshop

discussions and deliverables on future remote and in-situ characterization

of specific targets.

            Discussion topics will be related to understanding specific properties 

and population trends following: Structure, composition, dynamics, activity

behavior. We strongly encourage the participation of early career researchers

(including graduate students and postdoctoral researchers). Schedule is planned

for a 2.5-day meeting, with a few overview talks (background and discussion

topics), forward-looking presentations (knowledge gaps, models, observing

plans), and guided discussions. The last half day will be dedicated to a guided

discussion session, which will lead to work on the planned workshop deliverables:

A white paper (state-of-the-art, prioritized knowledge gaps, characterization

and exploration pathways) and a plan for a multi-wavelength observing campaign.

All active participants are welcome to contribute.

            We will offer three modes of participation: Physical presence at the 

workshop (In-situ), remote login with option to present and participate in

guided discussions (Active online), remote login muted from the host side

(Passive online). The In-situ mode will consist of a few invited participants

 and selected contributing participants. Notices of intent are solicited from 

all interested participants, regardless of participation mode. Short abstracts

(< 500 words) are requested from those interested in contributed talk or

facilitated discussion sessions.

           

Questions? Please contact the organizers:

Gal Sarid ([email protected])

Maria Womack ([email protected])

 

———————————+

Send submissions to:

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

You are receiving this email because you are a DPS member.

To unsubscribe or update your information, please send your request

to [email protected]. The more general AAS privacy policy is available

online at https://aas.org/about/policies/privacy-policy.

 

Newsletter 18-43

Issue 18-43, October 20, 2018

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS AT THE DPS MEETING
  2. LOOKING FOR SCIENTISTS TO VOLUNTEER FOR THE DPS MEETING
  3. DPS NOMINATING SUBCOMMITTEE MEMBER ELECTION DURING DPS 50
  4. DPS WORKSHOP REMINDER: JUNO AND JUNO-SUPPORTING JUPITER ATMOSPHERIC RESULTS
  5. DPS WORKSHOP: PRIMITIVE OR PROCESSED? CARBON IN TODAY’S SOLAR SYSTEM VS. THE EARLY SOLAR SYSTEM AND THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM
  6. PUBSPACE AND YOU WORKSHOP AT DPS
  7. EDUCATION AND OUTREACH SHAREATHON AT DPS
  8. DPS MEETING JWST TOWN HALL
  9. LSST AND THE SOLAR SYSTEM WORKSHOP
  10. DPS WORKSHOP ON LABORATORY STUDIES OF ATMOSPHERES AND PLUMES
  11. NEOCAM SCIENCE COMMUNITY DISCUSSION AT DPS
  12. LSST SOLAR SYSTEM HACKATHON AT DPS
  13. FUTURE PLUTO AND KUIPER BELT MISSIONS: THE VIEW FROM 2018
  14. TRICK OR TREAT AND TELESCOPES
  15. WORKSHOP ON IN SITU EXPLORATION OF THE ICE GIANTS
  16. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

 COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS AT THE DPS MEETING 

 

DPS will try something new in the program at this year’s meeting. We have

allotted 5 minutes at the beginning of the plenary sessions for oral announcements

about items  of broad interest to our community.  If you would like to make a

very short announcement  (no longer than 2 minutes), please send a short

description of your topic to [email protected]  for coordination and approval

by DPS leadership.

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

LOOKING FOR SCIENTISTS TO VOLUNTEER FOR THE DPS MEETING

Consider giving an hour of your time to support early career scientists and

undergraduate students

We are looking for DPS members to volunteer for two events being sponsored

by DPS at the upcoming meeting in Knoxville.

1) We are looking for scientists to give feedback to early career scientists as

they preview their presentations for the meeting –
Sunday October 21st at 3pm
Monday October 22nd at lunch
Monday October 22nd at 4pm

2) We are looking for scientists to spend one hour with undergraduate students

in local intro planetary science courses (Exploring the Planets) mostly freshmen

and sophomores. We want to make sure that each group of students meet and

become comfortable with several scientists. There will be a faculty member and

TA with each group so that you can spend time talking to students. Your

commitment is one hour in each time slot (not the entire time).

  • Tuesday, Oct 23rd, 11:15 am – 1:45 pm
  • Wednesday, Oct 24th, 8:00 am – 10:30 am
  • Wednesday, Oct 24th, 12:15 pm – 2:45 pm
  • Wednesday, Oct 24th, 2:45 pm – 5:15 pm
  • Thursday, Oct 25th, 1:30 pm – 4:00 pm
  • Friday, Oct 26th, 12:30 pm – 3:00 pm

Please contact Sanlyn Buxner, [email protected] if you are willing to volunteer your

time for either (or both!) events

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

DPS NOMINATING SUBCOMMITTEE MEMBER ELECTION DURING DPS 50

  

Our DPS by-laws allow for the election of a member to the Nominating Sub-committee 

each year at the members meeting – this year’s Members Meeting takes place

on Wednesday Oct. 24, 12:30 pm. 

 

Nominations of subcommittee candidates are made in person at the Members

Meeting and will not close until at least three members are nominated. Please

consider nominating those you think would be good for the position. The

membership will then vote at the meeting and elect one person to work with

the other two subcommittee members for a 3 year term. 

 

This position is important because they seek candidates to run for the elected

offices of Vice-Chair and Committee members. The division’s leadership is

responsible for our annual meetings and carrying out the activities of the

division including managing the division’s funds, carrying out its elections,

federal relations, education, press activities, web maintenance, providing

professional development programs, ensuring a climate conducive to collegial

and productive scientific exploration and enabling publication of our scientific

results. The main activities for this committee are generally conducted in the

spring semester in preparation for summer DPS elections. If you have questions

about the tasks please feel free to contact the outgoing nominating subcommittee

chair (Kelsi Singer; [email protected]), the incoming chair (Yvonne

Pendelton, [email protected]) or other current/past members.  

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

DPS WORKSHOP REMINDER: JUNO AND JUNO-SUPPORTING JUPITER ATMOSPHERIC RESULTS

 

Sun Oct 21, 2018, 1:00-6:00pm Room 301 B (Knoxville Convention Center)

 

This is immediately prior to the 50th AAS/DPS meeting, but no DPS registration

is required to attend this meeting.

 

The workshop is intended to foster collaboration and discussion between the

Juno science team and the Earth-based observation community. We will have

people from the Juno project present mission updates and members of the Earth-based

community present updates on their observations. The structure of the meeting

will be informal in order to encourage interactions between all participants.

 

There is no registration required for this workshop, but please send us an email ([email protected] and/or [email protected])

if you intend to give a brief talk relating to Juno or Jupiter. This will help our

organization. 

 

We are working on some requests for WebEx participation, but this capability

is not guaranteed at this time.

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

DPS WORKSHOP: PRIMITIVE OR PROCESSED? CARBON IN TODAY’S SOLAR

SYSTEM VS. THE EARLY SOLAR SYSTEM AND THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM

 

As part of the SSERVI-sponsored series of workshops on Carbon in the

Solar System, we will be holding a panel discussion at DPS called “Primitive

or Processed?” Recent investigations within our Solar System, including the

Pluto system, the Saturn system, Mercury, and nearly all points in between,

point to carbon in some form on many bodies, though its nature is often elusive.

The event will assemble a panel of experts (see below) to discuss carbon in the

solar system (in meteorites and on planetary surfaces) and in the interstellar

medium, and the relationships between them. How processed are the carbon

compounds found across the solar system, compared to the carbon in the ISM?

How does the processing occur, and on what timescales? What future

measurements can help us to better understand carbon in our solar system?

Expert panelists include Dr. Yvonne Pendleton (NASA Ames), Dr. Diane

Wooden (NASA Ames) and Dr. Kelly Miller (SwRI San Antonio). We hope

you’ll join us for an engaging discussion!

 

Details:

Sunday Oct 21, 3-6 PM

Ballroom F-G

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

PUBSPACE AND YOU WORKSHOP AT DPS

 

PubSpace and You: How to Deposit Your Manuscripts as Required by ROSES

at the DPS Fall Meeting on Monday, Oct 22, 12:00 pm–12:45 pm, Room 301B. 

We will discuss the relatively new ROSES requirements to submit your manuscripts

to NASA’s PubSpace system, as well as the practicalities for doing so with a

variety of different publications.  Please join us.

 

7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7

EDUCATION AND OUTREACH SHAREATHON AT DPS

Rotunda Room (Knoxville Convention Center) on Monday October 24th from 5 to 6:15pm

Join us to share your best activities and materials for education and outreach

with other scientists, educators and local high school teachers. Learn what others

are doing as you prepare for your own events looking towards the Apollo 11th

50th Anniversary next summer. Additionally, we are soliciting your feedback

about what support you need and want from the DPS to support your education

and outreach work. Stop by and talk to others doing education and outreach events

and learn how to get involved in various settings. Participants are welcome to bring

materials to hand-out and do demonstrations.

 

Please contact Sanlyn Buxner [email protected] with questions.

 

8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8

DPS MEETING JWST TOWN HALL

Tue. Oct. 23, 12:00 pm–1:30 pm, Room 301 C 

 

Updated Agenda:    

* Project overview/status (20m) – Eric Smit, JWST Program Scientist    

* Exposure Time and Planning Tools update (15m) – Bryan Holler    

* Scattered Light and Bright Limits (10m) – John Stansberry    

* GTO/ERS summary, GO programmatics (20m) – Stefanie Milam    

* Q/A, Including HST gyroscope status/impacts (15m)  

 

John Stansberry JWST — NIRCam Operations & Commissioning Lead        

Solar System Lead Space Telescope Science Institute 410 338 2442

 

9———9———9———9———9———9———9———9———9———9

LSST AND THE SOLAR SYSTEM WORKSHOP

4:30-6:00pm Weds Oct 24, 2018, 50th DPS Meeting, Room 301 D-E

(Knoxville Convention Center)

This workshop serves as the annual meeting of the Large Synoptic Survey

Telescope (LSST) Solar System Science Collaboration (SSSC) and is open

to all DPS attendees. We will provide a brief status of LSST with respect to

Solar System science, provide updates on current and future activities

within the SSSC, and examine follow-up opportunities in the LSST era.

The presentation schedule is as follows:

  • LSST Project & Solar System Data Status Update – Mario Jurić (University of Washington/LSST)  & Siegfried Eggl (University of Washington/LSST)
  • LSST Solar System Science Collaboration (SSSC) Update – Meg Schwamb (Gemini Observatory) & David Trilling (NAU)
  • NOAO Data Lab Capabilities in Support of (LSST) Solar System Science – Frank Valdes (NOAO)
  • Gemini Solar System Follow-up in the LSST Era – Bryan Miller (Gemini Observatory)

Contact organizers Meg Schwamb ([email protected])

and David Trilling ([email protected]) with any questions

 

10——-10——–10——–10——–10——–10——–10——–10——–10———10

DPS WORKSHOP ON LABORATORY STUDIES OF ATMOSPHERES AND PLUMES

 

Workshop on “Laboratory Studies of Atmospheres and Plumes” organized

by the Laboratory Astrophysics Division of AAS  

 

The object of the Laboratory Astrophysics Division (LAD) is to advance our

understanding of the Universe through the promotion of fundamental theoretical

and experimental research into the underlying processes that drive the cosmos.

This LAD workshop will consist of five 15-minute-long invited talks showcasing

the laboratory astrophysics work being conducted to support planetary missions for

the exploration of our solar system and beyond. The invited talks will demonstrate

how missions like Cassini, New Horizons, Rosetta, and future missions focused

on Europa or exoplanets can benefit from these experimental and theoretical studies.

They will be followed by a 10-minute panel discussion to encourage participants

to explore the laboratory astrophysics needs for planetary science studies and

initiate conversations that could lead to future collaborations and new` research

investigations. 

 

The workshop program will be as follows:

12:00-12:05: Stefanie Milam and Ella Sciamma-O’Brien — General introduction and welcome
12:05-12:20: Morgan Cable — “Laboratory Investigations to Support Exploration of Titan” 
12:20-12:35: Karl Hibbitts — “Understanding Europa and its potential plumes through laboratory measurements”

12:35-12:50: Will Grundy — “Laboratory Studies of Condensed Volatiles Under Outer Solar System Conditions”

12:50-13:05: Perry Gerakines — “Laboratory Experiments in Support of Comet Exploration” 
13:05-13:20: Sarah Horst —“Laboratory astrophysics investigations supporting exoplanet exploration”

13:20-13:30: Panel discussion 

 

The workshop will be Thursday October 25th from 12:00-1:30 PM in room 301D-E. 

Lunch boxes will be provided on a first come first serve basis to the first 30 participants. 

 

Please contact Dr. Ella Sciamma-O’Brien ([email protected])

or Dr. Stefanie Milam ([email protected]) with any questions.

Acknowledgments: We greatly appreciate support for this workshop from the

VORTICES team from SSERVI, and from Thermo Fisher Scientific.

 

11——-11——–11——–11——–11——–11——–11——–11——–11———11

NEOCAM SCIENCE COMMUNITY DISCUSSION AT DPS

 

The NEOCam Science Team invites the planetary science community to

join us for a discussion of NEOCam at the 50th DPS meeting in

Knoxville. We will present an overview of the mission concept,

including anticipated bandpasses, survey strategy, and data products,

as well as discuss some of the avenues of investigation that NEOCam

would enable. The discussion will consist of two one-hour blocks with

ample time for questions, so attendees may come and go as their

schedule dictates. All members of the science community, especially

early career researchers and members of historically under-represented

groups, are encouraged to attend to learn more about the project. 

 

Date: Thursday, Oct 25 2018

Time: 3:00-5:00 pm

Location: Room 200D

 

Questions? Contact Joe Masiero ([email protected])

 

12——-12——–12——–12——–12——–12——–12——–12——–12———12

LSST SOLAR SYSTEM HACKATHON AT DPS

 

Thursday October 25, 2018 4:00-7:30 pm
Room 200 B-C (Knoxville Convention Center), 50th DPS meeting, Knoxville, TN

 

Open to all DPS attendees

 

Organizers: Meg Schwamb (Gemini Observatory) & David Trilling (NAU)

 

The main goal of the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST)

Solar System Science Collaboration (SSSC) is to facilitate the efforts of the

planetary community to study the planets and small body populations residing

within our Solar System using LSST data. Over its 10 year lifespan, the LSST

will observe and catalog  over 5 million Main Belt asteroids, almost 300,000 Jupiter

Trojans, over 100,000 NEOs, over 40,000 KBOs, tens of interstellar objects,

and over 10,000 comets. To prepare for future  survey cadence decisions and

ensure that interesting and novel Solar System science is achievable with

LSST, the SSSC is organizing a Hackathon at DPS. The aim is spend several

hours working intensively on collaborative projects related to community

preparations for when LSST turns on.  Past Hack day or SSSC sprint experience

is not required. Come ready with a project idea or join someone’s pitched project.

Programming experience is not a requirement. This workshop is focused towards

SSSC members, but any DPS attendee is welcome to attend. Please register at

https://goo.gl/forms/1RoZLOVQ9cbtQbU33 to reserve a spot.

 

13——-13——–13——–13——–13——–13——–13——–13——–13———13

FUTURE PLUTO AND KUIPER BELT MISSIONS: THE VIEW FROM 2018

Friday, 26 October | 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm

Room 301 B  – DPS Conference Venue, Knoxville TN

 

Description:

The Kuiper Belt (KB) is a scientific treasure trove consisting of comets,

planetesimals, and small planets like Pluto. Since its discovery in the early

1990s, the KB has yielded fundamental insights into planetary accretion,

the migration of planets, and the population structure of our solar system

—including the discovery that dwarf planets like Pluto are common there.

 

The exploration of Pluto by New Horizons in 2015, the first KB dwarf planet

to be explored, revealed a richness of geological, atmospheric, satellite, and

compositional diversity at Pluto that rivals planets like Mars. The flyby also

revealed evidence for Pluto being an actively evolving world over many

spatial and temporal scales including evidence for an interior ocean, active

glaciers, dunes, tectonics, a wide variety of terrain ages, and a complex

atmosphere. Those results, combined with the heterogeneous colors, surface

compositions, and satellite systems of other KB dwarf planets beg for an

ongoing future in Kuiper Belt exploration.

 

In this workshop we will survey 2018 work on (i) a return to Pluto with an

orbiter, (ii) Centaur missions to study KBOs, and (iii) flyby missions to other

KB dwarf planets. We will review community and individual scientist work

to motivate NASA to fund future studies leading to the next Decadal Survey.

 

14——-14——–14——–14——–14——–14——–14——–14——–14———14

TRICK-OR-TREAT AND TELESCOPES

 

DPS is continuing its Trick-or-Treat and Telescopes Program. Put out your

telescopes – or even binoculars – during trick-or-treat time on Halloween, in

your own lawn or in a neighbor’s lawn with better viewing (or more traffic).

The following website gives advice and connections to resources. If you have

any pictures of your event, please send them to bonnie.buratti(at)jpl.nasa.gov

education/trick-or-treat-and-telescopes

 

15——-15——–15——–15——–15——–15——–15——–15——–15———15

WORKSHOP ON IN SITU EXPLORATION OF THE ICE GIANTS

Notice of upcoming workshop. Pre-registration is now open –

Please note that attendance is capped at 90, so please register early!

February 25-27, 2019, Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Marseille, France

Meeting URL : https://ice-giant-workshop.lam.fr

Abstract submission deadline: December 31, 2018
Early registration deadline: January 31, 2018
Maximum number of participants: 90

We are pleased to announce a workshop addressing scientific and technological

topics relevant to the in situ exploration of giant planet atmospheres, including

scientific questions, how to achieve them, and technological challenges. In the

spirit of the Cassini-Huygens mission legacy, the workshop will also focus on

potential mission concepts and international cooperation, with an emphasis on

probe studies of the ice giants in the framework of future NASA-ESA collaborations.

The Workshop on In Situ Exploration of the Ice Giants will take place at

Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Marseille (https://www.lam.fr/) in a three-day

science program comprising themed sessions, and featuring a mixture of invited

reviews, invited and contributed talks, and posters. The workshop will cover

topics ranging from the link between the formation conditions of the ice giant

planets and atmospheric composition, measurement techniques, instrumentation,

and technologies, and mission concepts. Invited speakers will include international

experts in the origin, formation, and evolution of giant planets, giant planet

atmospheres, instrumentation for in situ measurements of atmospheres, entry

and descent probes and their technologies, future technology needs and development,

and what the ice giants can tell us about exoplanetary systems.

 

Abstract submissions for posters and for talks are encouraged, although

the number of talks available is limited in order to keep the workshop to

three days. All contributions should be related to science, measurements,

or technologies for in situ exploration of the ice giants. Please register early,

as space is limited to no more than 90 participants! The possibility of

publishing workshop papers in a peer review journal is being explored.

 

16——-16——–16——–16——–16——–16——–16——–16——–16———16

 JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) ASSISTANT TEACHING PROFESSOR IN PHYSICS (MULTIPLE POSITIONS)

 

The Department of Physics and Applied Physics at the University of

Massachusetts Lowell (UML) invites applications for a number of

teaching faculty positions to begin September 2019.  We are especially

interested in candidates who can complement and/or enhance existing

instructional service programs in the department.
The applicant would be expected to teach introductory-level high-enrollment

Physics and Astronomy courses. The successful candidate should have a

strong commitment to teaching at both the undergraduate and graduate

levels with skills that complete and enhance the department’s growing base

of full-time faculty. Additional duties would include coordination of the

graduate teaching assistants leading the laboratory component of these

high-enrollment lecture courses.  

Minimum Qualifications (Required):

            • Ph.D. in Physics or related field (must have Ph.D. by the time of appointment)

            • Demonstrated teaching ability in physics and excellent communication

               skills-Ability to work effectively with diverse groups 

 

Special Instructions to Applicants:
Please include a CV, cover letter, teaching statement/philosophy, evidence

of teaching and teaching evaluations with your application.  Names and

contact information for three references will be required at the time of application.

 

To apply, visit the URL:

http://explorejobs.uml.edu/lowell/en-us/job/495957/assistant-teaching-professor-in-physics-multiple-positions

 

B) NASA HUBBLE FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM (NHFP)

 

On behalf of the NASA Astrophysics Division, the Space Telescope Science

Institute (STScI) announces the second annual call for applications for

postdoctoral fellowships under the NASA Hubble Fellowship Program

(NHFP) #02904, to begin in the Fall of 2019.

 

The Announcement of Opportunity, which includes detailed program policies

and application instructions, is available at the website: http://nhfp.stsci.edu.

The application submission page will be open today until November 1, 2018.

Please share this employment announcement with your friends, networking

groups, mailing lists, and social connections using this link.  

 

———————————+

Send submissions to:

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

You are receiving this email because you are a DPS member.

To unsubscribe or update your information, please send your request

to [email protected]. The more general AAS privacy policy is available

online at https://aas.org/about/policies/privacy-policy.

Newsletter 18-42

Issue 18-42, October 13, 2018

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS AT THE DPS MEETING
  2. LOOKING FOR SCIENTISTS TO VOLUNTEER FOR THE DPS MEETING
  3. DPS NOMINATING SUBCOMMITTEE MEMBER ELECTION DURING DPS 50
  4. NEW PHOTO GALLERIES AVAILABLE FOR 2016 AND 2017 DPS MEETINGS
  5. DPS WORKSHOP REMINDER: JUNO AND JUNO-SUPPORTING JUPITER ATMOSPHERIC RESULTS
  6. DPS WORKSHOP: PRIMITIVE OR PROCESSED? CARBON IN TODAY’S SOLAR SYSTEM VS. THE EARLY SOLAR SYSTEM AND THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM
  7. LSST SOLAR SYSTEM HACKATHON AT DPS
  8. TRICK OR TREAT AND TELESCOPES
  9. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

 COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS AT THE DPS MEETING 

 

DPS will try something new in the program at this year’s meeting. We have

allotted 5 minutes at the beginning of the plenary sessions for oral announcements

about items  of broad interest to our community.  If you would like to make a

very short announcement  (no longer than 2 minutes), please send a short

description of your topic to [email protected]  for coordination and approval

by DPS leadership.

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

LOOKING FOR SCIENTISTS TO VOLUNTEER FOR THE DPS MEETING

Consider giving an hour of your time to support early career scientists and 

undergraduate students

We are looking for DPS members to volunteer for two events being sponsored 

by DPS at the upcoming meeting in Knoxville.

1) We are looking for scientists to give feedback to early career scientists as 

they preview their presentations for the meeting – 
Sunday October 21st at 3pm
Monday October 22nd at lunch
Monday October 22nd at 4pm

2) We are looking for scientists to spend one hour with undergraduate students 

in local intro planetary science courses (Exploring the Planets) mostly freshmen

and sophomores. We want to make sure that each group of students meet and

become comfortable with several scientists. There will be a faculty member and

TA with each group so that you can spend time talking to students. Your

commitment is one hour in each time slot (not the entire time).

  • Tuesday, Oct 23rd, 11:15 am – 1:45 pm
  • Wednesday, Oct 24th, 8:00 am – 10:30 am
  • Wednesday, Oct 24th, 12:15 pm – 2:45 pm
  • Wednesday, Oct 24th, 2:45 pm – 5:15 pm
  • Thursday, Oct 25th, 1:30 pm – 4:00 pm
  • Friday, Oct 26th, 12:30 pm – 3:00 pm

Please contact Sanlyn Buxner, [email protected] if you are willing to volunteer your

time for either (or both!) events

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

DPS NOMINATING SUBCOMMITTEE MEMBER ELECTION DURING DPS 50

  

Our DPS by-laws allow for the election of a member to the Nominating Sub-committee 

each year at the members meeting – this year’s Members Meeting takes place 

on Wednesday Oct. 24, 12:30 pm. 

 

Nominations of subcommittee candidates are made in person at the Members

Meeting and will not close until at least three members are nominated. Please

consider nominating those you think would be good for the position. The

membership will then vote at the meeting and elect one person to work with

the other two subcommittee members for a 3 year term. 

 

This position is important because they seek candidates to run for the elected

offices of Vice-Chair and Committee members. The division’s leadership is

responsible for our annual meetings and carrying out the activities of the

division including managing the division’s funds, carrying out its elections,

federal relations, education, press activities, web maintenance, providing

professional development programs, ensuring a climate conducive to collegial

and productive scientific exploration and enabling publication of our scientific

results. The main activities for this committee are generally conducted in the

spring semester in preparation for summer DPS elections. If you have questions

about the tasks please feel free to contact the outgoing nominating subcommittee

chair (Kelsi Singer; [email protected]), the incoming chair 

(Yvonne Pendelton, [email protected]) or other current/past members.  

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

NEW PHOTO GALLERIES AVAILABLE FOR 2016 AND 2017 DPS MEETINGS

 

Henry Throop has kindly put together photo galleries from the Pasadena 2016

and Provo 2017 DPS meetings.  Please find their links, as well as links to other

galleries, at history/dps-history

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

DPS WORKSHOP REMINDER: JUNO AND JUNO-SUPPORTING JUPITER ATMOSPHERIC RESULTS

 

Sun Oct 21, 2018, 1:00-6:00pm Room 301 B (Knoxville Convention Center)

 

This is immediately prior to the 50th AAS/DPS meeting, but no DPS registration

is required to attend this meeting.

 

The workshop is intended to foster collaboration and discussion between the

Juno science team and the Earth-based observation community. We will have

people from the Juno project present mission updates and members of the Earth-based

community present updates on their observations. The structure of the meeting

will be informal in order to encourage interactions between all participants.

 

There is no registration required for this workshop, but please send us an email 

([email protected] and/or [email protected])

if you intend to give a brief talk relating to Juno or Jupiter. This will help our

organization. 

 

We are working on some requests for WebEx participation, but this capability

is not guaranteed at this time.

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

DPS WORKSHOP: PRIMITIVE OR PROCESSED? CARBON IN TODAY’S SOLAR 

SYSTEM VS. THE EARLY SOLAR SYSTEM AND THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM

 

As part of the SSERVI-sponsored series of workshops on Carbon in the

Solar System, we will be holding a panel discussion at DPS called “Primitive

or Processed?” Recent investigations within our Solar System, including the

Pluto system, the Saturn system, Mercury, and nearly all points in between,

point to carbon in some form on many bodies, though its nature is often elusive.

The event will assemble a panel of experts (see below) to discuss carbon in the

solar system (in meteorites and on planetary surfaces) and in the interstellar

medium, and the relationships between them. How processed are the carbon

compounds found across the solar system, compared to the carbon in the ISM?

How does the processing occur, and on what timescales? What future

measurements can help us to better understand carbon in our solar system?

Expert panelists include Dr. Yvonne Pendleton (NASA Ames), Dr. Diane 

Wooden (NASA Ames) and Dr. Kelly Miller (SwRI San Antonio). We hope

you’ll join us for an engaging discussion!

 

Details:

Sunday Oct 21, 3-6 PM

Ballroom F-G

 

7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7

LSST SOLAR SYSTEM HACKATHON AT DPS

 

Thursday October 25, 2018 4:00-7:30 pm
Room 200 B-C (Knoxville Convention Center), 50th DPS meeting, Knoxville, TN 

 

Open to all DPS attendees

 

Organizers: Meg Schwamb (Gemini Observatory) & David Trilling (NAU)

 

The main goal of the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) 

Solar System Science Collaboration (SSSC) is to facilitate the efforts of the 

planetary community to study the planets and small body populations residing 

within our Solar System using LSST data. Over its 10 year lifespan, the LSST 

will observe and catalog  over 5 million Main Belt asteroids, almost 300,000 Jupiter

Trojans, over 100,000 NEOs, over 40,000 KBOs, tens of interstellar objects,

and over 10,000 comets. To prepare for future  survey cadence decisions and

ensure that interesting and novel Solar System science is achievable with

LSST, the SSSC is organizing a Hackathon at DPS. The aim is spend several

hours working intensively on collaborative projects related to community

preparations for when LSST turns on.  Past Hack day or SSSC sprint experience

is not required. Come ready with a project idea or join someone’s pitched project.

Programming experience is not a requirement. This workshop is focused towards

SSSC members, but any DPS attendee is welcome to attend. Please register at

https://goo.gl/forms/1RoZLOVQ9cbtQbU33 to reserve a spot.

 

8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8———8

TRICK-OR-TREAT AND TELESCOPES

 

DPS is continuing its Trick-or-Treat and Telescopes Program. Put out your

telescopes – or even binoculars – during trick-or-treat time on Halloween, in

your own lawn or in a neighbor’s lawn with better viewing (or more traffic).

The following website gives advice and connections to resources. If you have

any pictures of your event, please send them to bonnie.buratti(at)jpl.nasa.gov

education/trick-or-treat-and-telescopes

 

9———9———9———9———9———9———9———9———9———9

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) GSFC RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN NOBLE GAS ANALYSIS 

 

Applications are now being accepted for a Research Associate to work on the

development of Ar-Ar analysis and dating of geologic samples at NASA/GSFC.

This position may be filled at the postdoctoral level or for more senior researchers

as a visiting scholar. The successful candidate would join scientists in the Noble

Gas Lab to develop the capability for Ar-Ar geochronology on our multicollector

instruments, and use it to address questions about solar system materials, for

example, the origin of meteorites, the age of aqueous alteration, or other research

of mutual interest. The MNGRL facility comprises two multicollector magnetic

sector mass spectrometers (Nu Noblesse and Thermo Helix) with various modes

of gas extraction (laser and furnace), two in situ geochronology development

projects, and sample examination and preparation capabilities. Applicants should

hold a Ph.D. in geosciences or a related field and have experience in noble gas

analysis of geologic samples, either terrestrial or extraterrestrial. US citizenship

is not required. Applications are due by November 2, 2018; package materials and

address can be found at https://cresst2.umd.edu/opportunities/researchopp.html.

For more information, contact Dr. Barbara Cohen ([email protected]).  

 

B) 2019 EXPLORATION FELLOWSHIP IN EARTH AND SPACE SCIENCE

     SCHOOL OF EARTH AND SPACE EXPLORATION

     ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY

     TEMPE, ARIZONA

 

The School of Earth and Space Exploration (SESE) at Arizona State University 

invites applications for the postdoctoral research scholar position of Exploration 

Fellow. The mission of the postdoctoral fellowship is to foster SESE’s interdisciplinary

research program by attracting and supporting outstanding early-career scientists

and engineers to pursue independent research in collaboration with SESE faculty.

Research areas within SESE encompass theoretical and observational astrophysics,

astrobiology, cosmology, earth and planetary science, instrumentation and systems

engineering, and science education. Anticipated start date for the position is July 2019. 

 

Incoming Fellows will receive an annual stipend of $65,000 with health benefits,

plus $12,000 per year in discretionary research funds.  A relocation allowance will

be provided.  The initial appointment is for one year with subsequent annual renewal

for up to a total of three years, contingent upon satisfactory performance, the needs

of the university, and availability of resources.

 

Interested candidates should contact two faculty members in SESE to discuss

potential collaborative research topics and determine whether they would agree to

serve as an Exploration Fellow mentor. When a topic of mutual interest between

the applicant and potential faculty mentors is identified, the applicant should

submit a research proposal as a single PDF that includes: (1) a cover letter

identifying the proposed research topic and the names of the two faculty mentors,

(2) a current CV, (3) a research proposal not longer than five pages (including

figures and references), and (4) one paper exemplifying the applicant’s research.

Applicants should arrange for three letters of reference to be submitted separately.

Preference will be given to proposals that include interdisciplinary research

spanning multiple research areas within SESE.

 

Essential duties of the position:  The successful applicant will conduct original

research, document results and write journal articles, and present at scientific

meetings. Minimum Qualifications: Ph.D. by the time of appointment in a field

relevant to Earth and Space exploration, including (but not limited to) astrophysics,

physics, chemistry, geology, biology, and engineering.  Candidates must be within

five years from receipt of the doctoral degree.

 

Desired Qualifications: (1) research proposal that demonstrates relevance,

interdisciplinary merit, and/or potential impact of the proposed research

activities to the overarching “big picture” research questions in the field

and to the mission of SESE, (2) a record of prior achievement and experience

demonstrating the potential to accomplish proposed research objectives,

(3) evidence of strong verbal and written communication skills.

Application materials (and any questions) should be submitted by email

to [email protected], addressed to the Exploration Fellowship Committee. 

Applications will only be given full consideration when all materials described

above are received.  Initial review of complete applications will begin on

December 1, 2018; if not filled, application review will continue weekly

until the search is closed.  Reference Job ID 12578. A background check

is required for employment.

More information about the Exploration Fellowship can be found at:

http://sese.asu.edu/exploration-fellowship

More information about the department can be found here: https://sese.asu.edu/

Postdoctoral benefits can be found at: https://cfo.asu.edu/postdoctoral-scholars

 

C) APPLICATIONS SOLICITED FOR TENURE-TRACK ASSISTANT PROFESSOR

The Department of Physics/Astronomy and Department of Geology at 
Western Washington University (WWU) invite applications for a tenure 
track Assistant Professor of Planetary Science. This position has an 
expected start date of September 2019, and will be split evenly between 
the two departments, with Physics as the administrative lead department 
for purposes of annual review, tenure and promotion. Teaching 
assignments will be focused in Geophysics, a program shared between the 
departments.

We seek applicants whose research and teaching examines the role of 
physical processes in planet formation and evolution, planetary 
interiors, surfaces, atmospheres and/or magnetospheres, small bodies, 
solar system dynamics, or related topics. The preferred candidate will 
be expected to develop and maintain a vigorous research program that 
complements existing strengths in remote sensing, planetary geology, 
seismology, magnetism, and tectonics, to engage students in this 
research, and to teach undergraduate courses at all levels, using 
student-centered instructional approaches when appropriate.

http://employment.wwu.edu/cw/en-us/job/496058/assistant-professor-of-planetary-science

 

D) NASA HUBBLE FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM (NHFP)

 

On behalf of the NASA Astrophysics Division, the Space Telescope Science

Institute (STScI) announces the second annual call for applications for

postdoctoral fellowships under the NASA Hubble Fellowship Program

(NHFP) #02904, to begin in the Fall of 2019.

 

The Announcement of Opportunity, which includes detailed program policies

and application instructions, is available at the website: http://nhfp.stsci.edu.

The application submission page will be open today until November 1, 2018.

Please share this employment announcement with your friends, networking

groups, mailing lists, and social connections using this link.  

 

———————————+

Send submissions to: 

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

You are receiving this email because you are a DPS member.

To unsubscribe or update your information, please send your request

to [email protected]. The more general AAS privacy policy is available

online at https://aas.org/about/policies/privacy-policy.

Newsletter 18-41

Issue 18-41, October 6, 2018

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. NEOCAM SCIENCE COMMUNITY DISCUSSION AT DPS
  2. LSST AND THE SOLAR SYSTEM WORKSHOP
  3. FUTURE PLUTO AND KUIPER BELT MISSIONS: THE VIEW FROM 2018
  4. REMINDER TO REGISTER FOR THE WOMEN IN PLANETARY SCIENCE DISCUSSION HOUR, LUNCHTIME TUESDAY OCT 23RD AT DPS, KNOXVILLE
  5. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

NEOCAM SCIENCE COMMUNITY DISCUSSION AT DPS

 

The NEOCam Science Team invites the planetary science community to

join us for a discussion of NEOCam at the 50th DPS meeting in

Knoxville.  We will present an overview of the mission concept,

including anticipated bandpasses, survey strategy, and data products,

as well as discuss some of the avenues of investigation that NEOCam

would enable.  The discussion will consist of two one-hour blocks with

ample time for questions, so attendees may come and go as their

schedule dictates.  All members of the science community, especially

early career researchers and members of historically under-represented

groups, are encouraged to attend to learn more about the project.

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

LSST AND THE SOLAR SYSTEM WORKSHOP 

4:30-6:00pm Weds Oct 24, 2018, 50th DPS Meeting, Room 301 D-E 

(Knoxville Convention Center)

This workshop serves as the annual meeting of the Large Synoptic Survey 

Telescope (LSST) Solar System Science Collaboration (SSSC) and is open

to all DPS attendees. We will provide a brief status of LSST with respect to

Solar System science, provide updates on current and future activities

within the SSSC, and examine follow-up opportunities in the LSST era. 

The presentation schedule is as follows: 

  • LSST Project & Solar System Data Status Update – Mario Jurić (University of Washington/LSST)  & Siegfried Eggl (University of Washington/LSST)
  • LSST Solar System Science Collaboration (SSSC) Update – Meg Schwamb (Gemini Observatory) & David Trilling (NAU)
  • NOAO Data Lab Capabilities in Support of (LSST) Solar System Science – Frank Valdes (NOAO)
  • Gemini Solar System Follow-up in the LSST Era – Bryan Miller (Gemini Observatory)

Contact organizers Meg Schwamb ([email protected])

and David Trilling ([email protected]) with any questions

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

FUTURE PLUTO AND KUIPER BELT MISSIONS: THE VIEW FROM 2018

Friday, 26 October | 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm

Room 301 B  – DPS Conference Venue, Knoxville TN

 

Description:

The Kuiper Belt (KB) is a scientific treasure trove consisting of comets,

planetesimals, and small planets like Pluto. Since its discovery in the early

1990s, the KB has yielded fundamental insights into planetary accretion,

the migration of planets, and the population structure of our solar system

—including the discovery that dwarf planets like Pluto are common there.

 

The exploration of Pluto by New Horizons in 2015, the first KB dwarf planet

to be explored, revealed a richness of geological, atmospheric, satellite, and

compositional diversity at Pluto that rivals planets like Mars. The flyby also

revealed evidence for Pluto being an actively evolving world over many

spatial and temporal scales including evidence for an interior ocean, active

glaciers, dunes, tectonics, a wide variety of terrain ages, and a complex

atmosphere. Those results, combined with the heterogeneous colors, surface

compositions, and satellite systems of other KB dwarf planets beg for an

ongoing future in Kuiper Belt exploration.

 

In this workshop we will survey 2018 work on (i) a return to Pluto with an

orbiter, (ii) Centaur missions to study KBOs, and (iii) flyby missions to other

KB dwarf planets. We will review community and individual scientist work

to motivate NASA to fund future studies leading to the next Decadal Survey.

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

REMINDER TO REGISTER FOR THE WOMEN IN PLANETARY SCIENCE 

DISCUSSION HOUR, LUNCHTIME TUESDAY OCT 23RD AT DPS, KNOXVILLE

 

Although the initial catering deadline has passed we still have some spots/

lunches available for the Women in Planetary Science Discussion Hour at

DPS, please register if you think you might attend to so we can judge the

seating and lunch capacities correctly :).  Registration and more details at: 

http://bit.ly/DPS_WIPS_2018.  

 

Basic info: Join us for the annual DPS Women in Planetary Science event

over lunch. All are welcome! The main topic will be diversity and inclusion. 

Pre-registration is required to receive a lunch, and recommended even if you

are bringing your own lunch due to possible room space limitations.

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) VISITING ASSISTANT PROFESSOR IN PHYSICS

      BEREA COLLEE

      BEREA, KENTUCKY

 

content/visiting-assistant-professor-physics

 

The Physics Department at Berea College invites applications for a visiting

assistant professor, beginning in August 2019. The initial appointment is for

one year with the possibility of renewal for up to three years upon satisfactory

performance. Applicants should have a Ph.D. in physics, astronomy, geophysics,

or a related field at the time of appointment. We seek candidates who demonstrate

a strong commitment to undergraduate teaching in a liberal arts context and

who are familiar with evidence-based, student-centered teaching. Candidates

with a background in planetary science and/or geophysics are particularly

encouraged to apply, although all subfields of physics will be considered.

The successful candidate will be expected to teach courses in introductory

physics, contribute to our new geology/planetary science program, and

support the General Education curriculum. The department is seeking an

individual with experience working within a community of diverse students

and colleagues. Successful candidates will, by their teaching, research, or

service, demonstrate that they can contribute to the diversity and excellence

of our community. Although this is primarily a teaching position, there is

opportunity for conducting summer research with students through Berea’s

Undergraduate Research and Creative Projects Program.

 

Applicants should send a letter of interest, statement of teaching philosophy,

statement of scholarly interest, academic transcripts, current CV, three letters

of recommendation, and a complete Berea College application form found at 

http://www.berea.edu/FacApp to [email protected].

 

Review of applications will begin November 15 and continue until the position is filled.

 

B) ASSISTANT OR ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR IN PLANETARY SCIENCE

     PURDUE UNIVERSITY

     WEST LAFAYETTE, INDIANA

 

content/assistant-or-associate-professor-planetary-science

 

Tenure track position(s) in Planetary Science, Purdue University

 

The Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences (EAPS),

within the College of Science at Purdue University, invites applications

for one or more tenure-track faculty positions in planetary atmospheres

and/or planetary physics. These appointments will be at the level of Assistant

or Associate Professor. Growth in planetary science is part of large-scale

interdisciplinary hiring effort across key strategic areas in the College of

Science.  This position comes at a time when the College is under new

leadership and with multiple commitments of significant investment.

 

Candidates should be able to develop a vigorous, externally funded,

internationally recognized theoretical, experimental, and/or observational

research program that addresses research questions of fundamental importance.

Possible areas of study in planetary atmospheres could include observing

and/or modeling of the atmospheres of jovian, terrestrial, exosolar planets

or small bodies, and/or the origin of life and habitability. Possible areas of

study in planetary physics could include computer modeling of impact

processes, planetary origins, or planetary interiors.

 

Candidates are expected to develop a program that is complementary to

existing research within the department and teaching needs at the undergraduate

and graduate levels. The potential to develop interdisciplinary, collaborative

research that cuts across specialty areas within the department, the College

of Science, and Purdue’s research community is desirable. Candidates must

have completed their Ph.D. in Planetary Sciences or related field at the

time of employment. Within EAPS and Purdue, candidates will find

supportive colleagues, a diverse and vibrant academic community, with

ample opportunities for professional and personal growth.

 

Purdue University’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary

Sciences is committed to advancing diversity in all areas of faculty effort,

including scholarship, instruction, and engagement. Candidates should

address at least one of these areas in their cover letter, indicating their past

experiences, current interests or activities, and/or future goals to promote a

climate that values diversity and inclusion.

 

Interested applicants should visit https://hiring.science.purdue.edu, submit a

curriculum vitae, a research statement, a teaching statement, and complete

contact information for at least 3 references. Review of applications will

begin January 2, 2019, and will continue until the position is filled.

Questions related to this position should be sent to David Minton

([email protected]). Applications will be accepted until the position

is filled. A background check will be required for employment in this position.

Purdue University is an ADVANCE institution.

 

C) ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS OR ASTRONOMY AT ITHACA COLLEGE

 

The Ithaca College Department of Physics and Astronomy invites

applications for a tenure-track assistant professor to begin in August

2019. The successful candidate will embrace our commitment to

undergraduate teaching, advising, and mentorship, will establish an

active experimental physics or astrophysics research program or an

observational astronomy research program with significant

undergraduate student involvement, and will contribute to the

operation and improvement of the department, school, and college.

 

The successful candidate must have completed a Ph.D. in physics,

astronomy, astrophysics, or a closely related field by August 1, 2019.

Experience as a teacher of record or as a teaching assistant at the

undergraduate level is required.

 

For the complete position announcement and to submit an application,

please visit:

 

https://ithaca.peopleadmin.com

 

Please upload a complete curriculum vitae, a statement of teaching

experience and philosophy, a description of research plans, and a

statement that addresses how they will contribute to a culture of

inclusion and to diversity at Ithaca College. Applicants must also

provide names and email addresses of three individuals who will be

asked to submit letters of reference. To ensure full consideration,

complete applications must be received by October 8, 2018.

 

D) RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN PLANETARY SCIENCE AT CU BOULDER

 

The newly formed Exploration of Planetary Ices and Climates (EPIC)

group at the University of Colorado’s Laboratory for Atmospheric and

Space Physics (LASP) is seeking to fill a research position in

planetary geophysics and remote sensing. Candidates at the levels of

RS-I and RS-II will be considered. The initial appointment is for one

year, with opportunities for future extensions.

 

Research duties include conducting studies of the atmospheres and

surfaces of planets and their natural satellites, including Earth’s

moon, using data from NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, Mars

Reconnaissance Orbiter, and/or legacy datasets such as Cassini and

Galileo. Candidates with expertise in numerical modeling and

simulation of physical phenomena including ice/vapor transport,

dynamical processes, or impact cratering are especially encouraged to

apply. Studies of exoplanets and exomoons may also be supported.

 

The CU/LASP EPIC group conducts a diverse research program

encompassing data analysis, simulation, and theoretical studies to

understand the atmospheres and surfaces of icy planets and moons. The

group maintains strong involvement in both active and future NASA

planetary missions. Inquiries may be directed to Prof. Paul Hayne:

[email protected]

 

For more details and to apply:

 

https://goo.gl/RtEvQX

 

E) GRAD STUDENT/POSTDOC OPPORTUNITIES IN

     PLANETARY SURFACE PROCESSES AT UT AUSTIN

 

Applications are solicited for graduate students and a postdoctoral

fellow to join the newly formed UT Austin Planetary Surface Processes

Group, headed by Dr. Tim Goudge, in the Department of Geological

Sciences at the University of Texas at Austin. Graduate student

applications will be considered for Fall of 2019, while the start date

of the postdoctoral fellow could be as early as January 2019.

 

The area of focus for graduate student projects is open within the

broad field of planetary surface processes, and will be selected based

on research topics of mutual interest. Prospective students can find

out more here:

 

http://www.timgoudge.com/Files/Goudge_Student_Ad_2018.pdf

 

The two year postdoctoral fellow position will involve research on the

incision of paleolake outlet canyons on Mars. Prospective applicants

can find out more here:

 

http://www.timgoudge.com/Files/Goudge_Postdoc_Ad_2018.pdf

 

Dr. Goudge is strongly committed to building an inclusive research

group with diverse perspectives and backgrounds. Applicants from

historically underrepresented groups in STEM fields, with

non-traditional backgrounds, and/or with a demonstrated interest in

efforts to improve inclusion and diversity in STEM are especially

encouraged to apply.

 

Prospective applicants with questions about these opportunities can

contact Dr. Goudge at tgoudge  jsg.utexas.edu.

 

F) NASA HUBBLE FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM (NHFP)

 

On behalf of the NASA Astrophysics Division, the Space Telescope Science

Institute (STScI) announces the second annual call for applications for

postdoctoral fellowships under the NASA Hubble Fellowship Program

(NHFP) #02904, to begin in the Fall of 2019.

 

The Announcement of Opportunity, which includes detailed program policies

and application instructions, is available at the website: http://nhfp.stsci.edu.

The application submission page will be open today until November 1, 2018.

Please share this employment announcement with your friends, networking

groups, mailing lists, and social connections using this link.  

 

———————————+

Send submissions to: 

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

You are receiving this email because you are a DPS member.

To unsubscribe or update your information, please send your request

to [email protected]. The more general AAS privacy policy is available

online at https://aas.org/about/policies/privacy-policy.

William (Bill) R. Ward (1944-2018)

William (Bill) R. Ward passed away on September 20th at his home in Prescott, Az after a battle with brain cancer.  Ward was a preeminent theoretician that made many seminal contributions to our understanding of planetary dynamics and solar system formation.  With his thesis advisor, Peter Goldreich, Ward proposed that planetesimals were formed via local gravitational instability in the protostellar disk.  In 1973, Ward was the first to recognize that the obliquity of Mars undergoes large oscillations, and with Alastair Cameron in 1976, he was one of the original proposers of the giant impact theory for the origin of the Moon.  Ward was a pioneer in the study of gravitational interactions between planets and their precursor gas disk, and how these may cause large scale changes in planetary orbits.  His many papers on this topic elucidated the nature of Type I vs. Type II migration, central to our understanding of planet formation in our Solar System and in exoplanetary systems. Ward also contributed greatly to our understanding of satellite formation and dynamical evolution.  After completing his PhD at Caltech, Ward worked as a post-doc at CFA, before moving  to JPL.  He joined SwRI in Boulder, Co., in 1998, and retired from SwRI as an Institute Scientist in 2014.  Ward is survived by his wife Sandra, brother Jeff,sister Patty, sons Brad and Scott, and daughter Stephanie.

Robin Canup

Southwest Research Institute

Newsletter 18-40

Issue 18-40, September 29, 2018

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. IN MEMORIAM: WILLIAM (BILL) R. WARD (1944-2018)
  2. COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS AT THE DPS MEETING
  3. LAST CALL TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS YEAR’S EARLY CAREER PRESENTERS REVIEW AT DPS
  4. PUBSPACE AND YOU WORKSHOP AT DPS
  5. ANNOUNCEMENT OF DPS WORKSHOP ON LABORATORY STUDIES OF ATMOSPHERES AND PLUMES
  6. TRICK OR TREAT AND TELESCOPES
  7. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

IN MEMORIAM: WILLIAM (BILL) R. WARD (1944-2018)

 

William (Bill) R. Ward passed away on September 20th at his home in Prescott,

Az after a battle with brain cancer.  Ward was a preeminent theoretician that made

many seminal contributions to our understanding of planetary dynamics and solar

system formation.  With his thesis advisor, Peter Goldreich, Ward proposed that

planetesimals were formed via local gravitational instability in the protostellar disk. 

In 1973, Ward was the first to recognize that the obliquity of Mars undergoes large

oscillations, and with Alastair Cameron in 1976, he was one of the original proposers

of the giant impact theory for the origin of the Moon.  Ward was a pioneer in the

study of gravitational interactions between planets and their precursor gas disk, and

how these may cause large scale changes in planetary orbits.  His many papers on this

topic elucidated the nature of Type I vs. Type II migration, central to our understanding

of planet formation in our Solar System and in exoplanetary systems. Ward also

contributed greatly to our understanding of satellite formation and dynamical evolution. 

After completing his PhD at Caltech, Ward worked as a post-doc at CFA, before

moving  to JPL.  He joined SwRI in Boulder, Co., in 1998, and retired from SwRI

as an Institute Scientist in 2014.  Ward is survived by his wife Sandra, brother Jeff,

sister Patty, sons Brad and Scott, and daughter Stephanie. 

 

Robin Canup

Southwest Research Institute

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS AT THE DPS MEETING 

 

DPS will try something new in the program at this year’s meeting. We have

allotted 5 minutes at the beginning of the plenary sessions for oral announcements

about items  of broad interest to our community.  If you would like to make a

very short announcement  (no longer than 2 minutes), please send a short

description of your topic to [email protected]  for coordination and approval

by DPS leadership.

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

LAST CALL TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS YEAR’S EARLY CAREER PRESENTERS REVIEW AT DPS

This is the last call for  career scientists, including undergraduate and graduate

students, postdocs, others early in their careers, and first time presenter to

participate in this year’s Early Career Presenters Review at DPS.  Join this

educational opportunity to receive feedback from seasoned presenters! 

We have space on Sunday October 21 at 3pm, Monday October 22nd at 7am,

and 4pm. Early career scientists are invited to practice their oral or poster

presentation and receive feedback before presenting during the regular meeting.

Participants also have the opportunity to network with their peers and future

colleagues.

 

Registration is free but required for participants:

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/DPS_18_EC.

 

Please contact Sanlyn Buxner ([email protected]) with any questions.

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

PUBSPACE AND YOU WORKSHOP AT DPS

 

PubSpace and You: How to Deposit Your Manuscripts as Required by ROSES

at the DPS Fall Meeting on Monday, Oct 22, 12:00 pm–12:45 pm, Room 301B. 

We will discuss the relatively new ROSES requirements to submit your manuscripts

to NASA’s PubSpace system, as well as the practicalities for doing so with a

variety of different publications.  Please join us.

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

ANNOUNCEMENT OF DPS WORKSHOP ON LABORATORY STUDIES OF
ATMOSPHERES AND PLUMES

 

Workshop on “Laboratory Studies of Atmospheres and Plumes” organized

by the Laboratory Astrophysics Division of AAS  

 

The object of the Laboratory Astrophysics Division (LAD) is to advance our

understanding of the Universe through the promotion of fundamental theoretical

and experimental research into the underlying processes that drive the cosmos.

This LAD workshop will consist of five 15-minute-long invited talks showcasing

the laboratory astrophysics work being conducted to support planetary missions for

the exploration of our solar system and beyond. The invited talks will demonstrate

how missions like Cassini, New Horizons, Rosetta, and future missions focused

on Europa or exoplanets can benefit from these experimental and theoretical studies.

They will be followed by a 10-minute panel discussion to encourage participants

to explore the laboratory astrophysics needs for planetary science studies and

initiate conversations that could lead to future collaborations and new` research

investigations. 

 

The workshop program will be as follows:

12:00-12:05: Stefanie Milam and Ella Sciamma-O’Brien — General introduction and welcome
12:05-12:20: Morgan Cable — “Laboratory Investigations to Support Exploration of Titan” 
12:20-12:35: Karl Hibbitts — “Understanding Europa and its potential plumes through laboratory measurements”

12:35-12:50: Will Grundy — “Laboratory Studies of Condensed Volatiles Under Outer Solar System Conditions”

12:50-13:05: Perry Gerakines — “Laboratory Experiments in Support of Comet Exploration” 
13:05-13:20: Sarah Horst —“Laboratory astrophysics investigations supporting exoplanet exploration”

13:20-13:30: Panel discussion 

 

The workshop will be Thursday October 25th from 12:00-1:30 PM in room 301D-E. 

Lunch boxes will be provided on a first come first serve basis to the first 30 participants. 

 

Please contact Dr. Ella Sciamma-O’Brien ([email protected])

or Dr. Stefanie Milam ([email protected]) with any questions.

Acknowledgments: We greatly appreciate support for this workshop from the

VORTICES team from SSERVI, and from Thermo Fisher Scientific.

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

TRICK-OR-TREAT AND TELESCOPES

 

DPS is continuing its Trick-or-Treat and Telescopes Program. Put out your

telescopes – or even binoculars – during trick-or-treat time on Halloween, in

your own lawn or in a neighbor’s lawn with better viewing (or more traffic).

The following website gives advice and connections to resources. If you have

any pictures of your event, please send them to bonnie.buratti(at)jpl.nasa.gov

education/trick-or-treat-and-telescopes 

 

7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) BATEMAN POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWSHIP,

     DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY & GEOPHYSICS,

     YALE UNIVERSITY

 

The Department of Geology and Geophysics at Yale University

(www.geology.yale.edu) announces an annual competition for a Bateman

Postdoctoral Fellowship. We welcome applicants with research interests

across the full range of disciplines within earth and planetary sciences,

including studies of geophysics, planetary sciences, tectonics, oceans,

atmosphere, climate dynamics, geochemistry, paleoclimatology, geobiology,

and the evolution of life. The Postdoctoral Associate position is awarded

for two years, providing a stipend ($60,000/yr) and base research funds

($5,000/yr), plus health care benefits and limited expenses for relocation.

Applicants should contact a sponsor in the Department to discuss potential

research projects, and then submit a short (2-3 page) statement of research

interests and proposed research, a curriculum vitae with a full list of

publications, an endorsement letter from the sponsoring faculty member,

and three confidential letters of reference. Applications should be submitted

online at http://apply.interfolio.com/54659. The deadline for receipt of all

application materials is December 15, 2018, and successful candidates are

expected to begin their program at Yale between July 1 and December 31, 2019. 

Yale University is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity employer.

Yale values diversity among its students, staff, and faculty and strongly

welcomes applications from women, persons with disabilities, protected

veterans, and underrepresented minorities.

 

B) POSTDOCTORAL POSITION COMETARY ATMOSPHERES

     PHYSICS DEPARTMENT

     AUBURN UNIVERSITY

 

The Physics Department at Auburn University invites applicants for a

post-doctoral research position within the Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics 

group in the field of cometary atmospheres

 

The successful candidate will analyze images of comet 9P/Tempel 1 taken

during the flyby of NASA’s Deep Impact spacecraft. These images were

acquired with comet specific narrowband filters and allow for a detailed study

of the gas and dust surrounding the nucleus. The goal of this project is to

connect this gas and dust to specific areas on the nucleus, to investigate

chemically heterogenous outgassing, and to identify atomic and molecular

processes that alter the inner coma.

 

Familiarity with planetary science and/or atomic and molecular physics is

preferred. Substantial familiarity with a commonly-used scientific

programming language (e.g. IDL, Python) is highly desirable. Review of

applications will begin October 19th, 2018 and continue throughout the

year as the positions become available. 

 

The contact for this activity is Prof. Dennis Bodewits ([email protected]).

 

More details and information on how to apply can be found at:

http://www.auburn.edu/~dzb0059

 

C) GRADUATE RESEARCH OPPORTUNITY

     UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI’I :

     FLUID MIGRATION IN TITAN’S ICE SHELL

 

content/graduate-research-opportunity-university-hawaii-fluid-migration-titan’s-ice-shell

 

As part of the new NASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI) project “Habitability

of Hydrocarbon Worlds: Titan and Beyond”, we are investigating the

mechanisms and pathways by which biosignature-hosting materials might

be transported from a habitable ocean environment to the surface, where

they could be recognized by remote sensing instruments.  These mechanisms

might include cryovolcanism, solid state convection in the ice shell, fracture/

fault propagation, and the formation of subsurface fluid reservoirs that might

facilitate fluid migration to the surface. See nai.nasa.gov/teams/can-8/jpl-titan/

for a more detailed description of the overall project.

 

An opportunity exists in this area at the University of Hawaii (UH) for a

graduate student to pursue their PhD, enrolled through the Department of

Earth Sciences (formerly known as Geology and Geophysics;

www.soest.hawaii.edu/GG/), but hosted within the Hawaii Institute of

Geophysics and Planetology (HIGP; www.higp.hawaii.edu).  The deadline

for applying to graduate school at UH is January 15 for Fall 2019 admission;

more details at www.soest.hawaii.edu/GG/admissions/gg_admissions.html

 

The desired candidate will have a solid physics, math, or geology/geophysics

background, and interests/expertise in numerical modeling, cryomagmatism,

ice physics, Titan and/or other icy satellites.

 

Please contact Sarah Fagents at [email protected] for more information.

 

D) NASA ASTROBIOLOGY POSTDOCTORAL OPPORTUNITY

     UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII

 

content/nasa-astrobiology-postdoctoral-opportunity-university-hawaii

 

As part of the new NASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI) project “Habitability

of Hydrocarbon Worlds: Titan and Beyond”, we are investigating the

mechanisms and pathways by which biosignature-hosting materials might

be transported from a habitable ocean environment to the surface, where

they could be recognized by remote sensing instruments.  These mechanisms

might include cryovolcanism, solid state convection in the ice shell, fracture/

fault propagation, and the formation of subsurface fluid reservoirs that might

facilitate fluid migration to the surface. See nai.nasa.gov/teams/can-8/jpl-titan/

for a more detailed description of the overall project.

 

An opportunity exists in this area for a postdoctoral researcher to develop a

proposal for the NASA Astrobiology Postdoctoral Program, for a project to

be pursued at the University of Hawaii.  The desired candidate will have a

solid physics, math, or geology/geophysics background, and interests/expertise

in numerical modeling, cryomagmatism, ice physics, Titan and/or other icy

satellites.  The next deadlines for this program are November 1 and March 1. 

If the proposal is selected for funding, the anticipated start dates would be

spring/summer 2019 or fall 2019, respectively.  More details are available at

nai.nasa.gov/funding/postdoctoral-fellowship-program

 

Please contact Sarah Fagents at [email protected] for more information.

 

E) NASA HUBBLE FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM (NHFP)

 

On behalf of the NASA Astrophysics Division, the Space Telescope Science

Institute (STScI) announces the second annual call for applications for

postdoctoral fellowships under the NASA Hubble Fellowship Program

(NHFP) #02904, to begin in the Fall of 2019.

 

The Announcement of Opportunity, which includes detailed program policies

and application instructions, is available at the website: http://nhfp.stsci.edu.

The application submission page will be open today until November 1, 2018.

Please share this employment announcement with your friends, networking

groups, mailing lists, and social connections using this link.  

 

———————————+

Send submissions to:

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

You are receiving this email because you are a DPS member.

To unsubscribe or update your information, please send your request

to [email protected]. The more general AAS privacy policy is available

online at https://aas.org/about/policies/privacy-policy.

Newsletter 18-39

Issue 18-39, September 23, 2018

 

+————————————CONTENTS—————————————-+

  1. NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE ADVISORY COMMITTEE (PAC) MEETING
  2. INPUT REQUESTED FOR SOLAR SYSTEM SCIENCE WITH ASTROPHYSICS ASSETS, DEADLINE EXTENDED
  3. PDS BOOTH AT DPS – INDIVIDUAL TUTORIALS (AND GROUP CLASSES) AVAILABLE
  4. NEW DATES FOR THE PLUTO SYSTEM AFTER NEW HORIZONS (PSANH) CONFERENCE
  5. 2019 JANSKY FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM AT NRAO
  6. NASA HUBBLE FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM (NHFP)
  7. JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

+——————————————————————————————–+

 

 

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1

NASA PLANETARY SCIENCE ADVISORY COMMITTEE (PAC) MEETING

 

NASA’s Planetary Science Advisory Committee (PAC) will hold a meeting this

Wednesday, September 26, 2018 from 1:00-5:00 pm Eastern via telephone

and Webex. 

 

The agenda includes: (all times Eastern)

1:00 Opening Announcements            (Jonathan Rall)

1:05 PSD Status Report + Q & A       (Lori Glaze)

2:00 PSD R & A Status                       (Jonathan Rall)

2:30 PDCO Update                             (Kelly Fast)

3:00 Senior Review Update                 (Bill Knopf)

3:30 GPRA-MA Review and Rating

4:30 Discussion and Findings

5:00 Adjourn

 

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

            meeting number is 999 932 505

            password is PAC@Sept26 (case sensitive)

 

Dial-in information:

            USA toll free conference number 1-800-779-9966, passcode 5255996

            Toll number, 1-517-645-6359, passcode 5255996

 

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2

INPUT REQUESTED FOR SOLAR SYSTEM SCIENCE WITH ASTROPHYSICS ASSETS, DEADLINE EXTENDED

 

A committee has been established to determine what the capabilities are for 

current/pending/future Astrophysics Assets.  This effort follows a number of

Solar System working groups that were organized for JWST and WFIRST (among

others).  Many lessons learned will carry over to other future missions, but

requirements or desirements for all wavelengths should be considered in the era

of the next large astrophysics mission (e.g. LUVOIR, OST, HabEX, LYNX, etc). 

 

The goal to compile a uniform set of basic capabilities and needs to maximize

the yield of Solar System science with future Astrophysics missions while

allowing those missions to achieve their Astrophysics priorities.

 

Here we are seeking input from the community to be considered.  All

recommendations will be considered and compiled into a report for NASA’s

Planetary Science and Astrophysics Divisions to consider.

 

This is the last chance to provide your input(!) so please fill this form out by 

OCTOBER 12th.

 

Form here: https://goo.gl/forms/U21a1LZ3v3cHtUAP2

 

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3

PDS BOOTH AT DPS – INDIVIDUAL TUTORIALS (AND GROUP CLASSES) AVAILABLE

The PDS will have a booth at the DPS meeting to provide PDS support to 

the scientific community.  There will be both scheduled classes in selected

topics as well as signup for individual support sessions.  Topics will cover

all stages of the archive process, from developing and costing a Data

Management Plan through getting data through PDS peer review.  Finding

and using PDS data will also be covered.

Sign up for an individual session to get your specific questions answered, 

or come to one of the scheduled group sessions:  http://pds-training.psi.edu

Available topics:
            – Finding PDS Data
            – General training on PDS4 (either for missions or R&A archives)
            – Data Management Plans for Proposers
            – Designing Mission or Project PDS4 Dictionaries
            – Archiving your data — Bring your data and we will get you started.
            – Using PDS4 data — How is it different and tools to read the PDS4 labels

Contact:  Eric Palmer, [email protected]

 

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4

NEW DATES FOR THE PLUTO SYSTEM AFTER NEW HORIZONS (PSANH) CONFERENCE

 

The dates for the Pluto System After New Horizons (PSANH), an international 

science conference on the Pluto system and the Kuiper Belt, have shifted by two

days to July 14–18, 2019 (Sunday through Thursday). The venue remains the

same: the conference will be held at the Johns Hopkins University Applied

Physics Laboratory in Laurel, MD.

 

Please mark your calendars accordingly!

 

Further information on the PSANH Conference is available at:

 

https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/plutosystem2019/

 

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5

2019 JANSKY FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM AT NRAO 

The Jansky Fellowship Program supports outstanding postdoctoral scientists 

whose research is broadly related to the mission and scientific goals of the

National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), which operates two world-

class research facilities: the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array

and the Very Large Array. 

As a Jansky Fellow, you will have a unique opportunity to contribute to and 

learn from the development and delivery of the largest and most capable radio

telescopes in the world. Research that employs NRAO telescopes in multi-

wavelength collaborations is encouraged. Candidates with interests in radio

astronomy techniques, instrumentation, computation, and theory are encouraged

to apply. Applicants should describe how their research or technical interests

couple with NRAO telescopes or science. 

Appointments may be made at either of the NRAO sites: Socorro, NM, or 

Charlottesville, VA. In compelling cases, a ‘split appointment’ Jansky Fellowship

split between a university and an NRAO site, or a ‘non-resident’ Jansky Fellowship

hosted at a university within the United States may be offered. The deadline for

2019 Jansky Fellowship Program application materials, including letters of reference,

is Thursday, November 1, 2018 at 11:59 pm EDT. Award offers will be made

starting in early January 2019. Fellowships normally begin in September 2019. 

For more information about the Jansky Fellowship Program and instructions on

how to apply, please visit the Jansky Fellowship website.

 

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6

NASA HUBBLE FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM (NHFP)

 

On behalf of the NASA Astrophysics Division, the Space Telescope Science

Institute (STScI) announces the second annual call for applications for

postdoctoral fellowships under the NASA Hubble Fellowship Program

(NHFP) #02904, to begin in the Fall of 2019.

 

The Announcement of Opportunity, which includes detailed program policies

and application instructions, is available at the website: http://nhfp.stsci.edu.

The application submission page will be open today until November 1, 2018.

Please share this employment announcement with your friends, networking

groups, mailing lists, and social connections using this link.  

 

7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7

JOBS, POSITIONS, OPPORTUNITIES

 

A) T. C. CHAMBERLIN POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWSHIP

     UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

 

content/t.c.-chamberlin-postdoctoral-fellowship-0

 

The Department of the Geophysical Sciences at The University of Chicago

invites applications for the T.C. Chamberlin Postdoctoral Fellowship. We

seek outstanding scientists who lead creative investigations into the nature

of Earth and other planetary bodies–their physics, biology, chemistry, climate,

and history–and who have a desire to participate in the broad intellectual life

of the Department and the University. We encourage people with interests in

any aspect of the Earth and planetary sciences to apply. To give a sense of the

diverse interests of our Chamberlin Fellows, in recent years Fellows have

included people whose research focuses on the effect of clouds on climate,

asteroid impacts, biogeochemical cycling, and petrology/geochronology.

 

Start date is negotiable, with a target of October 1, 2019. The initial term of

the Fellowships will be one year, renewable for a second year. A competitive

salary will be offered, plus benefits. Research funds are also available. Please

email a single pdf file containing a CV, a 2-4 page research plan, and names

and contact information for at least three references, to: 

[email protected] Applicants should also arrange for letters

to be sent by their named references to the same address. Consideration of

complete applications (those including letters of reference) will begin

October 8, 2018, and exceptional applicants will be contacted after review to

schedule on campus interviews.

 

B) POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE

     BROWN UNIVERSITY

 

content/postdoctoral-research-associate

 

The Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences at Brown

University is seeking Postdoctoral Research Associate(s) with a background

in planetary geophysics, data analyses, or applied math.

 

The successful applicant(s) will carry out research on a project selected to

match their expertise. Possible research topics include, but are not limited to

volcanology, hydrology, tectonics, analysis of lunar gravity data, planetary

mantle thermochemical evolution, magnetohydrodynamics, and Solar System

and lunar chronology. The research will include quantitative or qualitative

analyses of spacecraft data and/or numerical modeling. The applicant will be

expected to carry out independent research, give presentations at professional

meetings, and prepare publications on the work.

 

Interested individuals must have a Ph.D. in Planetary Science, Geology,

Physics/Astronomy, Mathematics, or a related field. If interested, please send

a brief statement of research interests and future research goals along with your

CV to Alex Evans at alex_evans [at] brown [dot] edu. Will be accepting

applications on a rolling basis.

 

For questions or more information, please contact Alex Evans at

alex_evans [at] brown [dot] edu.

 

C) POSTDOCTORAL POSITIONS

     UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI’I AT MANOA

 

The Reaction Dynamics Group, Department of Chemistry, University of

Hawai’i at Manoa, invites applications for postdoctoral positions in the areas

of i) gas phase reaction dynamics and combustion chemistry, ii) condensed

phase chemistry (astrochemistry), and iii) planetary sciences (water formation

on the Moon). The prime directive of the experimental gas phase studies is to

investigate the formation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in

extreme environments (combustion systems; deep space) exploiting crossed

molecular beams along with mass spectrometry (QMS; ReTOF) and ion imaging

(Hawaii) and a pyrolytic micro reactor (Advanced Light Source, Lawrence

Berkeley Laboratory). The condensed phase (ice) studies aim to untangle the

formation of complex organic molecules on interstellar nanoparticles by ionizing

radiation exploiting fragment free photoionization techniques. The planetary

science project seeks to elucidate the formation of water on the lunar surface.

 

For each position, the appointment period is initially for one year, but can be

renewed annually based on avail­a­b­ility of funds and satisfactory progress. The

salary is competitive and commensurate with experience. Successful applicants

should have a strong background in one or more of the following: experimental

reaction dynamics, molecular beams, combustion chemistry, UHV tech­nology,

pulsed laser systems, low temperature chemistry. Solid communication skills in

English (written, oral), a publication record in internationally circulated, peer-

reviewed journals, and willingness to work in a team are man­da­to­ry. Only self-

motivated and energetic candidates are encouraged to apply.

 

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

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

Hawai’i at Manoa, Honolulu, HI 96822-2275, USA [[email protected]].

The review of applications will start October 1, 2018 and continues until the

positions are filled. A description of our current research group can be found at

http://www.chem.hawaii.edu/Bil301new/index.html

 

D)  ASSISTANT PROFESSOR – ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE

      UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLOMBIA

 

content/assistant-professor-atmospheric-science

 

The Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences (EOAS) at the

University of British Columbia invites applicants for a full-time, tenure-track

faculty position at the level of Assistant Professor. Applicants will have a PhD

or equivalent experience in a related field and should be investigating processes

relating to the field of atmospheric science, with research in the Earth’s atmosphere 

or planetary atmospheres. All aspects of atmospheric science are of interest, including 

but not limited to, weather patterns and extreme events under climate change, 

fundamental processes in coupled climate systems, or boundary layer dynamics.

The candidate will be expected to develop a strong, externally funded and

internationally recognized research program, successfully supervise graduate

students, participate in departmental activities and demonstrate the potential to

participate and collaborate in the atmospheric sciences programme. EOAS is 

dedicated to practicing excellence in teaching and evidence demonstrating interest

in innovative teaching methods is desirable, along with demonstrated potential for

teaching excellence.

 

Research and teaching interests in EOAS, the top-ranked and largest Earth Sciences

department in Canada, span the history of the Earth and the evolution of its structure

from core to stratosphere (http://www.eoas.ubc.ca/). We seek candidates who

complement existing departmental strengths and have capacity and interest in

interacting with other research groups both within and outside the department.

Candidates should possess a strong record of research productivity commensurate

with their experience.

 

Applications should include: i) a cover letter, ii) a detailed curriculum vita, iii) a

one-page summary of research interests and accomplishments, iv) a one-page outline

of a potential five-year research program, v) a one-page statement of teaching philosophy,

vi) three recent publications and vii) three (3) letters of reference.  Directions for how

to submit your application can be found at https://www.hr.ubc.ca/careers-postings/faculty.php  

posting #31310.

 

In addition, the names and contact details of three referees should be entered here:

https://www.eoas.ubc.ca/content/atscirefsub. We will contact your referees and ask

them to submit reference letters. It is the applicant’s responsibility to ensure their

referees submit their letters before November 1, 2019.

 

Review of applications will start November 1, 2018 and applications will be

accepted until the position is filled. The successful applicant is expected to start

in July 2019 or at a date of mutual agreement. This position is subject to final

budgetary approval.

 

Questions should be directed to the Search Committee Chair,

Professor Raymond Andersen, by email at [email protected]

 

———————————+

Send submissions to: 

Anne Verbiscer, DPS Secretary ([email protected]

 

You are receiving this email because you are a DPS member.

To unsubscribe or update your information, please send your request

to [email protected]. The more general AAS privacy policy is available

online at https://aas.org/about/policies/privacy-policy.