Newsletter 12-14

Issue12-14, June 18th 2012

+—————————–CONTENTS——————————–+
1) CHAIR UPDATE
2) DPS 2012 PLANETARY SCIENCE PRIZE WINNERS ANNOUNCED
3) DPS MEMBERS RECEIVE KAVLI PRIZE IN ASTROPHYSICS
+———————————————————————+

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CHAIR UPDATE
So far, so good. Letters and e-mails from the DPS membership were very effective in getting the attention of Congress to restore the NASA planetary exploration budget. In April the House and Senate Appropriations Subcommittees added significant funding to the President’s budget request. Kudos also goes to the members DPS Committee and the Federal Relations Committee who made a record number of visits to Congressional offices in late May. Bipartisan support for planetary science was strongly in evidence in all our interactions. The Federal Relations Committee deserves thanks and congratulations for an outstanding job organizing these meetings and carrying our message to Capitol Hill.

We have made a lot of progress, but we are a long way from being out of the woods. This will be a complicated legislative year (it is a presidential election year after all) and we will probably need more e-mails and letters to Congress before the budget is finalized. This is a good time to write (a physical letter) thanking the members of the Appropriations Subcommittees for their support (their addresses can be found on the FRS contacting congress page public_policy/communicating-congress).

The longer-range challenge we have is the Administration in the form of Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and the Office of Science Technology Policy (OSTP). These organizations give NASA direction for future planning and that direction is currently requiring major budget cuts over the next five years. Planetary exploration requires multi-year planning and commitments. While Congress can give planetary exploration extra money on a year-by-year basis, the OMB five-year planning budget can hamstring NASA’s execution of any Congressionally-enhanced planetary program. The DPS will engage OMB and OSPT and push for five-year budget planning levels that can achieve the priority goals of the Decadal Survey.

I would also like to extend our congratulations to our Prize winners: Gerard P. Kuiper Prize: Darrell Strobel (Johns Hopkins); Harold C. Urey Prize: Alberto Fairen (SETI Institute); Carl Sagan Medal: Patrick Michel (Obs. de la Côte d’Azur); and Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Science Journalism Award: Michael Carroll (Free-Lance Journalist). In addition, the Harold Masursky Award is posthumously attributed to Susan Niebur (formerly of Niebur Consulting).

Well-deserved thanks go to the Prize Subcommittee for all their hard work!

Finally, please all remember to cast your vote in our DPS 2012 elections for the DPS committee Vice-Chair and members. To vote, go to http://aas.org/vote/ .

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DPS 2012 PLANETARY SCIENCE PRIZE WINNERS ANNOUNCED

The Division for Planetary Sciences (DPS) of the American Astronomical Society (AAS) is pleased to announce its 2012 prize winners:

– Gerard P. Kuiper Prize for outstanding contributions to the field of planetary science:
Darrell Strobel received his undergraduate education at North Dakota State University where he graduated with honors in 1964. He moved on to Harvard where he completed a Masters in Physics in 1965 and was awarded a PhD in Applied Physics in 1969. After graduation he went to work at the Naval Research Lab rising to Head of the Atmospherics Dynamics Section which he led from 1976-1984. He joined Johns Hopkins University in 1984 where he is a Professor associated with both the Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences and the Physics & Astronomy Center for Astrophysical Sciences. He is a member of the DPS, AGU and the International Academy of Astronautics, and a Fellow of the IAU. He served as a co-investigator and science team lead for the Ultraviolet Spectrometer Experiment on Voyager, he is an Interdisciplinary Scientist for Aeronomy for the Cassini Mission and is a co-investigator on the New Horizons mission. He has served on numerous study groups and boards and has served as editor of several AGU publications and Icarus.

– Harold C. Urey Prize for outstanding achievement in planetary research by a young scientist: Alberto Fairen is a research scientist at the SETI Institute’s Carl Sagan Center for the Study of Life in the Universe in Mountain View, California. He completed a Master dissertation at the Universidad Autonoma de Madrid in 2005 with a thesis on the “Inhibition of carbonate synthesis in extreme acidic environments: a comparative study of the martian aqueous environments and Rio Tinto”. In 2006 he received a Ph.D. with the dissertation “Dating possible biological processes on Mars according to the tectonic history and hydrogeological and geochemical evolution of the planet”. He was a postdoctoral fellow at Ames Research Center with Chris McKay before joining the SETI Institute.

– Harold Masursky Award for outstanding service to planetary science and exploration:
Susan Niebur started her advanced education with a BS in Physics, with high honors, from Georgia Tech in 1995. She followed with Masters and PhD degrees in Physics from Washington University in St. Louis with a thesis titled “Observation of Energy- Dependent Electron-Capture Decay in Galactic Cosmic Rays.” While still in graduate school she founded and led the National Association of Graduate-Professional Students, dedicated to advocating for graduate and professional students nationwide. After receiving her PhD Susan went to NASA Headquarters where she was the Discovery Program Scientist until 2006. While at HQ she co-founded the Early Career Fellowships and Workshops for Planetary Scientists. In 2008, while running Niebur Consulting, she founded the Women in Planetary Science Project dedicated to community building and removing barriers to success. In 2007 Dr. Niebur learned that she had inflammatory breast cancer, a disease that eventually led to her death in February 2012. While fighting this disease, she continued to work to raise awareness and build community through her online blog, Toddler Planet. Her husband and two children, her family, and countless friends and acquaintances mourn her premature passing at the same time they continue to celebrate the gifts she left behind.

– Carl Sagan Medal for outstanding communication by an active planetary scientist to the general public:
Patrick Michel is a planetary scientist who began his advanced education with a degree in Aeronautical Engineering and Space Techniques in 1993 whereafter he moved to the study of asteroids. He received his PhD in 1997 for a thesis titled “Dynamical evolution of Near-Earth Asteroids”. He has been a Permanent Researcher at CNRS where he leads the Lagrange Laboratory Planetology group. He is a co-chair of the MarcoPolo-R sample return mission science team and is a co-I on the OSIRIS-REx and Hayabusa 2 missions. He has wide involvement in the IAU and other international organizations. In 2006 he received the “Young Researcher” prize from the French Society of Astronomy and Astrophysics.

– Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Sciences Journalism Award to recognize and stimulate distinguished popular writing on planetary sciences:
Michael Carroll is a science journalist, astronomical artist, and children’s book author. He fell in love with the images returned to Earth from the Rangers, Lunas, and Surveyors, the Apollo astronauts, the Mariners, Vikings, and Voyagers, and began to paint these worlds at the age of 11. Michael has authored more than 20 books and many more articles in magazines such as Astronomy, Popular Science, Astronomy Now (UK), Sky & Telescope, Clubhouse, and Odyssey. In his winning entry, “Storm Warning” from Astronomy magazine’s August 2011 issue, Michael expertly explains weather phenomena that occur on the solar system’s planets in language that any “armchair astronomer” can understand. In recognition of his effort to promote planetary sciences in popular media, the Division for Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society is delighted to present the 2012 Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Sciences Journalism Award to Michael Carroll.

The 2012 DPS prizes will be presented at the DPS meeting in Reno, Nevada, 14-19 October 2012. http://www.psi.edu/dps12/

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DPS MEMBERS RECEIVE KAVLI PRIZE IN ASTROPHYSICS

The Kavli Prize in Astrophysics is shared between David C. Jewitt, University of California, USA, Jane X. Luu, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Lincoln Laboratory, USA, and Michael E. Brown, California Institute of Technology, USA. They received the prize “for discovering and characterizing the Kuiper Belt and its largest members, work that led to a major advance in the understanding of the history of our planetary system.”
See : http://www.kavliprize.no/

 

Newsletter 12-13

Issue 12-13, June 13, 2012

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1) 44TH DPS ANNUAL MEETING : CALL FOR PAPERS
2) JUPITER ICY MOONS EXPLORER PARTICIPATION OPPORTUNITIES
3) ALMA CYCLE 1 SUBMISSION DEADLINE: JULY 12TH 2012
4) AAS 2013 PRIZE NOMINATIONS DUE DATE COMING UP SOON
5) JOB OPPORTUNITIES
6) UPCOMING MEETINGS
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44TH DPS ANNUAL MEETING : CALL FOR PAPERS
14-19 October 2012
Reno, Nevada, Grand Sierra Resort and Casino

http://www.psi.edu/dps12/

The deadline for abstract submission is Thursday, 19 July 2012, 9:00pm ET.

Other important Dates:
Early Registration: 30 June – 23 July 2012
Hartmann travel grants applications deadline: 9 July 2012
Abstract Submission Deadline: 9:00 pm ET, Thursday, 19 July 2012
Regular Registration: 24 July – 3 September 2012
Late Abstract Submission Deadline: 12:00noon ET, Monday, 3 September 2012
Public Workshop Meeting Request Deadline: 3 September 2012
Late Registration: 4 – 26 September 2012
Hotel Reservations Deadline: 20 September 2012
Onsite Registration: 14 – 19 October 2012

The 44th Meeting of the DPS in Reno, NV has a great line up of Invited
talks, Workshops, and Events, and now is your chance to be a part of
it!
Full abstract instructions and submission form is available at
http://www.psi.edu/dps12/abs.shtml

Abstract correspondence originates from abstractsonline.com. Please set your spam filters to allow email from abstractsonline.com.

300-word abstracts may be submitted by uploading word processing files, cutting and pasting or typing directly into the abstract form.

Reno Hotel Information
DPS has secured fantastic hotel room rates at the Grand Sierra Resort and Casino!
Your stay at the Grand Sierra Resort and Casino includes complimentary transportation to/from the Reno-Tahoe International Airport. Booking within the DPS room block will ensure that your daily resort fee is waived.

Grand Sierra Guestrooms: Single and Double Rooms $94
Government Rate: Single and Double Rooms $94
Luxury Summit Guestrooms: Single and Double Rooms $120

To make a reservation, call 1-800-648-5080 and reference the “DPS Annual Meeting.” You may also use the custom online DPS reservation
page at https://resweb.passkey.com/Resweb.do?mode=welcome_ei_new&eventID=3192976.
Reservations made through the Grand Sierra homepage will not guarantee you the DPS Meeting rate.

The deadline to make reservations is 20 September 2012. Booking outside of our reserved block results in significant increase in meeting costs for everyone.

Calling all Volunteers!
Participate at the DPS Reno meeting as a volunteer for 16 hours, and receive complimentary registration. This is a great opportunity for undergrads, grads, postdocs, and local amateur astronomers at our meetings: to supervise sessions, help at registration, usher at events, and various other odd (but greatly appreciated) jobs. This is a great chance to meet and mingle with your peers, get up to date on the newest science, and pick up some cool freebies in the Exhibit Hall. Sign up today at http://aas.org/meetings/dps/volunteer_form

Hartmann Travel Grant program for the DPS meeting in Reno
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Starting with a generous contribution from William K. Hartmann, followed by member contributions and matching funds from the DPS Committee, a limited number of student travel grants are made available to assist toward participating at the annual DPS meeting. Travel grants are primarily intended for students, but post-doctoral scientists without other means of support will also be considered. Travel grants for the Reno meeting will be typically no more than approximately five hundred dollars and are intended to provide a supplement that makes the difference on whether or not a student is able to attend the annual meeting. In some cases the travel grant may be requested to cover the meeting registration fee. Preference is given to students who have not received a Travel Grant in the past.

The deadline for applications will be will be 9:00 PM PDT, Friday July 9, 2012.
Late applications cannot be accepted. All notifications will be made on or before July 22, 2012.

Please see the Hartmann Travel Grant page at the DPS web site (meetings/travel_grant_application) for detailed information on submittal and format.

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JUPITER ICY MOONS EXPLORER PARTICIPATION OPPORTUNITIES

On May 2, 2012, ESA selected the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE) as the first Large-class mission in the Cosmic Vision plan. The JUICE mission will investigate Jupiter and its system, with focus on the icy moons, completing its mission by orbiting Ganymede. The mission is planned for launch in 2022. NASA has offered to contribute a combination of US instrument(s), instrument component(s) for European-led instrument(s), and/or Co-Investigators on European-led instruments, all to total not more than $100M life cycle cost.

We expect 55% of this funding will be used during the instrument development phases and the remaining 45% during operations (cruise and prime science mission). Given the duration of cruise, lean focused science teams will be a necessity.

JUICE instruments are planned to be solicited via a competitive Announcement of Opportunity issued by ESA; a corresponding amendment to SALMON will be released by NASA. Release of these documents is planned for late June 2012.

Scientific objectives, model payload and mission profile can be found in the JUICE Assessment Study Report (Yellow Book) at:

http://sci.esa.int/juice

A Federal Business Opportunity (FBO) announcement will be available within the next two weeks.

For more information, contact Curt Niebur ([email protected]).

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ALMA CYCLE 1 SUBMISSION DEADLINE: JULY 12TH 2012

Cycle 1 Call for Proposals is now open.

Members of the astronomical community are invited to propose scientific programmes to be scheduled within the ALMA Early Science Cycle 1 period, which we expect to start on January 1, 2013. This provides an important opportunity for Early Science from this cutting edge facility. The Cycle 1 period will span 10 months and any astronomer may submit proposals.

Deadline for submission is July 12.

In addition, a new program of Science Verification aimed at testing new capabilities of ALMA for Cycle 1 and beyond will begin in June 20, and the list of suggested targets will be available shortly at this URL : http://almascience.org/alma-data/science-verification.

A new installment of Science Verification data is available. This release contains IRAS16293 band 9 data. The source, the data and the data reduction procedure are described in the accompanying CASA Guide. This is the first ALMA band 9 Science Verification data release and represents a milestone for ALMA construction.

The full Call and all the information and tools relevant for proposal preparation are available through the ALMA Science Portal :
http://almascience.org.

The ALMA Helpdesk facility may also be accessed via the Science Portal. User support, including face-to-face assistance, is provided by the European ALMA Regional Centre.

For more details see : http://www.eso.org/sci/facilities/alma/arc.html

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AAS 2013 PRIZE NOMINATIONS DUE DATE COMING UP SOON

The due date for all nominations and supporting materials for the 2013
AAS Prizes–Saturday, 30 June 2012.

Email your nominations, letters of support and ancillary materials to:
G. Fritz Benedict, the AAS Secretary ([email protected]).

No need to send paper copies; electronic submissions are preferred.

All the instructions and guidelines are found here:
http://aas.org/prizes/nominations.

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JOB OPPORTUNITIES

a) NASA POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWSHIPS

The NASA Postdoctoral Program (NPP) offers scientists and engineers
unique opportunities to conduct research at NASA Centers. Each NPP
fellowship opportunity is designed to advance NASA research in a
specific project related to space science, earth science, aeronautics,
exploration systems, lunar science, astrobiology, or astrophysics.

Applicants must have a Ph.D. or equivalent degree in hand before
beginning the fellowship, but may apply while completing the degree
requirements. U. S. citizens, Lawful Permanent Residents, and foreign
nationals eligible for J-1 status as a Research Scholar may apply.

Stipends start at $50,000 per year, with supplements for high
cost-of-living areas and for certain academic specialties. Financial
assistance is available for relocation and health insurance, and
$8,000 per year is provided for professional travel.

Applications are accepted three times each year: March 1, July 1, and
November 1.

For further information and to apply, visit:

http://nasa.orau.org/postdoc/description/index.htm

Questions may be submitted by e-mail to [email protected]

b) RESEARCH POSITION AT GSFC

The Planetary Magnetospheres Laboratory at NASA Goddard Space Flight
Center is seeking a researcher to provide expertise in new capabilities
for modeling the interactions between the solar wind and the Moon and
other near-airless bodies, transport and trapping of lunar volatiles,
volatile sources and losses, and plasma/surface interactions. In
addition to research, you will provide expertise in associated
planetary and exploration robotic missions and instrument development
projects. You will participate in preliminary and critical design
reviews and develop and defend instrument and mission requirements. You
will be called on to demonstrate strong teaming capability applied to
the solution of relevant problems. Missions that you could support
include the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) and future lunar and
planetary projects of the SSED.

A PhD in a relevant field of Physics or Astronomy is preferred.
Candidates must have experience modeling solar wind/plasma interactions
with the surface and near surface environments of the Moon and other
solar system bodies. Salary will be commensurate with experience and
qualifications. U.S. citizenship required. To view the full vacancy
announcement go to:

http://www.usajobs.gov/GetJob/ViewDetails/317833300

For information about the research program, please contact

Robert MacDowall
301-286-2608
[email protected]

NASA GSFC is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

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UPCOMING MEETINGS

A planetary meeting calendar is posted at
http://planetarynews.org/meetings.html

You may also want to consult the Planetary meetings and Conferences Calendar at:
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/

a) EANA12 Astrobiology Workshop
Stockholm, Sweden, 15-17 October 2012
http://agenda.albanova.se/conferenceDisplay.py?confId=2996

Note that the deadline for abstract submission has been extended to June 25 2012.

b) The third Moscow Solar System Symposium
October 8-12, 2012
Moscow, Russia,
http://ms2012.cosmos.ru/

c) Exploring the Formation and Evolution of Planetary Systems
June 2-7, 2013
Victoria, Canada
http://www.iau.org/science/meetings/future/symposia/1064/

 

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Newsletter 12-12

Issue12-12, June 3d 2012

+—————————–CONTENTS——————————–+
1) DPS ELECTIONS 2012: PROCEDURE AND HOW TO VOTE
2) CANDIDATES BIOS AND STATEMENTS
+———————————————————————+

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2012 DPS ELECTIONS : PROCEDURE

The 2012 election for DPS Vice-Chair and Committee is now open, and will close on July 30th 2012.

To vote, go to http://aas.org/vote/ .
You will need your AAS member login ID (which defaults to your membership number), and your password.
If you haven’t registered to or renewed your DPS membership recently, please take a moment to do so now.
This will allow you to vote and benefit from all membership advantages.

You should vote for one of the two candidates for Vice-Chair:
Heidi Hammel, AURA
Jeff Moore, NASA Ames

The Vice-Chair will become the DPS Chair in October 2012.

You should vote for two of the four candidates for DPS Committee:
Ross Beyer, SETI Institute
Sebastien Charnoz, AIM, Univ. Paris Diderot, France
Amanda Sickafoose Gulbis, Southern African Large Telescope
Paul Withers, Boston University

The successful candidates will serve on the committee for three years after October 2012.

The detailed vitae and position statements for each of the candidates follow.
This information is also linked from the main election page,
http://aas.org/vote/

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CANDIDATES BIOS AND STATEMENTS

Candidates biographical notes and statements follow in alphabetical order.

CANDIDATES FOR VICE-CHAIR (Vote for 1)

a) HEIDI HAMMEL: VICE CHAIR

Executive Vice President, AURA, Inc., Washington, DC

Education:
Ph. D. University of Hawaii, Physics and Astronomy, 1988
B. Sc. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Earth and Planetary Science,
1982

Career:
Executive Vice President of Association of Universities for Research in
Astronomy (AURA) since 2011; Senior Research Scientist, Space Science
Institute, Boulder, CO 1999-2010; Principal Research Scientist, MIT,
Cambridge, MA, 1990-1999; Staff, Contractor, Research Associate, JPL,
Pasadena, CA 1988-1990

Selected honors:
Women in Space Science Award, Adler Planetarium, Chicago, IL, 2009
Carl Sagan Medal, AAS Division for Planetary Sciences, 2002
Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2000
Exploratorium Public Understanding of Science Award, San Francisco, CA 1998
Harold C. Urey Prize AAS Division for Planetary Sciences, 1996
NASA Group Achievement Award, Comet SL9 Jupiter Observations, HST Team,
1996
NASA Group Achievement Award, Voyager Science Investigation, ISS Team 1990

AAS/DPS Service:
AAS Education Committee: member (2008 – 2011)
AAS Van Biesbroeck Prize Committee: member (2006 ­ 2008, chair 2008)
DPS Web Site Developer, Administrator (1995 – 2007)
DPS Committee (1993 – 1996)
DPS Nominating Subcommittee (1989 – 1992)

Selected other community service:
National Academy of Science: Space Studies Board (2010 ­ present);
Planetary Science Decadal Survey, Chair of the Giant Planets Panel
(2009-2011); Committee on Priorities for Space Science Enabled by Nuclear
Power and Propulsion (2004-2005); Committee on Planetary Exploration,
COMPLEX (1995 – 1998)
The Planetary Society, Board of Directors (2005 ­ present); Vice President
(2010 ­ present)
NASA: Outer Planets Assessment Group Steering Committee ­ ³OPAG² (2008 –
present); Astrophysics Subcommittee (2006 ­ 2008); Solar System
Exploration Strategic Roadmap Committee ³SRM12² (2005 ­ 2006); Ex Officio
Education Liaison; Education Strategic Roadmap Committee ³SRM3² (2005 ­
2006); Space Science Advisory Committee ³SScAC² (2002 ­ 2005); SScAC
Education and Public Outreach Task Force (2002); IRTF-Keck Management
Operations Working Group (2001 ­ 2003); Origins Advisory Subcommittee
(1998 ­ 2001)
AAAC/NSF Exoplanet Task Force (2006 – 2008)
AAAS Section D (Astronomy): Council (2008 ­ 2010); Member-at-large (2002
2007); Nominating Committee (1996 ­ 1999; 2011 ­ present)
NOAO Committee for Access to Large Telescopes for Astronomical Instruction
and Research ‹ ³ALTAIR² (2008 – 2009)

Candidate Statement:
“The planetary exploration program is one of the most successful and
viable NASA programs. However, it is our judgment that in terms of
scientific priority it ranks below space astronomy and astrophysics*
[*specifically a new large over-budget space telescope for astrophysics]Š
The next step in planetary exploration is to do such things as landing
missions and sample return missions, and these require full development of
[a new launch capability]… In our judgment, it is ultimately better for
future planetary exploration to concentrate on developing the [new]
capabilities rather than to attempt to run a “subcritical” planetary
program given the current financial restrictions…”

Sound familiar? The occasion was NASA’s decision to eliminate the
planetary exploration program; the new space telescope was Hubble; the new
launch system was the Shuttle; and the speaker was James Beggs, then NASA
Administrator; and the date was 1981 (read more at John Logsdon¹s essay
about that era at http://bit.ly/KuKrcT).

Today¹s situation is an eerie parallel to the struggle a generation ago:
stark reductions in the NASA Planetary Science Division (PSD) budget;
clear prioritization of the James Webb Space Telescope over other science
missions; and ongoing turmoil over future NASA launch vehicles. Yet as
bad as it seemed in 1981, we know how the story eventually played out: the
launches of Galileo and Cassini; the robust Mars program; a mission
orbiting a main belt asteroid; the Hubble Space Telescope providing
amazing planetary science results and mission support; and much more
planetary exploration.

I was an undergraduate in 1981, and was advised to avoid planetary science
because the future was so grim. Undaunted, I eventually got a PhD. After
attempts to find a faculty position failed, I landed in a soft-money
planetary science position, and I worked in those trenches for over 20
years. Last year, I chose to transition from soft-money research to
science policy and management in Washington, DC. My motivation for that
change is the same motivation for taking on a DPS leadership role:
somewhere right now in our country, an undergraduate is being advised to
avoid our field, and I want to make sure that she has a vibrant future in
astronomy and planetary science if she so chooses.

To justify growing the PSD budget back to $1.5B and beyond, we must
convince the American public and Congress that a mission to Mars or Europa
is as important as getting a job, replacing a crumbling bridge, finding
affordable healthcare, and educating our kids. As planetary scientists, we
understand the importance of planetary science to many issues that face
humanity: global climate change, planetary-scale sustainability, severe
weather, earthquakes, impact hazards, and so on. We must, however,
communicate this.

The current DPS leadership has worked hard and successfully on our behalf
in the past year. Much work remains, and this is not a job just for the
DPS leadership. We need you. By checking the box next to my name, you
agree to the following terms and conditions: you commit to work with the
DPS to be an active participant in saving our field; you agree to send
letters to your congressional representatives when asked; and you sign up
to give public talks, write opinion pieces for your local newspapers, and
do other activities that engage your neighbors in the exciting work that
we do as planetary scientists.

For my part, I will work with the DPS leadership to represent our field
within Washington, and to get us the tools we need for planetary research.
Together, we can preserve the voyages we envisioned in our Decadal
Survey. Our goal is that a generation from now, the community leaders
(today¹s undergraduates) will be able to say, as we do now, ³wow, we have
a terrific planetary science program.²

——————————————
b) JEFF MOORE: VICE-CHAIR

The exploration of space, particularly the planets, is one of the hallmarks of our civilization. Indeed, future historians may regard it as the positive hallmark. Planetary exploration showcases our understanding and appreciation of the cosmos, but just as importantly, provides a sense of awe and wonder like no other. However, we live in unsettled times. This is exquisitely so for our profession as planetary scientists. The events and politics of the current century clearly indicate the need for the champions of science to provide a visible, vigorous, and effective counterpoint to agents that threaten the enlightenment and the prosperity of our civilization as expressed through space exploration. Planetary mission funding in the U.S. is being slashed. The current U.S. mission manifest is such that much of the solar system could go radio-dark within a decade. Research and Analysis is underfunded, resulting in scientists disproportionally investing time writing numerous proposals at the expense of conducting research. The need for most researchers, especially those on soft money, to write or participate in multitudinous proposals weakens the review process by the very unavailability of these researchers to serve on review panels; this situation invites a downward spiral of unproductivity. Mission Operations and Data Analysis similarly suffer from a lack of resources.

The DPS plays a central role in representing planetary science before the public, the government (Congress, NASA, OMB) and the rest of the scientific community. I intend to vigorously pursue these avenues in representing the DPS community.

I offer my time and energy to promote our vital interest to our friends, proponents, and sponsors, while working to expand these constituencies. Central among issues is the essentiality of continuity in our world-class annual meetings, and that our meetings maintain a financial benefit to the DPS. If elected, I will develop initiatives to establish an orderly secession of missions that are balanced in targets, objectives, and costs. I will continue the DPS’s very successful relationship with our international colleagues and respective missions. I will seek common ground with other US research agencies such as NOAA and NRC as well as our related professional societies such as the AGU and GSA. I will also work toward greater inclusion of such disciplines as astrobiology into the DPS community, as unity within our field is now more vital than ever, and inclusivity promotes our scientific and programmatic goals.

I will concentrate my efforts toward increasing R&A and MO&DA funding, and to increase the efficiency of proposal evaluation and administration. A component of this will be to promote proposal writing training as part of our annual meetings. Also I will investigate how the DPS might create endowments to support a range of activities like research and public outreach. An overarching objective will be to be proactive in our communication with our government sponsors and the general public. This should be accomplished, whenever possible, in conjunction with likeminded partners, ranging from the AAAS and AGU to the Planetary Society and the National Geographic Society.

My research has focused on a range of topics relating to the geologic evolution of planetary landscapes and crustal materials. I have published a number of papers on the geomorphology, stratigraphy, and sedimentology of terrestrial planets and outer planet satellites, as well as explored the roles of impact cratering, volcanology, and tectonism on planetary bodies. I have conducted extensive laboratory simulations of Martian geological processes. I have researched the implications of impact craters on Europa for a sub-surface ocean. I have investigated Martian layered fluvial delta deposits, possible Martian ice-covered lakes in large basins such as Hellas, large alluvial fans on the Martian highlands, the role of SO2 in maintaining the early Martian climate, evidence of two episodes of Martian fluvial climate optima, the sublimation-driven erosion of the surfaces of Callisto and Hyperion, and the exogenic-processes-dominated nature of Titan’s landforms and evidence for climate change there. My record demonstrates a breath of interests and experiences, which I believe, if elected, provides the background to advocate balanced and vigorous goals for the DPS community.

I believe my experience provides me with the capacity to accomplish these objectives. I have been an active member of DPS since 1981. I was Science Organizing Committee (SOC) Chair for the 2003 DPS Meeting and (SOC) Chair for the NASA Lunar Science Forum (2009 and 2011). I am a Faculty Guest Lecturer in the Earth & Planetary Sciences Department of the University of California, Santa Cruz. I am the New Horizons Mission Imaging Node Leader; am a Mars Exploration Rover (MER) Science Team member; and was a Galileo Solid State Imaging Team Associate. I currently serve on the 2011-2012 Europa Science Definition Team as Geology Lead. I served on the JEO/ESJM Europa SDT’s leadership group. I am a Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, HiRISE Science Team collaborator. Further afield, I was a Tank Platoon Leader and Battalion Staff Officer in the United States Army.

Professional Background:
NASA Research Scientist since 1999; SETI Institute Research Scientist 1993-1999; NASA NRC postdoc 1991-1992; Graduate Research Associate, Dept. of Geology, Arizona State University 1983-1990; Research Assistant, School of Geology and Geophysics, University of Oklahoma 1980-1983; Emergency Room Extern, Moore Municipal Hospital, Moore, OK 1978-1980; Lieutenant (Tank Platoon Leader and Battalion Staff Officer) United States Army 1975-1978

Education:
B.A. (Modern European History) University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, May 1975
B.S. (General Geophysics) University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, May 1983
M.S. (Geology) Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, May 1986
Ph. D. (Geology) Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, December 1990

Selected Honors:
1997 Galileo Solid State Imaging Team, Superior Performance Award
2007 New Horizons Spacecraft Development Team, NASA Achievement Award
2008 MER 3rd & 4th Extended Mission Team, NASA Achievement Award

CANDIDATES FOR COMMITTTEE (Vote for two)

a) ROSS BEYER: COMMITTEE

Research Scientist with the Carl Sagan Center at the SETI Institute.

I carry out my research at NASA Ames Research Center in the Space
Science and Astrobiology Division (Planetary Systems Branch) and
with the Intelligent Robotics Group (part of the Intelligent Systems
Division).

Scientific Focus: Planetary Surfaces

I study surface geomorphology, surface processes, remote sensing
and photogrammetry of the solid bodies in our Solar System (Mars,
the Moon, icy satelliets, etc.)–if you can stand on it, I’m
interested in what its like and how it got that way.

Education:
Ph.D. Planetary Sciences, The University of Arizona, 2004.
B.S. Astronomy, University of Illinois, 1998.
B.S. Physics, University of Illinois, 1998.

Positions:
Research Scientist, Sagan Center, SETI (2007-present)
National Academies Research Associate and NASA Postdoctoral Fellow (2005-2007)

Spacecraft Involvement (broadly defined):
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter: HiRISE Co-Investigator
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter: LROC Participating Scientist
New Horizons: Geology and Geophysics Imaging team affiliate (not an *actual* team member)
Mars Science Laboratory: landing site certification science
Mars Exploration Rovers: landing site certification science
Mars Global Surveyor: I was a grad student of a MOC science team member
Galileo: I was Mike Belton’s (SSI lead) summer student at the time of the first Ganymede encounter.

Outreach:
My team at NASA Ames works with Google to make NASA’s geospatial
data more available via their Google Earth and Google Maps platforms.

Service:
Icarus Editorial Board member (2010-2012)
PG&G’s Planetary Cartography and Geologic Mapping Working Group member (2007-present)
DPS Webmaster (2006-2011)

Statement:

The Division for Planetary Sciences represents us, the planetary
scientists to larger organizations and the public. It can also be
an incredible vehicle for scientific change and the professional
development of scientists in our field. It is our community.

I think that the DPS must represent our membership’s perspective
to governments and the general public, it should advance scholarship,
and it should enable its members to be better scientists.

The DPS already has a fantastic program of legislative visits and
is very active on a public policy front, as well as engaging the
public through various efforts. As a DPS committee member I would
like to be more inovlved with that process and help ensure that the
“DPS position” is known to policy makers as they craft legislation
and budgets that affect our interests.

The DPS’s annual meeting does an amazing job of advancing scholarship,
but our designated publication, Icarus, falls short in this modern
age. The articles, refereeing, and editing are top notch, but the
policies that surround that core of scholarship are lacking. The
research that we do and submit to Icarus is, by and large, paid for
by public funds, and the results of that research, in my opinion,
should belong to the public. Access to our research, as published
in Icarus is very costly to the individual researcher whose institution
does not have a subscription, and nearly impossible for a non-researcher
to get access to. I think that as a scholarly society it is our
duty to make our research more accessible. Science is not accomplished
when we make the discovery, it is accomplished when that discovery
is communicated with others.

I will work with the DPS leadership to change our relationship with
Elsevier, Inc., the publisher of Icarus, to promote broader access.
If Elsevier is unwilling to change their policies to allow affordable
open access, then I would be in favor of more dramatic change
regarding what many consider to be `our’ journal. However, Icarus
is not `ours,’ aside from a subscription discount, the society
receives no benefit from our relationship with the journal. We are
the authors, the editors, the reviewers, and the audience, and I
feel that we need more of a say in how our scholarship is represented
than we currently have.

Finally, I think that our society has done an excellent job in
recent years promoting Professional Development via the new
subcommittee and their activities, and I would continue to encourage
the committee and society to expand upon their work.

—————————————————-
b) SEBASTIEN CHARNOZ: COMMITTEE

Professor of Astrophysics, University of Paris

Education: PhD 2000, University of Paris.

Research Interests: Collisional processes, origins, planet formation, satellite formation, rings dynamics, Kuiper and Asteroid Belts, giant planets, numerical simulations.
Associate member of the Cassini Imaging Team since 2003.
DPS is the place where I was born scientifically. Thanks to its blend of excellence and accessibility, young researchers have their place beside senior ones and new ideas can be debated in a friendly and enthusiastic atmosphere. At DPS, instrumentalists, theoreticians and observers are considered at a same level, breaking the boundaries that are found in other communities.
After working in numerical simulations of planetary formation during my PhD, I had the opportunity to join the Cassini Imaging Team in 2002 where I met the most extraordinary people of my scientific career. In this group I have brought my knowledge of planet formation and applied it to the dynamics of Saturn rings and satellite formation around the giant planets to build new models of satellite formation. Working internationally, this work has shown me the challenges of interdisciplinary work and the barriers that must be overcome in multidisciplinary dialogs.
Since planetary science is today one of the most visible areas of astronomy and attracts substantial public attention, we must continue our efforts to (i) attract young people to the field, (ii) facilitate international collaborations for building and strengthening new projects (iii) fuel interdisciplinary collaborations between different communities. As a European, a professor, and a researcher trying to make connection between different fields, I would engage in these three complementary areas if elected as a DPS Committee Member :
· Attract and facilitate young researchers to our scientific family
As a university professor, I am particularly sensitive to the question of the attracting and supporting young researchers in our scientific community. Young researchers are the vital “fluid” of our community: they are our future and they bring young and fresh views, new ideas, and strength to push the frontiers. As a DPS Committee Member I will act to promote actions towards graduate and PhD students, facilitating their participation in sessions dedicated to them. Also, in order to help young scientists starting their careers in planetary science, I will push projects aiming at linking students and research teams looking for postdocs.

· Strengthen ties with overseas colleagues
DPS meetings, since their origin, have been a marvelous place for promoting scientific collaborations, from small groups up to large consortiums for international space missions. In this way, the DPS plays a unique structuring role for our community that is not done by any other scientific society. The recent JUICE experiences show how vital international collaboration is to our community. As a citizen from Europe and as a DPS Committee Member I would be natural liaison to facilitate international communications between Europe and the DPS community and help to be the voice of the DPS community in Europe.

· Pushing forward trans-disciplinary collaborations :
Discoveries are often done at frontiers. Whereas we often talk about multidisciplinarity, this is often a difficult task because different communities have different languages. In addition, often researchers involved in trans-disciplinary research take a risk: the risk to be considered as a stranger by different funding agencies or review panels. However, due to the dynamism of planetary sciences, our community attracts new communities and we are bound to multidisciplinarity. I propose that by carefully designing interdisciplinary sessions, workshops and discussions at DPS, we can open new fields of explorations and form new research teams, both at the small collaboration levels, and at the scale of space missions
This is the way I propose to serve the DPS community if elected as a DPS Committee Member.

—————————————————————
c) AMANDA SICKAFOOSE GULBIS: COMMITTEE

Astronomer, Southern African Large Telescope, Cape Town, South Africa

Education
. University of Colorado (Astrophysical, Planetary, and Atmospheric Sciences; MS 1999, PhD 2002)
. Denison University (Physics, Mathematics; BS 1997)
. United States Air Force Academy (1993-1995)

Professional Positions
. Visiting Scientist, MIT Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 2008-present
. Research Scientist, MIT Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 2006-2008
. Postdoctoral Associate, MIT Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 2003-2006
. Postdoctoral Research Associate, Univ. of Colorado, Center for Integrated Plasma Studies, 2003
. Research Assistant, Univ. of Colorado, Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, 1998-2002
. Undergraduate Research Assistant, Lowell Observatory, summer 1996 & 1997

Research Interests
My recent research is focused on small bodies in the outer solar system, primarily via the technique of stellar occultations. This work encompasses a wide range of interests: observations on telescopes worldwide (visible and IR wavelengths), instrumentation (high-speed, visible wavelengths), astrometry (stars and solar system bodies), and the physical characterizations of Pluto, Charon, and other Kuiper Belt objects. I have also been involved with laboratory work on dusty plasmas. I remain interested in the near-surface dusty plasma environments on airless bodies, specifically the Moon and asteroids.

Selected Activites
. member of the AAS and DPS (since 1996); the IAU (since 2009); the African Astronomical Society and the Sutherland Small Telescopes User’s Committee (since they were founded in 2011)
. member of the Science Organizing Committees for the 2010 MEARIM II and 2008 DPS meetings
. member of NASA’s Management Operations Working Group for Planetary Astronomy, Planetary Atmospheres, and NEO Observations (2007-2008)
. speaker for public talks, Astronomy Centres, and BBC productions (2004-present)
. reviewer for NASA funding proposals from multiple programs

Candidate Statement
The DPS is a vibrant community, with the capability of not only advancing planetary research but fostering international collaborations, inspiring non-scientists, and encouraging future generations. I am interested in serving on the DPS committee in order to build on all of these aspects.

Planetary exploration and research continues to suffer under financial pressures. To help our cause, I think it is important to work with government representatives as well as take full advantage of international resources and raise public awareness. There are so many exciting, approachable aspects of planetary science that it is not difficult to share our knowledge and enthusiasm in order to generate popular interest and support. With increasingly accessible and widespread media, it is becoming much easier to connect with people worldwide. These tools can be employed to strengthen scientific collaborations and to reach a variety of people who are eager to learn more about astronomy (importantly, motivating students in math and science). One demonstration that funding can be available if we think broadly is the recent founding of the IAU Office of Astronomy for Development here in South Africa. We need to continue to be creative in finding ways to secure, maximize, and extend resources.

I am also interested in promoting interdisciplinary collaborations within the DPS. Many research projects can benefit from progress that is made on other bodies, application of different techniques, and/or a more comprehensive understanding of the Solar System. For example, laboratory work has traditionally held a fairly small place in the community; however, communication between experimentalists and observers is critical to the interpretation of spectroscopic and photometric observations of small bodies. If elected, I would look for ways to support and promote these types of interactions.

———————————————————-
d) PAUL WITHERS: COMMITTEE

Biography

Professional positions:
Assistant Professor, Astronomy Department, Boston University, 2010-present
Researcher, Center for Space Physics, Boston University, 2003-2010

Education:
PhD, Planetary Sciences, University of Arizona, 2003
MS and BA, Physics, University of Cambridge, 1998

Selected service roles:
DPS Nominating Subcommittee, 2008-2011
MEPAG Goals Committee, 2008-present
Local Organizing Committee, Magnetospheres of the Outer Planets meeting, 2011
Delivered atmospheric datasets to PDS for accelerometer instruments on Mars Odyssey, Spirit, Opportunity, Phoenix and arranged delivery of Venera 15/16 ionospheric data
Involvement in spacecraft radio occultation investigations (Mars Express, Venus Express); aerobraking accelerometer investigations (Mars Global Surveyor, Mars Climate Orbiter, Mars Odyssey, Venus Express); atmospheric entry investigations (Beagle 2, Spirit, Opportunity, Huygens, Phoenix)

Research areas:
Currently focused on planetary atmospheres and ionospheres, particularly Mars.

Statement

I belong to many scientific organizations. Of all of them, the DPS is the one that I feel works most directly for its membership. That sense of an organization serving its membership is what I wish to maintain and enhance by my service on the DPS Committee.

In thinking of my possible contributions to the DPS as a member of the Committee, I recalled one of my earliest forms of professional service. The graduate students of the University of Arizona’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory organize a celebration each fall. Some of you may have heard of it: the semi-legendary Bratfest. Many students focused on making the party a success, whereas I found my niche in making it financially possible – selling scores of the specially-designed commemorative shirts each year. I have a similar attitude to my service on the DPS Committee. I want to enable those DPS leaders who are visionaries to accomplish great things for our community. For example, that means working to ensure successful and non-bankrupting annual DPS meetings, to explore ways of improving the operations of the numerous NASA funding programs that support so many of us, and to navigate Icarus safely through the scientific publishing industry’s turmoil concerning the access of taxpayers to the discoveries they paid for.

When America’s planetary scientists want the voice of planetary science to be heard by the public, Washington, or just about any group, they turn to the DPS. When international planetary scientists, many of whom are DPS members, want to engage with America’s planetary science community, the DPS is the organization they call. I would like the DPS to make more frequent and more effective use of its powerful voice in communicating the views and concerns of the planetary science community to the public, the media, and others.

These are interesting times for planetary science. We have switched from concerns that the next decade’s flight program will be “all Mars, all the time” to fears that it could collapse to levels not seen since the 1980s, when no NASA planetary launches occurred between 1978 and 1989. Growing from those troubled times to a rate of one launch per year in 2000-2010 was a magnificent achievement for planetary science. The recent Decadal Survey outlined an exciting program of planetary exploration that is diverse in its destinations and its mission sizes. However, if any fraction of the Decadal Survey’s inspirational plan is to have a chance of becoming reality, the entire DPS is going to have to argue relentlessly for the importance and value of planetary science for the next few years. This will be the major preoccupation of the DPS over the three-year term of this slate of candidates, and I am eager to play a role in that endeavour.

 

———————————+

 

Newsletter 12-11

Issue12-11, June 1st, 2012

+—————————–CONTENTS——————————–+
1) IN MEMORIAM: JOHN GUEST
2) DPS EDUCATION SUBCOMMITTEE SEEKS NEW MEMBER
3) CALL FOR PROPOSALS TO ORGANISE EAS COLLOQUIA
4) UPCOMING MEETINGS
+———————————————————————+

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1
IN MEMORIAM: JOHN GUEST

John Guest (1938-2012) was a pioneer in planetary geologic mapping, contributing to the first geologic map of Mercury, as well as the first comprehensive map of the eastern equatorial region of Mars with Ron Greeley. He participated in the Mariner 10 and Viking missions, as well as the Magellan mission to Venus. Along with Ron, he helped to select the Viking 2 landing site. Primarily though, John was a volcanologist, happiest when he was in the field, especially at Mt. Etna. John did his PhD work at University College London, mapping volcanic fields in Chile, including the Chao Dacite and the Upper Tertiary ignimbrites in Antofagasta Province. He then went to the University of London Observatory to work with Gilbert Fielder on lunar craters, quickly realizing that craters on the Moon are not volcanic, but impact, starting his long interest in planetary science.
He founded the NASA Regional Planetary Image Facility at University College London, and taught many students there, including Rosaly Lopes, Chris Kilburn and Ben Bussey. John founded the European Planetary Geology Consortium in 1976, along with Philippe Masson, Gerhard Neukum, and Marcello Fulchignoni, which sparked many collaborations among its members. John’s work on Mars, Mercury, the Moon and Venus, as well as his very extensive work on terrestrial volcanology, leave a rich legacy.
He had a particular talent for being able to interpret geology from surface morphology – whether in the field, from aerial photographs or planetary images. He was much loved by his collaborators and students for his kind and generous spirit, and his sense of humor, which included terrifying his students in the field with tales of hairy lava tube rats and deadly snakes camouflaging in ropy lava. He was awarded the GSA G.K. Gilbert award in 1991; that same year the asteroid 1982 HL was named Guest by the International Astronomical Union Nomenclature Committee. He is survived by his wife Mary and sons James and Ben.

Prepared by Ellen Stofan, Angus Duncan, Rosaly Lopes, and Chris Kilburn.

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2
DPS EDUCATION SUBCOMMITTEE SEEKS NEW MEMBER

The DPS Education Subcommittee is seeking a member willing to take responsibility for developing and maintaining DPS-hosted webpages on “How to Become A Planetary Scientist” and “Educational Resources for Members”. Time commitment is expected to be low as considerable information has already been collected. The DPS/AAS webpage system was recently modernized so no webpage experience is necessary. Graduate student volunteers are welcome with the consent of their advisors.

Nick Schneider, Education & Public Outreach Officer, [email protected]

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3
CALL FOR PROPOSALS TO ORGANISE EAS COLLOQUIA
In order to promote medium size meetings in astronomy and astrophysics and related areas, the European Astronomical Society (EAS) launched in 2011 a series of EAS Colloquia (EASColl) to provide a mechanism to exchange ideas and promote cross-fertilisation of ideas between scientists working in Europe.

EASColl are intended to be medium-size meetings of 50 to 80 people dedicated to either established scientific domains or emerging fields of small/growing communities, which can not apply for support to the large EU Networks or qualify as International Astronomical Union Symposia (IAUS).
We are pleased to announce the second Call for Proposals to organise EAS Colloquia.

Practical information (including the application form) can be found on the EAS web pages : http://eas.unige.ch/meetings.jsp?tab=eascoll

The deadline for submission is June 25, 2012.
Selection by Council is expected to take place at their Council meeting at the Rome EWASS2012. The funding is allocated for EASColl to be held the next calendar year, i.e., in the course of 2013.

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4
UPCOMING MEETINGS

a) NINTH EUROPEAN SPACE WEATHER WEEK
3rd Announcement and call for papers

The next European Space Weather Week will take place at the Belgian Royal Academy of Sciences in Brussels, Belgium, from 5-9th November 2012.
Conference Website: http://stce.be/esww9/
ESWW9 will centre on the following open sessions:

Session 1: European Space Weather Landscape: Current Perspectives and Requirements for the Future
Session 2: Innovations and Key Challenges in Space Weather Science
Session 3a: Solar Variability Effects on Climate
Session 3b: Coupled Space Weather Modelling
Session 4a: Spacecraft Operations and Space Weather
Session 4b: Space Weather in the Solar System
Session 5: COST ES0803 Final Results

Abstract Submission is now open via http://stce.be/esww9 and will close on 30th June.
Early registration: 5th October

This meeting is supported by the European Space Agency, the Solar Terrestrial Centre of Excellence, the EC COST Office through the COST Action ES0803 and the Belgian Science Policy Office

b) 1970-2010: THE GOLDEN AGE OF SOLAR SYSTEM EXPLORATION
10-13 September 2012, Rome, Italy
The deadline for pre-registration and abstract submission
HAS BEEN POSTPONED TO JUNE 3, 2012.

Registration :
http://goldenage2012.ifac.cnr.it/index.php/goldenage2012/goldenage2012/s…

Abstracts :
http://goldenage2012.ifac.cnr.it/index.php/goldenage2012/goldenage2012/s…

At the Conference web site
http://goldenage2012.ifac.cnr.it/index.php/goldenage2012/goldenage2012
you can now find information on several hotels close to the conference location.

Information at:
[email protected]

c) WINTER SCHOOL: “FROM THE FIRST SOLIDS TO THE FIRST PLANETESIMALS”
The French National Program for Planetary Sciences (http://pnp.projet.latmos.ipsl.fr/) organizes a winter school: “From the first solids to the first planetesimals”, to be held in Les Houches (French Alpes, at the foot of Mt. Blanc) from February 10 to 15, 2013. This is the fifth edition of a series of schools on the “Chronology of Solar System formation” that is very popular in the French planetary science community.
All lectures will be in English and the participation is open to the international community.
The registration fees, which include full-board accommodation in double room in the prestigious “Centre de Physique des Houches” are 365 Euros.
The maximum number of participants is fixed to 70. We invite interested people to pre-register before September 20 at:
http:// www.oca.eu/michel/SchoolChronoV/ ChronoV_Register/ChronoV_Register.php
No fees are requested at the time of pre-registration. Please indicate in the box “Message” the subject of your research activity.
If the number of pre-registered participants exceeds 70, the Scientific Committee and invited lecturers will make a selection. Priority will be given to people whose research area is tightly connected with the subject of the school, as well as to students, post-docs and young researchers.
We hope to see you numerous in Les Houches.

The school Scientific Committee:
A. Morbidelli (OCA, Nice), M. Chaussidon (CRPG, Nancy), B. Marty (CRPG, Nancy), P. Michel (OCA, Nice), F. Robert (MNHN, Paris)

d) 11TH EUROPEAN VLBI NETWORK SYMPOSIUM AND EVN USERS MEETING
9-12 October 2012, Bordeaux

http://evn2012.obs.u-bordeaux1.fr

The Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Bordeaux (LAB) at the University of Bordeaux (France), on behalf of the European VLBI Consortium, will host the 11th European VLBI Network (EVN) Symposium and EVN Users Meeting on October 9-12, 2012. The Symposium will be held at the “Chambre de Commerce et d’Industrie de Bordeaux”, located in the “Palais de la Bourse”, in the center of Bordeaux.

The latest scientific results and technical developments from VLBI and e-VLBI will be reported at the conference. Planned sessions will include stars (from birth to death), galaxies, AGN, extreme astrophysics, astrometry and geodesy, planetary and space science, as well as techniques and developments. Presentations addressing synergy between (e-)VLBI and other new or planned radio facilities (e-MERLIN, EVLA, LOFAR, ALMA, MeerKAT, ASKAP, SKA,…) or instruments at other wavelengths (Fermi, Gaia,…) are welcome. The programme will also include an EVN Users Meeting to foster interaction between the EVN users and the EVN organization. All individuals who have an interest in the various research fields of VLBI and related fields are encouraged to attend the symposium and make an oral or poster presentation.
Bordeaux is famous for its wine but also for its rich and varied history…

Registration and abstract submission are open and will close on 10 July 2012.

Contact: [email protected]

 

———————————+

 

Newsletter 12-10

Issue12-10, May 14th 2012

+—————————–CONTENTS——————————–+
1) KEPLER COMMUNITY FOLLOW-UP OBSERVING PROGRAM
2) 2ND “PAOLO FARINELLA” AWARD (2012)
3) COORDINATION WITH ESA’S 2012 CALL FOR A SMALL MISSION OF
OPPORTUNITY IN ESA’S SCIENCE PROGRAM FOR A LAUNCH IN 2017
4) PLANETARY GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS (PGG) PROGRAM PROPOSALS
5) JOB OPPORTUNITIES
6) UPCOMING MEETINGS
+———————————————————————+

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1
KEPLER COMMUNITY FOLLOW-UP OBSERVING PROGRAM

The Kepler Community Follow-up Observing Program (CFOP) is a web-based tool with the principal aim to optimize resources and facilitate collaboration in follow-up studies of planet candidates in the Kepler field. CFOP currently contains information from the Kepler Input Catalog (KIC), publicly available parameters on the Kepler planetary candidates, target finder charts and information on multiplicity, and links to analysis tools such as ephemeris calculations and periodograms at the NASA Exoplanet Archive, to help plan and execute follow-up studies. In addition, CFOP serves as a repository for community-gathered follow-up data by allowing upload and display of data and derived astrophysical parameters and in the future will contain follow-up data from the Kepler team. All data will be clearly associated with the user who provided it and contact information is available to facilitate additional discussion and begin collaborations. CFOP is available at http://cfop.ipac.caltech.edu/.

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2
2ND “PAOLO FARINELLA” AWARD (2012)

Since 2011 a Prize is dedicated to the memory of Paolo Farinella (1953-2000). Last year, the Prize was awarded to W.F. Bottke at the joint DPS-EPSC meeting in Nantes (F). (http://meetings.copernicus.org/epsc-dps2011/paolo_farinella_prize.html)
The second edition of the Farinella Prize is devoted to planetary science and specifically for studies of the formation and early evolution of the solar system, which was one of the research interest in Paolo’s career. The award ceremony will be hosted by the EPSC meeting in Madrid, Spain (23 – 28 September 2012).
Nominations (using a special form) must be sent by email not later than May 30, 2012, at the following address:
[email protected]

Contact / requests : Adriano Campo Bagatin
On behalf of the supporting committee of the Paolo Farinella Prize.
Departamento de Fisica, Ingenieria de Sistemas y Teoria de la Senyal
[email protected]

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3
COORDINATION WITH ESA’S 2012 CALL FOR A SMALL MISSION OF
OPPORTUNITY IN ESA’S SCIENCE PROGRAM FOR A LAUNCH IN 2017

– Request due to NASA by May 15
– NASA response to PI by June 1
– Proposal due to ESA by June 15
– Submission of full proposal and cover letter to NASA by June 22

NASA is prepared to provide proposing U.S. investigators with a letter
of acknowledgement for proposals in alignment with established NASA
strategic science objectives. Proposers desiring such a letter must
submit to NASA a brief description of (1) the mission concept
contemplated, (2) the relevance of its science objectives to
established NASA science objectives, and (3) contemplated U.S.
involvement in the mission to be proposed. This description may
not exceed 1000 words (~two single-spaced pages, 12-point type) and
must be submitted by email no later than May 15, 2012, to
[email protected]. Requests for letters of acknowledgement
should come from the lead U.S. collaborator on the proposed mission.
NASA will conduct an internal review of the proposed mission’s
relevancy to NASA science objectives and, for those submissions in
good alignment with these objectives, will provide a letter of
acknowledgement in time for submission to ESA with the proposal.

ESA Announcement website:
http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/object/index.cfm?fobjectid=50119

Questions, contact:
Dr. Colleen N. Hartman
(202) 358-2165
[email protected]

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4
PLANETARY GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS (PGG) PROGRAM PROPOSALS

The Planetary Geology and Geophysics (PGG) program supports
scientific investigations of planetary surfaces and interiors,
satellites (including the Moon), satellite and ring systems, and
smaller Solar System bodies, such as asteroids and comets. The
goals of the PGG program are to foster the synthesis, analysis,
and comparative study of data that will improve the understanding
of the extent and influence of planetary geological and geophysical
processes on the bodies of the Solar System.

The due date for proposals to this program has been delayed to
July 2, 2012, to permit proposers who recently received evaluations
of their PGG ROSES 2011 proposals additional time to prepare
proposals.

Questions may be addressed to:
Michael Kelley
[email protected]
202-358-0607

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5
JOB OPPORTUNITIES

POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH: SECONDARY ION MASS SPECTROMETRY (SIMS)
MICROPROBE ANALYSIS
The Lunar and Planetary Institute (LPI), part of the Universities
Space Research Association, invites applications for a postdoctoral
fellowship in the area of SIMS isotopic and elemental analysis of
Martian meteorites.
The successful candidate will work with an international team at NASA
Johnson Space Center in Houston. Candidate should be self-motivated,
and must have a Ph.D. in geochemistry, cosmochemistry, or related.
Strong background in ion microprobe analysis essential. Experience in
analysis/interpretation of Pb isotopes is advantageous. Experience with
a Cameca 1270/80 is also advantageous. Knowledge of Martian
geochemistry and petrology is beneficial, but not essential. Travel is
required. Candidates should also present an independent research plan
that complements the Martian meteorite study.
Position is for one year, with possible extension to a second year.
Applicants should send a letter of interest, a curriculum vita with
list of publications, a brief statement of research interests, and
three references to [email protected]. Further details contact
Justin Simon ([email protected]) or John Jones
([email protected]). Information on research and facilities at
the LPI can be found at:
http://www.lpi.usra.edu

Information on JSC facilities can be found at:
http://ares.jsc.nasa.gov/ares/index.cfm

The Universities Space Research Association is an Equal Opportunity
Employer.

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6
UPCOMING MEETINGS

a) EUROPEAN PLANETARY SCIENCE CONGRESS 2012
IFEMA-Feria de Madrid
23–28 September 2012, Madrid, Spain

We invite the international community of planetary scientists to submit an abstract for presentation of their recent work at the EPSC 2012 Meeting, which will take place at the conference centre IFEMA-Feria de Madrid in Spain, 23-28 September 2012.

http://epsc2012.eu

Please consider submitting a paper : browse the list of sessions and identify the session that most closely matches your area of interest; your abstract can then be submitted directly to that session.
Abstract deadline: 23 May 2012.

The meeting will consist of oral and poster sessions, as well as workshop-style sessions. There is a current list of over 70 sessions is organized around several topics.

Please note the 6 sessions in :
GP Giant Planet Systems :
http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EPSC2012/sessionprogramme/GP

The whole scientific program and abstract submission are accessible at:
http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EPSC2012/sessionprogramme

Travel funding will be available for students: EPSC will make a contribution to a
large number of European PhD students to support their attendance. Information on registration, accommodation, travel routes, visa requirements and social events are available on the meeting web site.

Please forward this message to colleagues who may be interested.

b) DAP-2012 MEETING
The “Dust, Atmosphere and Plasma: Moon and Small Bodies” meeting will
take place on June 6-8, 2012, in Boulder Colorado. The program is now
available at:

http://lasp.colorado.edu/ccldas/ldap_2012

Please register online by June 1, 2012, if you plan to attend.

c) EXOPLANETS IN MULTI-BODY SYSTEMS IN THE KEPLER ERA
February 9-16, 2013
Aspen Center for Physics, Aspen, CO, USA

http://www.astro.ufl.edu/~eford/meetings/aspen2013/

For centuries, theories of planet formation were guided exclusively by
our solar system. However, the discovery of planets orbiting other
stars (exoplanets) has demonstrated that nature often produces
planetary systems quite different from our own, neither anticipated by
nor well explained by the current theories of solar system formation
and dynamics.
In this one week program, scientists from the fields of planetary
science, celestial mechanics, astronomy and astrophysics will meet to
discuss new developments in the field of extrasolar multi-planet
systems. Our workshop will provide an environment where these
scientists can present new ideas, discuss their implications for
identifying the most important problems in the field and chart the
field’s future direction.
The meeting will be held either February 9-15 or February 10-16, 2013.
We anticipate nearly 100 participants. The Aspen Center for Physics
will coordinate applications, registration and housing. We will
update the meeting website with information as these details become
available. See the ACP website for further information about
registration, housing and day care for previous winter meetings.
Young scientists, women and underrepresented minorities are all
encouraged to apply.

d) 2012 NEXT GENERATION LUNAR SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEERS
WORKSHOP

The 3rd annual Next Generation Lunar Scientists & Engineers (NGLSE)
Workshop will be held on Monday, July 16, 2012 at the NASA Ames
Research Center (ARC), preceding the NASA Lunar Science Forum. This
one-day workshop for graduate students, postdocs, and early career
professionals will focus on effective career strategies for navigating
today’s job market. The purpose of this group is to engage and
develop the next generation of lunar scientists and engineers, and to
enable their successful involvement in current planning for the
exploration of the Moon.

Please indicate your interest in attending at:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/6G53ZQG

Email any questions to: [email protected]

———————————+

 

Newsletter 12-9

Issue12-09, April 27th 2012

+—————————–CONTENTS——————————–+
1) DPS ELECTIONS 2012 : CANDIDATE SLATE
2) SUPPORT THE CASSINI MISSION

+———————————————————————+

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1
DPS ELECTIONS 2012 : CANDIDATE SLATE
The DPS Nominating Committee has identified the following candidates for the 2012 DPS elections for Vice-Chair and Committee:

Vice-Chair (1 to be elected):
Heidi B. Hammel, AURA
Jeff Moore, NASA Ames

Committee (2 to be elected):
Ross A. Beyer, SETI Institute
Sebastien Charnoz, AIM, Univ. Paris Diderot, France
Amanda Gulbis, Southern African Large Telescope (SALT)
Paul Withers, Boston University

Additional candidates, supported by a petition of at least 20 DPS members, may be nominated by May 27th. Please send any nominations to the DPS Secretary, Athena Coustenis, at [email protected].

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2
SUPPORT THE CASSINI MISSION
If you would like to be included as a signatory on the Letter of Support for the continuation of the Cassini Solstice Mission and its scientific objectives, please fill in the form at the URL below so that your signature can be added. A list of signatories will be published and linked as a PDF on this page.

http://jakal.sp.ph.ic.ac.uk/SupportCassini

 

Newsletter 12-8

Issue 12-8, April 20, 2012

+—————————–CONTENTS——————————————————–+
1) INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY MOBILIZATION TO RESTORE PLANETARY BUDGET CUTS
2) NATIONAL PLANETARY EXPLORATION CAR WASH AND BAKE SALE
3) REMINDER: DPS 2012 PRIZE NOMINATIONS
4) JOBS AND POSITIONS
5) UPCOMING MEETINGS
+——————————————————————————————————+

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY MOBILIZATION TO RESTORE PLANETARY BUDGET CUTS
The campaign to restore the catastrophic 20% cut in the planetary science budget has a number of aspects, and critical to the success of our campaign is mobilizing to get our voice heard in the Congressional appropriations process.
The following two notes speak to the mobilization of our community. The DPS Twitter accounts are a great source of breaking information, particularly for the Congressional budget battles.
A number of our non-US colleagues have asked what they can do to aid in this budget process. The best thing that can be done is to write letters expressing your opinions to the representatives and senators on the appropriations committees. Below is a suggested letter of support. The names and addresses of the critical representatives and senators are listed on the DPS “Communicating with Congress” webpage (public_policy/communicating-congress).
I urge all DPS members to take the time to write as many of these Representatives as possible in order to make the case for continued funding for the exploration of the solar system.

Dan Britt
Chair, DPS

a) *Letter in support of planetary sciences from international and public:*

Hello, my name is Dr. _______. I am a planetary scientist from
[City], [country other than USA]. I am concerned about the cuts
proposed to planetary science within NASA.

The United States has been a leader in planetary science; enhanced by
substantial contributions from international partners. Scientists
from countries like mine want to support the work and excellent
research achieved by our colleagues in the US.

NASA funding and partnerships on missions and projects, such as those
with the European Space Agency (ESA), are essential in allowing
scientists and engineers from all over the world to contribute to the
pursuit of knowledge. I hope that the United States will not give up
its planetary exploration program, will not accept the loss in
expertise and scientific excellence, and will continue to be an
inspiration to the rest of the world.

b) *Social media:*

In these perilous budgetary times, we need to mobilize our community and
supportive non-scientists to help maintain a healthy discipline. Social
media sites like Twitter and Facebook are proving to be useful tools in
quickly disseminating information and hosting discussion. The DPS now
has three Twitter accounts to give information to members and the public
on important points like Congressional action, election results and
reminders, and the like. Follow them at @DPSdevelopment (professional
development), @DPSMeeting (meeting-relevant information pre- and
mid-meetings), and @DPSCommittee (official DPS business).

While the DPS has no official Facebook page currently (although the
Professional Development committee is present on Facebook), a “Young
Scientists for Planetary Exploration” Facebook group has been
established, and several DPS members are also members of this group,
which is open to all DPS members. Stay tuned for further information on
the social media front!

-Andy Rivkin, DPS Treasurer and Tweetmaster General

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2
NATIONAL PLANETARY EXPLORATION CAR WASH & BAKE SALE

To attract media and Congressional attention to the perilous NASA planetary exploration cuts proposed to take place 1 October, and the need to restore the planetary budget to FY12 or higher levels, a National Planetary Exploration Car Wash and Bake Sale is being planned for June 9th .

Planetary groups and institutions are invited to join, sponsoring their own event locally and inviting media coverage to their event.

Those already involved include planetary groups at: LPL, LPI, Moon Express (Google Lunar X Prize), Notre Dame, PSI, SwRI, UCF, UCLA, and the University of Maryland.

More about the National Planetary Exploration Car Wash and Bake Sale on
June 9th can be found at
http://www.boulder.swri.edu/~con/June9/PlanetaryCarWash.html, and at our
Facebook page at:
_https://www.facebook.com/NationalPlanetaryExplorationCarWashBakeSaleDay_

Please consider organizing a local event of your own for June 9th , and registering it at the URL above

For more information, contact the Alan Stern, [email protected]
<prizes. The nomination form and
instructions can also be retrieved from this website. The completed nomination
form and supporting material should be emailed to [email protected].

Anyone may submit a nomination. A completed nomination will be retained and
considered by the Prize Subcommittee for three years, or as long as the nominee
is eligible, whichever is less. Past nominees may be re-nominated after the
expiration of a prior nomination. A posthumous nomination is allowed for a
limited time after the nominee’s death, except for the Sagan Medal. For specific
details, see the url noted above.
The deadline for nominations this year is May 1.

Consider for example the Carl Sagan Medal, that recognizes excellence in
public communication in planetary science. Do you have a colleague that
excels in reaching out to the public, that has a particularly effective way
of communicating new findings in our field? We want to recognize those
efforts, that are so important to the health of our field!

The Masursky Award recognizes meritorious service to planetary science. Do
you have a colleague whose efforts made a significant difference in the
success of an endeavor you’ve been involved in through engineering,
managerial, programmatic or public service activities? Consider nominating
that individual!

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4
JOB OPPORTUNITIES

a) POSTDOCTORAL POSITION IN PLANETARY SCIENCE

The Department of Geography at the University of Winnipeg (http://www.uwinnipeg.ca) invites applications for a postdoctoral position in the field of planetary science. The postdoc will be supervised by Professor Ed Cloutis and focus on the acquisition of laboratory spectra using a variety of planetary environment chambers, analysis of existing laboratory spectra relevant to a number of planetary missions, field work at a number of Mars analogue sites, and supervision of undergraduate and graduate students. Applicants with a strong background and interest in planetary spectroscopy are encouraged to apply.

The appointment could begin as soon as possible and will be funded full-time for up to 3 years. Continuation beyond the first year will depend on progress and availability of funding. Applicants should send their CV, brief summary of research, list of publications, and the contact information of at least 3 references to Ed Cloutis ([email protected]). Further details concerning the position are available from Ed Cloutis.

The University of Winnipeg is committed to employment equity, welcomes diversity in the workplace, and encourages applications from all qualified individuals including women, members of visible minorities, aboriginal persons and persons with disabilities. In accordance with Canadian immigration requirements, this advertisement is initially directed to Canadian citizens and permanent residents of Canada.

b) POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCHER: SECONDARY ION MASS SPECTROMETRY (SIMS) MICROPROBE ANALYSIS

The Lunar and Planetary Institute (LPI), part of the Universities
Space Research Association, invites applications for a postdoctoral
fellowship in the area of SIMS isotopic and elemental analysis of
Martian meteorites.

The successful candidate will work with an international team at NASA
Johnson Space Center in Houston. Candidate should be self-motivated,
and must have a Ph.D. in geochemistry, cosmochemistry, or related.
Strong background in ion microprobe analysis essential. Experience
in analysis/interpretation of Pb isotopes is advantageous.
Experience with a Cameca 1270/80 is also advantageous. Knowledge
of Martian geochemistry and petrology is beneficial, but not essential.
Travel is required. Candidates should also present an independent
research plan that complements the Martian meteorite study.

Position is for one year, with possible extension to a second year.
Applicants should send a letter of interest, a curriculum vita with
list of publications, a brief statement of research interests, and
three references to [email protected]. Further details contact:
Justin Simon ([email protected]) or
John Jones ([email protected]).

Information on research and facilities at the LPI can be found at:
www.lpi.usra.edu

Information on JSC facilities can be found at:
http://ares.jsc.nasa.gov/ares/index.cfm

The Universities Space Research Association is an Equal Opportunity
Employer.

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5
UPCOMING MEETINGS

See also:
PLANETARY MEETING CALENDAR ADDITIONS

Posted at http://planetarynews.org/meetings.html

a) Last Call for Abstracts 
Planetary Data: A Workshop for Users and Software Developers


Flagstaff, AZ (USA)
June 25-29, 2012
http://astrogeology.usgs.gov/groups/Planetary-Data-Workshop


We are pleased to announce Planetary Data: A Workshop for Users and Software Developers to be held June 25–29, 2012, at Northern Arizona University (NAU) in Flagstaff, Arizona. The meeting facility is at the du Bois Conference Center on the NAU campus. The two content tracks will share a common day on Wednesday to hold talks of overlapping interest. One or both tracks can be attended and there is no registration fee for either. Abstract submissions for presentations and/or posters are due by April 30, 2012. 

Planetary Data Users Track 
* Share information on digital planetary data, including availability, access and analysis methods. 
* Present how-to guides for locating, acquiring, processing and working with digital planetary data. 

Planetary Software Developers Track 
* Bring researchers and technology experts together to discuss and exchange ideas to identify difficult planetary research issues that can be addressed by software development. 
* Present planetary data processing and software development methods and techniques. 
* If you cannot attend, we would like to invite you to share your thoughts on needed software technologies for the planetary community (5-10min survey).

 

The Planetary Data Usertrack is sponsored by the NASA Planetary Data System, the Planetary Geology and Geophysics Program, and the Regional Image Facility network. The Planetary Software Developerstrack is sponsored by the NASA PG&G Cartography Program.

Schedule
April 30, 2012 Deadline for Abstract Submission (for presentation or poster)
June 15, 2012 Registration Deadline (if not submitting an abstract).
June 25-29, 2012 Workshop: Data Users (June 25-27), Software Developers (June 27-29)

b) Second Announcement and Call for Papers: “1970 – 2010: The Golden
Age of Solar System Exploration”

This conference will be held at Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, Palazzo
Corsini, Via della Lungara 10, Rome, Italy, from September 10-12, 2012.

The deadline for advanced registration and abstract submission is
May 15, 2012.

The Second Announcement can be found at:

http://goldenage2012.ifac.cnr.it/index.php/goldenage2012/goldenage2012

The email for information is [email protected]

c) GSA Annual Meeting Topical Session – The Heart of an Explorer: A
Tribute to Ronald Greeley

Ronald Greeley, who helped found the GSA Planetary Geology Division
30 years ago, passed away unexpectedly in late October 2011. Ron was
a leader and helped build the field of planetary geology, with work
that spanned the breadth of planetary research. From volcanic to
aeolian studies, from laboratory experiments to study of terrestrial
field analogs, and from mathematical modeling to geologic mapping to
NASA planetary mission data analysis, there is virtually no area or
technique in planetary geology in which Ron did not participate. In
tribute to Ron’s memory, and all he did on behalf of our field, we
invite oral and/or poster presentations from Ron’s colleagues and
former students for this wide-ranging planetary geology session to
discuss recent results from your work in the studies, or techniques,
or on missions, that Ron Greeley participated.

The GSA Abstract deadline is Tuesday, August 14, 2012. The 2012 GSA
Annual Meeting is 4-7 November in Charlotte, North Carolina. To
submit abstracts, go to this website:

http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2012AM/cfp.epl

 

Newsletter 12-6

Issue 12-6, March 22, 2012

+—————————–CONTENTS——————————————————–+
1) UPDATE FROM THE CHAIR : PLANS FOR ACTION ON THE NASA BUDGET
2) NRC’S COMMITTEE ON ASTROBIOLOGY AND PLANETARY SCIENCE
3) IRTF OBSERVING PROPOSALS
4) NEW FRONTIERS IN ASTRONOMY AND COSMOLOGY INTERNATIONAL GRANT COMPETITION
5) JOB OPPORTUNITIES
6) UPCOMING MEETINGS
+——————————————————————————————————+

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1
UPDATE FROM THE CHAIR : PLANS FOR ACTION ON THE NASA BUDGET
I am reporting from the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (LPSC) where, not surprisingly, the major cuts to the NASA Planetary Science Division budget are a frequent subject for the hallway discussions. The NASA HQ briefing was very well attended and featured the new SMD Chief John Grunsfeld and Jim Green of PSD. The message that came through clearly was that this budget is not what SMD or PSD prefers, but there is nothing that NASA HQ can do about it at their level. The new information from the briefing was a strong intention in SMD/PSD to reboot the Mars program in co-ordination with the human exploration side of NASA. The near-term impact is a committee that is looking at mission options in the 2018 time range for a ~$700 million range mission. This is money available in the current reduced budget and 5-year plan. Mars remains a very high priority for NASA HQ.

Steve Mackwell of LPI organized a Planetary Community Forum where the chairs of the planetary-oriented scientific societies (Planetary AGU, DPS, Planetary GSA, and the Meteortical Society) discussed plans for action on the budget. The bottom line is that if the community wants a different budget, the community will need to engage with Congress and convince them to change the budget. The Societies are committed to working for restoration of the budget to FY2012 levels (to $1.5 billion from the current proposal of $1.2 billion) with legislative language that directs NASA to follow the Decadal Survey and plan on level funding for over the next five years. The consensus course of action is to target selected House and Senate Appropriations Subcommittee members for engagement using meetings, letters, e-mails, and FAXs to make our opinion forcefully known. In the next week the DPS web site will provide names, addresses, talking points, and suggested letter formats for these contacts. These actions need to be coordinated with the legislative calendar which can be a bit murky. The best guess is that the House Subcommittee will be marking up their appropriations bill in late May, so we will need to begin writing “physical” letters about April 15 (all mail to Congress is irradiated and takes four to six weeks to be delivered), and plan on ramping up e-mails, visits and FAXs in mid-May. Additional contacts will be needed when the full House Committee meets on their budget, when the Senate Subcommittee meets, when the full Senate Committee meets, and probably when the House/Senate Conference Committee meets. Those dates are not clear now, but I will keep you informed.

Dan Britt, DPS Chair

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2
NRC’S COMMITTEE ON ASTROBIOLOGY AND PLANETARY SCIENCE

The National Research Council’s Space Studies Board has merged the Committee on Planetary and Lunar Exploration (COMPLEX) and the Committee on the Origins and Evolution of Life (COEL) to create the new Committee on Astrobiology and Planetary Sciences (CAPS).
The prime functions of CAPS will be to monitor the implementation of the recommendations contained in the Vision and Voyages planetary science decadal survey and in the reports drafted under the aegis of COEL and COMPLEX, and to act as the organizing committee for future studies in the areas of astrobiology and planetary science (e.g., the mid-term assessment of the decadal survey).
Philip Christensen (Arizona State University) and J. Gregory Ferry (Pennsylvania State University) have agreed to serve as the co-chairs of CAPS. Seventeen additional individuals have been identified and have agreed to serve on the committee, pending approval by the NRC’s Executive Office.
CAPS will hold its first face-to-face meeting on 23-25 May in the National Academies’ Keck Center, 500 Fifth St. NW, Washington, D.C., 20001.
Additional details about CAPS will be posted on its website at:

http://sites.nationalacademies.org/SSB/SSB_067577

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3
THE NASA INFRARED TELESCOPE FACILITY (IRTF) OBSERVING PROPOSALS

DEADLINE: 02 April 2012
***Use the ONLINE application form ***
NASA Infrared Telescope Facility Observing Proposals. Due date for the 2012B semester (August 1, 2012 to January 31, 2013) is Monday, April 2, 2012. See our online submission form. Available instruments include: (1) SpeX, a 1-5 micron cross-dispersed medium-resolution spectrograph (up to R=2,500) and imager; (2) CSHELL, a 1-5 micron high-resolution spectrograph (up to R=40,000); (3) NSFCAM2, a 2048×2048 pixel, 1-5 micron camera with a 0.04″/pixel scale (82″x82″ field-of-view) and a circular variable filter; (4) MORIS, a 512×512 pixel Andor CCD camera mounted at the side-facing, dichroic-fed window of the SpeX cryostat (60″x60″ field-of-view); MORIS can be used simultaneously with SpeX, and (5) PI-instruments including a low-resolution 3-14 micron spectrograph and high-resolution spectrographs for 8-25 microns. Information on available instruments can be found at: http://irtfweb.ifa.hawaii.edu/Facility/.
Important notice: We are planning to take NSFCAM2 off line during Aug.-Oct. 2012, to install a new infrared array and control electronics. We expect it to be available starting on Nov. 1, 2012. Due to the schedule uncertainties in returning the instrument to service, proposals to use NSFCAM2 will be accepted provided the program can be also accomplished with the SpeX slit viewer, which has 0.12″/pixel and a 60″x60″ field-of-view.
Important notice: We anticipate that SpeX will be taken off line during June –Oct. 2013, and will be available Nov. 1, 2013. This is necessary to upgrade SpeX with new arrays and array controllers. We strongly recommend observers to plan their observing accordingly. We also expect to accommodate key projects requiring large amounts of observing time using CSHELL, NSFCAM2, and visitor instruments during time SpeX is not available.
Visitor instruments (available on a collaborative basis with the instrument team) include: TEXES (5-20 micron high-resolution spectrograph; contact Matt Richter at [email protected] for more information), BASS (3-14 micron spectrometer; contact Ray Russell at [email protected]), and CELESTE (5-25 micron echelle spectrometer; contact Don Jennings at [email protected]).
Remote observing is available with SpeX, NSFCAM2, CSHELL, and MORIS.
Remote observing requests must be made in the proposal application – later requests will be considered if requested at least ONE MONTH ahead of time. If you wish to observe from your home institution, you MUST comply with the requirements for video conferencing and instrument operation provided on the Remote Observers Information page. First-time users should plan to work in Manoa, Hilo or at the summit for their first run with their support astronomer and become familiar with the instrument operation. Observers already familiar with the instrument and who want to observe remotely from their home institution are strongly encouraged to contact Miranda Hawarden-Ogata ([email protected]) to set up a test of the video link and user interface at least one month prior to their observing run. We cannot guarantee a successful remote observing connection on short notice since we have no control of hardware and software compatibility on the user’s side. It is the responsibility of the PI to provide up to date observing contact information.
Important notice: To keep our bibliography up to date and to ensure future funding of the IRTF, please check your publications at the following websites:
http://irtfweb.ifa.hawaii.edu/research/biblio/Refereed.html
http://irtfweb.ifa.hawaii.edu/research/biblio/Non_Refereed.html
and send to William Walters ([email protected]) any missing references.

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4
NEW FRONTIERS IN ASTRONOMY AND COSMOLOGY INTERNATIONAL GRANT COMPETITION

Deadline: 16 April 2012

The New Frontiers in Astronomy and Cosmology International Grant Competition is offering opportunities for innovative research on the following topics:

I. What was the earliest state of the universe?
II. Is our universe unique or is it part of a much larger multiverse?
III. What is the origin of the complexity in the universe?
IV. Are we alone in the universe? Or, are there other life and intelligence beyond the solar system?

Grants are offered for theoretical work, up to $300,000 for two years;
and experimental research, up to $500,000 for two years. Proposers
are required to complete a pre-application due 16 April, available on
the website www.NewFrontiersinAstronomy.org in mid-March.

In addition to the grants program, the New Cosmic Frontiers Essay
Contest offers prizes for high school and college student essays.
Further details can be found at www.NewFrontiersinAstronomy.org.

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5
JOB OPPORTUNITIES

1) POST-DOC IN HAMBURG, GERMANY
A 3-year post-doc position on dynamics and thermodynamics of planetary
atmospheres at the Meteorological Institute, University of Hamburg,
Germany has opened for anyone who may be interested. See :

http://www.verwaltung.uni-hamburg.de/stellenangebote/wissmit/Geowiss_01-…

Doctoral degree in physics, applied mathematics, astronomy, or Earth sciences, and re- search experience in the field of planetary atmospheres is required.
Preference will be given to disabled applicants with equal qualifications.
Application dossiers (application letter, curriculum vitae, degree certificate(s), two references) are to be submitted by e-mail ([email protected]) or by regular mail (Prof. Dr. Valerio Lucarini, Universität Hamburg, Meteorologisches Institut, Grindelberg 5, D-20144 Hamburg, Germany) not later than 1 May 2012. Please do not submit any originals.
For more information please contact [email protected] or check the following web- site http://www.mi.uni-hamburg.de/Theoretische.6.0.html.

2) ASSOCIATE EDITORS FOR THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
The American Astronomical Society is soliciting applications for two
new positions of Associate Editors for the Astrophysical Journal
Letters. These Associate Editors will play the same role for ApJ
Letters that the ApJ Scientific Editors play for the main journal.
Starting in Fall 2012 the new Associate Editors will work closely
together with the new ApJ Letters Editor, Dr. Frederic Rasio, to help
with the peer review process. See the AAS Job Register for more
details.

http://jobregister.aas.org/job_view?JobID=41840

3) POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE AT RENSSELAER
POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE
The Department of Physics, Applied Physics, and Astronomy at the
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) invites applications for a
Postdoctoral Research Associate in the area of exoplanet exploration,
including observational investigations and/or instrumentation
development. The successful applicant will carry out independent
research on the detection of exoplanets and characterization of
exoplanetary systems and their parent stars, with emphasis on
exploring the conditions for habitability.

Applicants must send a current CV with list of publications, contact
information for 3 professional references, and a 1-2 page statement
of research interests to Professor Jon A. Morse ([email protected]).

Potential applicants may wish to review the current research activities
of the NY Center for Astrobiology at:
http://www.origins.rpi.edu/origin.html

and consider how she/he could complement and enhance its portfolio,
then include such ideas in the research statement.

Applicants must have a PhD (or foreign degree equivalent) in astronomy,
astrophysics, physics, planetary science, or related field. The initial
appointment is for 1 year beginning as early as July 2012, renewable
for up to 2 additional years pending satisfactory review and
availability of funding.

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute has a strong institutional commitment
to diversity and is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer.

4) POST-DOCTORAL POSITION AT OBSERVATOIRE DE PARIS IN MEUDON, FRANCE:
Three dimensional MHD simulation of planetary magnetospheres

A one year renewable post-doctoral position founded by the FP7 collaborative
European project SHOCK (Solar and Heliospheric Collisionless Kinetics: Enabling
Data Analysis of the Sun to Earth Plasma System with Kinetic Modellings) is
available in the Paris Observatory at Meudon.

The successful candidate is expected to select and adapt an already existing
compressible MHD code to perform global simulation of a planetary magnetosphere.
The main objective during the very first phase of the project is to select and
validate the best suited MHD code among the few available codes published under
GNU General Public License (e.g. the ATHENA code, made available by the
Princeton University). During the second phase the implementation of the
boundary conditions at the planetary surface will be the main objective. In the
end, fully three dimensional simulations of the solar wind – magnetosphere
interaction for various wind parameters are expected to be produced routinely.

Candidates must have a PhD in plasma physics, astrophysics or a related field,
with a good experience in code development for parallel architectures, MHD
simulations and the use of visualisation tools.

The appointment will be for one year renewable once, with an expected start on
the 1st June 2012. The net salary is 2500 euros/month.
Applications including a CV, a short description of research work and list of
publications should be sent (by e-mail) to the two address given below. Two
reference letters, to be sent directly by the referees, are also required.
Full consideration will be given to applications received by the 8th April 2012.

Send applications by email to Filippo Pantellini ([email protected])
and c.c. to Michel Moncuquet ([email protected])

5) SERVING ON A REVIEW PANEL
Postdocs and early-career professionals, would you like to get some
experience on a review panel? Serving on a review panel is one of the
best ways to improve your proposal-writing skills. We are recruiting
reviewers for the NESSF (NASA Earth and Space Science Fellowship)
program. These are graduate student fellowship proposals that cover a
wide range of planetary topics. The review panels will be held
virtually via Webex (no travel required) in mid to late April. If you
are interested in serving on this panel, please send a CV or short
description of your expertise to

Dr. Sarah Noble
[email protected]

—————————————————————–
Additional Career opportunities are listed at http://astrobiology.nasa.gov/careers/

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6
UPCOMING MEETINGS

See also: PLANETARY MEETING CALENDAR ADDITIONS

Posted at http://planetarynews.org/meetings.html

—————————————————————–
OPAG MEETING, MARCH 29-30, 2012, ST. LOUIS
The Outer Planets Assessment Group (OPAG) will meet 29-30 March at the
Renaissance Grand St. Louis Hotel, St. Louis, Missouri. Information
regarding hotel and other logistics can be found at:

http://icpi.nasaprs.com/opag

Potential attendees are kindly asked to go to this website, and click on the invitation link and RSVP for attendance (this will assist our meeting planners).
This OPAG meeting will focus on the recently released FY13 NASA budget for Planetary Science, reports from the Europa Science

—————————————————————–
ESA’S ESLAB SYMPOSIUM ON “FORMATION AND EVOLUTION OF MOONS”
The European Space Agency’s ESLAB Symposium on “Formation and
Evolution of Moons” will be held at ESTEC, The Netherlands, 25-29 June
2012. The 2nd announcement may be found at:

http://tiny.cc/eslab-moons

The web page has been updated with the poster, list of invited
speakers, registration page and student support.

Deadline for abstract: 2nd April 2012

Abstract submission may be done at:

http://www.sciops.esa.int/index.php?project=CONF2011&page=index&conf=MOO…

—————————————————————–
MOVING FORWARD IN SPACE WORKSHOP
Applications are now available for the Moving FORWARD in Space Workshop, to be held in Philadelphia on June 4-6, 2012.

The primary goals of the workshop are to provide early-career female scientists with information and skills development necessary for a successful bid for a tenured professorship in the planetary sciences. Workshop activities will focus on developing mentoring and networking connections, techniques for more successful writing, acquiring grant funding, sharing of classroom ideas and materials, maintaining work-life balance, and challenges for dual career couples.

More information is available on the website at: https://sites.google.com/a/temple.edu/forward-in-space/

Application deadline and review:
Applications are available on the website or by e-mailing [email protected]. Applications must be received by midnight March 26, 2012. The workshop Organizing Committee will review applications and begin informing applicants on April 2. Applications for travel stipends will also be available at that time.

This conference is sponsored by the National Science Foundation via the FORWARD to Professorship Program.

—————————————————————–
DUST, ATMOSPHERE, AND PLASMA: MOON AND SMALL BODIES (DAP-2012)
The meeting will take place in Boulder, June 6-8, 2012.
Please visit our webpages http://ldap2012.colorado.edu/ to register and submit an abstract by 3/30/2012, if you plan to attend.

We are looking forward to see you in Boulder!

Alan Stern and Mihaly Horanyi

—————————————————————–
THIRD INTERNATIONAL PLANETARY DUNES WORKSHOP
Remote Sensing and Data Analysis of Planetary Dunes
June 12–15, 2012, at the Lowell Observatory, Flagstaff AZ 86001

To view the announcement, visit the conference website:
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/dunes2012/

—————————————————————–
ULTRAVIOLET ASTRONOMY: HST AND BEYOND
This is the second announcement for the upcoming conference: UV Astronomy: HST and Beyond to be held June 18-21 on the island of Kauai.

Ultraviolet Astronomy: HST and Beyond will review the current forefront in UV astronomy, and look to the future, identifying the science cases and instrumentation needs for the next generation of instruments, small, medium and large. We have a series of invited review talks on scientific and observational topics, and invite contributions on the latest results in ultraviolet astrophysics, technological developments, and future mission concepts.

The deadline for submitting contributions is March 31, 2012. If you planning on attend the meeting, I would like to encourage you to register at:

http://uvastro2012.colorado.edu/

The preliminary schedule of invited talks is now available online.

[From PEN]

—————————————————————–
NATIONAL MEETING ON SCIENCE EDUCATION AND COMMUNICATION
The Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP), in partnership with the
American Geophysical Union and the National Optical Astronomy
Observatories, is delighted to open the registration for its 124th
Annual Meeting and a conference on “Communicating Science” to be held
in Tucson, Arizona, Aug. 4 – 8, 2012.

The conference web site has detailed information and is now accepting
registration and abstract submissions at:

http://www.astrosociety.org/2012meeting

There will also be a weekend workshop on teaching hands-on astronomy
(with a focus on planetary exploration and reaching under-served
minorities) on Sat. and Sun., Aug. 4 & 5, for teachers in grades 3-12,
and those who work with them.

Abstracts are welcome for poster papers, 10-minute oral presentations,
one-hour hands-on workshops, and one-hour special-interest group
discussions. Full instructions are available on the conference website.
The deadline for submitting an abstract is April 30.

There is a substantial discount for early registration and for members
of the ASP. (You can join when you register.) The hotel space is
limited. We encourage participants to register early and make vacation
plans around this exciting meeting in the beautiful southwest.

[From PEN]

—————————————————————–
1970-2010: THE GOLDEN AGE OF SOLAR SYSTEM EXPLORATION
Accademia dei Lincei, Rome, Italy, 10-12 September 2012

Second Announcement and Call for Papers of the conference
The conference is organized in honour of Prof. Marcello Fulchignoni (University Paris Diderot-Paris 7) on the occasion of his forthcoming retirement. Prof. Fulchignoni devoted all of his scientific career to the study and understanding of processes that led to the formation of the Solar System. Prof. Fulchignoni taught from 1970 to 1993 at the University of Rome “La Sapienza”, before moving to Paris at the “University Paris Diderot – Paris 7” and at the “Observatory of Paris-Meudon”.
The main topics of the conference are:
1. The Moon: a Harsh Mistress 2. Mercury, Venus, Mars: the terrestrial planet family 3. The Gaseous Giants: Systems in the System(s) 4. Small Bodies: searching for origins 5. What else in the future?
Abstracts: a one page abstract shall be submitted using the LPSC two column format. The abstracts, in pdf format, should be sent to [email protected] .
Instructions and LaTex, Word and rtf templates are available at :
http://goldenage2012.ifac.cnr.it/index.php/goldenage2012/goldenage2012/s…
The deadline for abstract submission is: May 15, 2012.
The notification to the authors about their abstract will be sent by June 15, 2012.
Registration: Note that the number of participants is limited to 100 due to the size of the venue. Participants will be accepted on a first come first served basis.
The deadline for registration is: May 15, 2012.
Conference web site:
http://goldenage2012.ifac.cnr.it/index.php/goldenage2012/goldenage2012
Information : [email protected]

———————————————————————-
INSTABILITIES AND STRUCTURES IN PROTOPLANETARY DISKS
September 17 – 20, 2012
Marseille – France

Second Announcement
web site: http://wiki.oamp.fr/ispp/IsppWorkShop

Final registration is now open. Since the capacity of the lecture room is limited to ~50, early registration is recommended. Fees are 200 Euros for academics and 100 Euros for students; they will cover printed proceedings. Abstract submission and registration deadline is June 15th 2012.

—————————————————————–
EUROPEAN PLANETARY SCIENCE CONGRESS 2012
IFEMA-Feria de Madrid
23 – 28 September 2012, Madrid, Spain

http://epsc2012.eu

Abstract deadline: 23 May 2012

The scientific program and abstract submission are accessible at:

http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EPSC2012/sessionprogramme

Travel funding will be available for students: EPSC will make a contribution to a large number of European PhD students to support their attendance.
More information will be provided soon on the conference website.

—————————————————————–
THIRD CONFERENCE ON TERRESTRIAL MARS ANALOGUES
25 – 27 October, 2012 Marrakech Morocco
Pre- and Post-conference field trips
The second circular available on the conference web site:

http://www.ibnbattutacentre.org/conf/mars2012/

This is the third conference on Mars analogue studies. The first two were held at Catania (Italy) in 2002 and at Trento (Italy) in 2007.
Since the Trento Conference the interest in Mars analogues has increased enormously. The analysis of Mars analogue environments on Earth is of paramount importance for the interpretation of the data from past, present and future orbital and landed missions, as well as mission planning.

——————————————————————— 

Newsletter 12-5

Issue 12-5, March 4, 2012

+—————————–CONTENTS——————————————————–+
1) DPS 2012 PRIZE NOMINATIONS REMINDER
2) HOUSE SCIENCE COMMITTEE SCHEDULES NASA BUDGET HEARING
3) RESEARCH PROGRAM PROPOSALS : ROSES-2012 & EXOZODI
4) OBSERVING CALLS : KECK AND CFHT 2012B
5) ICARUS SPECIAL ISSUE ON EXTRA-SOLAR PLANETS
6) JOB OPPORTUNITIES
7) UPCOMING MEETINGS
+——————————————————————————————————+

1———1———1———1———1———1———1———1
DPS 2012 PRIZE NOMINATIONS REMINDER

Every year the DPS recognizes exceptional achievement in our field. It is time to consider nominating a respected colleague for one of the annual DPS prizes.

The Gerard P. Kuiper Prize honors outstanding contributions to the
field of planetary science. The Harold C. Urey Prize recognizes outstanding
achievement in planetary research by a young scientist. The Harold Masursky
Award acknowledges outstanding service to planetary science and
exploration. The Carl Sagan Medal recognizes and honors outstanding
communication by an active planetary scientist to the general public. The
Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Sciences Journalism Award recognizes and
stimulates distinguished popular writing on planetary sciences.

Detailed descriptions of each of the prizes and the criteria for nominees
for each can be found at prizes. The nomination form and
instructions can also be retrieved from this website. The completed nomination
form and supporting material should be emailed to [email protected].

Anyone may submit a nomination. A completed nomination will be retained and
considered by the Prize Subcommittee for three years, or as long as the nominee
is eligible, whichever is less. Past nominees may be re-nominated after the
expiration of a prior nomination. A posthumous nomination is allowed for a
limited time after the nominee’s death, except for the Sagan Medal. For specific
details, see the url noted above.

The deadline for nominations this year is May 1.

Consider for example the Carl Sagan Medal, that recognizes excellence in
public communication in planetary science. Do you have a colleague that
excels in reaching out to the public, that has a particularly effective way
of communicating new findings in our field? We want to recognize those
efforts, that are so important to the health of our field!

The Masursky Award recognizes meritorious service to planetary science. Do
you have a colleague whose efforts made a significant difference in the
success of an endeavor you’ve been involved in through engineering,
managerial, programmatic or public service activities? Consider nominating
that individual!

2———2———2———2———2———2———2———2
HOUSE SCIENCE COMMITTEE SCHEDULES NASA BUDGET HEARING

http://www.spacepolitics.com/2012/02/27/house-science-committee-schedule…
The House Science Committee has now scheduled its usual hearing on the administration’s budget proposal for NASA. The hearing is scheduled for 2 pm on Wednesday, March 7. NASA administrator Charles Bolden is the sole scheduled witness. While members got some opportunities to pose questions (or raise concerns) about the NASA budget earlier this month when presidential science advisor John Holdren talked about the overall FY13 R&D budget proposal, this will be an opportunity for the full committee to go into greater detail with the head of the space agency about the funding, or lack thereof, for specific NASA programs.

http://science.house.gov/hearing/full-committee-hearing-overview-nasa-fy…

Full Committee Hearing – An Overview of NASA FY13 Budget
2318 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515 | Mar 7, 2012 2:00pm

An Overview of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Budget for Fiscal Year 2013
Witnesses
The Honorable Charles F. Bolden, Jr., Administrator, National Aeronautics and Space Administration

The hearing will be webcast live at the above link.

House committee on Science, Space, and Technology membership:
Republican Members (23)
Ralph M. Hall, Texas
F. James Sensenbrenner, Wisconsin
Lamar S. Smith, Texas
Dana Rohrabacher, California
Roscoe G. Bartlett, Maryland
Frank D. Lucas, Oklahoma
Judy Biggert, Illinois
W. Todd Akin, Missouri
Randy Neugebauer, Texas
Michael T. McCaul, Texas
Paul Broun, Georgia
Sandy Adams, Florida
Benjamin Quayle, Arizona
Charles J. “Chuck” Fleischmann, Tennessee
Scott Rigell, Virginia
Steven Palazzo, Mississippi
Mo Brooks, Alabama
Andy Harris, M.D., Maryland
Randy Hultgren, Illinois
Chip Cravaack, Minnesota
Larry Bucshon, Indiana
Dan Benishek, Michigan

Democratic Members (17)
Eddie Bernice Johnson, Texas
Jerry F. Costello, Illinois
Lynn Woolsey, California
Zoe Lofgren, California
Brad Miller, North Carolina
Daniel Lipinski, Illinois
Donna Edwards, Maryland
Marcia L. Fudge, Ohio
Ben Ray Lujan, New Mexico
Paul Tonko, New York
Jerry McNerney, California
John Sarbanes, Maryland
Terri Sewell, Alabama
Frederica Wilson, Florida
Hansen Clarke, Michigan
Suzanne Bonamici, Oregon

3———3———3———3———3———3———3———3
RESEARCH PROGRAM PROPOSALS

A) ROSES-2012 AND SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION AVAILABLE
The 2012 omnibus solicitation Research Opportunities in Space and
Earth Sciences (ROSES-12) has been released with PDFs, table links,
due dates, and the new versions of the Guidebook for Proposers:
http://go.nasa.gov/ROSES12

To track all updates, amendments and corrections to ROSES and
subscribe to a convenient RSS feed, see:
http://science.nasa.gov/researchers/sara/grant-solicitations/roses-2012/

Proposers should be aware of the following significant changes from
last year:

1. Public Law 112-55 prevents NASA from funding proposals with
bilateral participation, collaboration, or coordination with China
(see GIC 12-01 in Section III (c) of the ROSES-12 Summary of
Solicitation).

2. Three new programs will be using a 2-Step submission process:
Geospace Science (Appendix B.3), Solar and Heliospheric Science
(Appendix B.4), and Cassini Data Analysis and Participating Scientists
(Appendix C.10) REQUIRE a Step-1 proposal (an enhanced NOI).
(Essential) Step-1 proposal due dates for the following programs:
Solar and Heliospheric Science – 03/16/2012
Cassini Data Analysis and Participating Scientist – 03/23/2012
Geospace Science – 04/13/2012

3. Please read Section II if you are interested in a Suborbital and
Suborbital-Class Investigation.
Many other small changes and other features of note are described at:
http://science.nasa.gov/researchers/sara/faqs/#1

[Edited for length.]

B) LARGE BINOCULAR TELESCOPE INTERFEROMETER EXOZODI KEY SCIENCE TEAM PROPOSAL CALL
NASA solicits proposals to become members of the Large Binocular Telescope Interferometer (LBTI) Exozodi Key Science Team (LBTI-ST). The LBTI-ST will work under the leadership of the LBTI Principal Investigator (Dr. Phil Hinz, University of Arizona) in order to most effectively execute the exo-zodi key science program. LBTI-ST members will participate in science deliberations, target selection, LBTI observations, data processing and analysis, follow-up observations, and publication in peer-reviewed journals.
Proposals from participants are due April 27 2012.
Results of the selection will be announced in early June 2012. Additional information may be obtained from Dr. Rafael Millan-Gabet, NASA-LBTI Project Scientist, at [email protected].

For detailed information about this proposal call please refer to:
http://nexsci.caltech.edu/missions/LBTI/cfp_keysci.shtml

4———4———4———4———4———4———4———4
OBSERVING CALLS

1) 2012B NASA KECK CALL FOR PROPOSALS
NASA is soliciting proposals to use the Keck Telescopes for the 2012B observing semester (August 2012 – January 2013). NASA intends the use of the Keck telescopes to be highly strategic in support of on-going missions and/or high priority, long term science goals. NASA Keck time is open to a wide range of disciplines including exoplanets and solar system topics, galactic and extragalactic topics, cosmology and high energy astrophysics. This semester and continuing into future semesters, there is limited time available for observations of targets based on public Kepler data or data obtained through the Kepler Guest Observer programs. In addition, this is the *final* semester to request time to support CoRoT Key Science. Proposals are also sought in the following discipline areas: (1) investigations in support of EXOPLANET EXPLORATION science goals and missions; (2) investigations of our own SOLAR SYSTEM; (3) investigations in support of COSMIC ORIGINS science goals and missions; (4) investigations in support of PHYSICS OF THE COSMOS science goals and missions; and (5) direct MISSION SUPPORT.

The proposal process is being handled by the NASA Exoplanet Science Institute (NExScI) at Caltech and all proposals are due by 4 pm PDT on March 15, 2012.

Please see the website http://nexsci.caltech.edu/missions/KeckSolicitation/index.shtml for further information and the proposal submission site. Questions not answered on these pages can be directed to [email protected].

2) 2012B CFHT CALL
The call for requests of time allocation in CFHT 2012B is open

Information can be found at :
http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/en/science/Proposals/

And for each instrument at :
– MegaCam : http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/en/science/QSO/ph1_MC.html ;
– WICam : http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/en/science/QSO/ph1_WC.html.
– ESPaDOnS : http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/en/science/QSO/ph1_ESP.html ;
– PUEO : http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/Instruments/Imaging/AOB/

Deadline: Wednesday 21 March, at 23:59 UTC.

5———5———5———5———5———5———5———5
ICARUS SPECIAL ISSUE ON EXTRA-SOLAR PLANETS

As announced at the Extreme Solar Systems II meeting and at the 2011
DPS/EPSC meeting, the journal Icarus would like to publish a special
issue devoted to extra-solar planets. You are encouraged to submit
original research papers on detection, characterization (orbital or
physical) or theoretical modeling (formation, dynamics, interior structure,
star-planet interactions…) of extra-solar planets.

The deadline for submission is April 15. Each paper will be reviewed
by two experts, as is standard practice for Icarus. Publication is
expected in early 2013. The special issue will also contain a few review
papers, written at the invitation of the Editors.

Icarus is traditionally viewed as an “international journal of Solar
System studies”, with emphasis on spacecraft and telescopic observations,
as well as theoretical modeling and laboratory work.
With this special issue, the journal wishes to affirm its strong interest
in extra-solar planetary science.

In Icarus, the mean time between submission and editorial response
(with 2 reviews) is 9 weeks, and the mean time from submission to final
decision is 28 weeks. Contrary to rumors, authors are free to post
manuscripts submitted to Icarus on preprint servers such as AstroPh
for more rapid dissemination of the results. This can be done at any
time, although the journal encourages authors to do so only after the
final acceptance of the paper. Icarus has no page charges, but a fee
of about US$400 is charged for each printed page with color art. (Color art
in the on-line issue is free.)

The Editors: P. Nicholson, G. Tinetti and A. Morbidelli

6———6———6———6———6———6———6———6
JOB OPPORTUNITIES

1) SCIENTIST IN IONOSPHERIC TOMOGRAPHY AT THE FINNISH METEOROLOGICAL INSTITUTE, HELSINKI, FINLAND
The Finnish Meteorological Institute (FMI, Helsinki, Finland) is seeking for a scientist in the area of ionospheric tomography with experience in GPS data analysis, starting from April 1, 2012, lasting until April 1, 2014 (2 years).

This position is part of the “TomoScand” project funded by the Academy of Finland. The main goal of this project is to obtain mesoscale 3D distributions of the ionospheric electron density over Scandinavia, with high spatial and temporal resolution, using GPS and Beacon satellite data as well as including information from the extensive network of ground-based ionospheric observations in the region.

The work of the successful applicant focuses on the analysis of data from a dense network of several hundreds of GPS receivers in Scandinavia, using tomographic inversion techniques, and on the interpretation of the results in terms of ionospheric and magnetospheric physics. The successful candidate is expected to be able to work independently along the goals of the “TomoScand” project, and to contribute to the implementation of the GPS data into a newly developed tomographic inversion routine that allows to simultaneously incorporate a multitude of different information into the inversion. Further, the successful candidate is expected to contribute to the technical aspects of acquiring and processing the GPS and Beacon satellite data.

Candidates must hold a PhD in the area of physics, mathematics, or geosciences, and should recognize themselves in as many as possible (but not necessarily all) points of the following profile:

– good or at least basic knowledge of ionospheric and magnetospheric physics
– good knowledge of mathematics (particularly inversion techniques)
– good abilities in programming and handling of large data sets
– experience in tomography (not necessarily ionospheric tomography)
– ability to work and publish independently
– ability to work in a team

Applications for the position need to be submitted not later than February 26, 2012, addressed [email protected] and cc:[email protected], including a CV, list of publications and a short statement of scientific interests.
For further information, please contact Olaf Amm, tel. +358919294689 or [email protected].

2) POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCHER IN DYNAMICAL MODELING OF TERRESTRIAL PLANET ACCRETION AT OBSERVATOIRE DE LA CÔTE D’AZUR (NICE, FRANCE)
This postdoc position, which can be filled for up to 4 years, is for a scientist who will investigate the dynamical process of terrestrial planet formation in collaboration with A. Morbidelli, at Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur in Nice, France.

The position is funded by the European Research Council project “Accretion and Early Differentiation of the Earth and the Terrestrial Planets” (PI. D. Rubie, Bayreuth University, Germany). The successful candidate will work in a multidisciplinary and international team with expertise that covers planetary science, accretion modeling and cosmochemistry (see: http://www.accrete.uni-bayreuth.de).
Experience in numerical simulations and/or terrestrial planet formation issues is required.

Applications, consisting of a CV, publication list, details of three referees and a statement of current and future research interests, should be sent to Dr. A. Morbidelli ([email protected]), from whom further details can be obtained.

3) POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH IN EXTRASOLAR PLANETARY SYSTEMS AND/OR PARALLEL N-BODY TOOLS (GANESVILLE, FLORIDA)
The University of Florida’s Astronomy Department invites applications
for a Postdoctoral Research Associate. The successful candidate will
collaborate with Eric Ford on research relating to the analysis of
exoplanet observations (Doppler and Kepler), orbital dynamics of
planetary systems, planet formation, and/or development of GPU-based
n-body tools. The successful applicant will be encouraged to develop
new initiatives related to these areas and to participate in the
department’s intellectual activities. Closely related research at UF
currently includes exoplanet searches, planetary dynamics, star
formation, planetary atmospheres, and instrumentation. UF has
extensive high-performance computing facilities and is a partner in
the 10.4m Gran Telescopio Canarias Observatory and the SDSS III
survey.

Position includes a competitive salary, health benefits, and research
funds. The anticipated start date is Summer or Fall 2012. The
appointment is renewable annually for up to 3 years based on
satisfactory performance, needs of the Department and College, and
available funding. Ph.D. in relevant field by starting date required.

Interested applicants should submit a CV, publications list, statement
of research accomplishments, interests and plans, and names and email
addresses of three potential references. Please note experience in
scientific and/or parallel programming. All application materials
should be sent to Eric Ford<[email protected]> (email
preferred). Applicaitons will be considered immediately until the
position is filled. Women and underrepresented minorities are strongly
encouraged to apply.

The University of Florida is an Equal Opportunity Institution

More information about Ford’s research group and UF Astronomy are
available athttp://www.astro.ufl.edu/~eford/ and
http://www.astro.ufl.edu/.

Included Benefits:
Information about health insurance (UF PostDocCare) is available at
http://hr.ufl.edu/benefits/post_doc_care/bcbs.asp which states “There
is no cost to the Postdoctoral Associate for PostDocCare coverage;
coverage for both the Postdoctoral Associate and covered dependents is
paid for by the University of Florida.”
Information about optional dental insurance (multiple choices with
different premiums) are available at
http://hr.ufl.edu/benefits/insurance/supplemental/dental.asp

4) EAS JOB OFFERS
We would like to draw your attention to the EAS Job page. You can find
it by going to this URL : http://eas.unige.ch/jobs.jsp?tab=job.

To upload job-related information simply click on “Post a new Job
Offer”. Then you can select in “Offer Type:” both “Job Offer” or “PhD
position”. This service is free. EAS Members can login using their
membership details.

If you are not a member of EAS, you can request a guest account to
login.

5) POSTDOCTORAL POSITION AT UCLA
The Department of Earth and Space Sciences at UCLA invites applications for a postdoctoral position in the field of planetary science. The postdoc will be expected to participate in the analysis of Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment observations of the Moon, and produce a set of improved mapped data products. See http://diviner.ucla.edu for more information. Applicants with a background in planetary surfaces, remote sensing, computer science, large datasets, parallel computing, Fortran, and Unix are encouraged to apply.

The initial appointment is a full-time 1-year appointment beginning as early as April, 2012 with an expectation of continuation depending on progress and availability of funding.

Applicants should send a CV with a list of publications, addresses and e-mail addresses of at least 2 references, and a one page summary of current research to Professor David A. Paige – [email protected].

The University of California is an Equal-Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer

6) LRO-LAMP POSTDOCTORAL POSITION AT SWRI
The Lyman Alpha Mapping Project (LAMP) on the Lunar Reconnaissance
Orbiter (LRO) mission is seeking a postdoctoral planetary scientist to
join our team’s investigations of a variety of lunar science questions
using far-UV observations of the lunar surface. Topics of study include
characterization of permanently shaded regions at the lunar poles,
mapping of surface water frost and hydrates, and identifying regional
space weathering effects. The far-UV map and spectra analyses to be
performed include comparisons with other LRO and lunar datasets for
detailed surveys of regions of interest. Applicants having experience
with imaging and/or spectroscopy from space-based observations, and a
background in scientific analysis and publication of lunar geology
and/or volatiles topics are encouraged to apply.

This is a 1 year limited term position at Southwest Research Institute
in San Antonio, TX, with extension dependent on availability of funding.
Visit http://www.swri.edu/HR/JobListing.asp and enter Job Code 15-01040
to apply now. For additional inquiries contact Dr. Kurt Retherford at
[email protected].

—————————————————————–
Additional Career opportunities are listed at http://astrobiology.nasa.gov/careers/

7———7———7———7———7———7———7———7
UPCOMING MEETINGS

INTERNATIONAL PLANETARY PROBE – 9 WORKSHOP – ABSTRACT DEADLINE EXTENDED
Week of June 17, 2012 in Toulouse, France.

Abstract deadline extended 16 March 2012
Al Seiff Award nomination deadline 15 March 2012

The 9th International Planetary Probe Workshop (IPPW-9) will be held in Toulouse, France on June 18-22, 2012. It will be hosted by ISAE (Institut Supérieur de l’Aéronautique et de l’Espace) on its campus. The list of session topics includes: Giants planets, Titan, Venus, Mars, Airless & Primitive Bodies, Science and technologies of probes, Landers and penetrators, Earth entry and Sample return technologies.
Short course
In addition to the five-day workshop, a two day short course is normally held on a related topic during the preceding weekend. The topic selected for IPPW-9 is “ Probe Science Instrumentation Technologies ” (June 16-17, 2012).

For more information, the website for the workshop is:
http://www.planetaryprobe.eu/

CONTACTS:
The IPPW9 conference secretariat
Carte Blanche
7, chemin En Barbaro – 81710 Saïx – France
Phone: +33 – 5 63 72 30 73 – Fax: +33 – 5 63 72 30 32
Email: [email protected]

—————————————————————–
OPAG MEETING, MARCH 29-30, 2012, ST. LOUIS

The Outer Planets Assessment Group (OPAG) will meet 29-30 March at the
Renaissance Grand St. Louis Hotel, St. Louis, Missouri. Information
regarding hotel and other logistics can be found at:

http://icpi.nasaprs.com/opag

Potential attendees are kindly asked to go to this website, and click
on the invitation link and RSVP for attendance (this will assist our
meeting planners). Please note that the hotel room block closes
7 March 2012.

This OPAG meeting will focus on the the recently released FY13 NASA
budget for Planetary Science, reports from the Europa Science
Definition team on the 3 Europa options, a report from our European
colleagues on JUICE, and other important, related matters. A detailed
agenda will follow.

Bill McKinnon, OPAG Chair

—————————————————————–
TRANSITING PLANETS IN THE HOUSE OF THE SUN: A WORKSHOP ON M DWARF STARS AND THEIR PLANETS
3-6 June 2012, Maui, HI
http://www.soest.hawaii.edu/GG/FACULTY/GAIDOS/haleakala.html

[email protected]

—————————————————————–
THE ORIGINS OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS
10-15 June 2012, Hamilton, Ontario
http://origins.physics.mcmaster.ca/oi_planets/

Ralph Pudritz ([email protected])

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2012 SAGAN SUMMER WORKSHOP: WORKING WITH EXOPLANET LIGHT CURVES
23-27 July 2012, Pasadena, CA
Dawn Gelino ([email protected])

http://nexsci.caltech.edu/workshop/2012/

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THE SPACE RESOURCES ROUNDTABLE (SRR) AND THE PLANETARY & TERRESTRIAL MINING SCIENCES SYMPOSIUM (PTMSS), IN COLLABORATION WITH THE LUNAR AND PLANETARY INSTITUTE (LPI),
will convene their third joint meeting on June 4–7, 2012, at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden, Colorado.

A special bonus this year will be the Transit-of-Venus observation event that we have prepared for the afternoon of June 5. This is an astronomical occurrence you won’t be able to experience again in your lifetime!

For more information, please visit the SRR webpage at: http://www.isruinfo.com and open the SRR/PTMSS 1st Announcement pdf file.

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AOGS-AGU(WPGM) JOINT ASSEMBLY
Resort Worlds Sentosa, Singapore
13-17 August 2012

**** ABSTRACT SUBMISSION DEADLINE IS March 12 ****

Website:
www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2012

Session PS09 – Active Satellites in the Outer Solar System
Convenors: Dr. Dennis Matson (JPL); Dr. Athena Coustenis (Paris Observatory); Dr. Steven Vance (JPL); Dr. Ashley Davies (JPL)

This is a session of contributed and invited papers on the geophysics of satellites, especially those that are currently active – Io, Enceladus, Triton, and possibly Europa and Ganymede. Research is progressing rapidly due to the stream of new spacecraft data. Welcome are papers on processes that affect the interiors of individual bodies as well as the surface expressions they produce. Included are the affects and chronology of internal heating (e.g., radioactivity, tidal dissipation, and other), structural evolution (e.g., differentiation), tides, and other processes. These geophysical processes themselves are universal in their application and transcend the compartmentalization suggested by nomenclature such as “satellite,” “dwarf planet,” “asteroid,” “comet,” “KBO,” “TNO,” “parent body,” and “planetesimal”.

 

Newsletter 12-4

Issue 12-4, February 20, 2012

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1) UPDATE FROM THE CHAIR
2) STATEMENT FROM THE DPS OF THE AAS
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UPDATE FROM THE CHAIR

A Strategy for Restoring Planetary Science Cuts

Many of us were expecting grim news for planetary sciences from the President’s FY2013 budget proposal, and that is what we got. A 20% cut from FY2012 levels, cancellation of a number of key programs, delays in others, reductions in many areas.
But this is a proposal. The President proposes and Congress disposes. We have plenty of friends in Congress and the planetary program is popular. The key to getting this funding restored is to make our voice heard in Congress and to work closely with our friends.
It is not news that this is an election year. The most likely outcome of the President’s budget proposal is a series of Continuing Resolutions (CR) until well after the elections and perhaps for the entire fiscal year. A CR would put the planetary budget back at the FY2012 level of $1.5 billion, but in order to use that extra money the CR language needs to include legislative direction on spending. Our efforts need to be focused on influencing the language that gets included in the CR. This requires DPS, in coordination with the other scientific societies and the Planetary Society, to engage with Congress during the coming year as the appropriations bills move through the legislative calendar. What I propose:
· Today: Let Congress know that this budget endangers the future of planetary science and our ability to achieve the goals of the Decadal Survey. This e-news contains a statement and a suggested letter to send to your congressperson. A DPS press release is also issued today. I strongly urge ALL DPS MEMBERS to take the time to e-mail or FAX a letter to their representatives.
The link to find the contact information for your representatives : http://www.congressmerge.com/onlinedb/index.htm
The link to the DPS Federal Relations Committee page for communicating with Congress:
public_policy/communicating-congress
· May-June: Senate and House Commerce, Science and Justice Subcommittees will mark up appropriations bills. I will again call on the DPS to e-mail or FAX letters to representatives, make press releases, and organize visits to the staff of the key committees. The DPS will provide suggested letter formats, talking points, and advice on contacting congressional staffers.
· June-July: The full appropriations committee ratifies their bills. This is likely to be delayed, but when it does come up, AGAIN we need to e-mail or FAX letters to representatives, make press releases, and organize visits to the staff.
· September-October: The CR is up for passage. Be prepared to contact Congress.
I realize that I’m asking a lot of the DPS membership. Repeated political activism of this sort does not come naturally to scientists, but advocacy of our science and its value to society is the only way that we will change the priorities and restore the planetary budget. Go write your Congressperson!

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Suggested letter to send to your congressperson

The Honorable __________________________
United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510

Dear Senator ___________________________

or

The Honorable __________________________
United States House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515

Dear Representative ______________________

I am writing you to express my concern about the President’s proposed Fiscal Year 2013 budget for NASA. This budget calls for deep cuts to the nation’s very successful and productive planetary science program. The Planetary Science Division in NASA falls in FY13 to $1.2 billion from a current $1.5 billion, a drop of 20%. These cuts will force NASA to cancel its plans for its most ambitious exploration missions, cancel collaborations with the European Space Agency, slash the Mars Exploration Program, cancel the Lunar Quest Program, delay the very successful Discovery and New Frontiers competitive programs, and force cuts in mission operations and data analysis for several current missions, reducing the science return on an investment already made by the taxpayers.
The planetary science program in NASA is one of America’s great success stories. It has catalyzed a golden age of planetary exploration under American leadership. This is a program that rewrites the textbooks and cements American leadership in space science. This is a program that trains young Americans in science and engineering and enables America to dominate space science. This is a program that thrills and engages the public with a stream of pictures and discoveries from incredible new worlds. This program provides excellent value to America.
The planetary science community has a consensus plan for future exploration in its Decadal Survey written under the auspices of the National Research Council of the National Academies, Vision and Voyages for Planetary Science in the Decade 2013-2022. The Decadal Survey recommends a balanced program of exploration and scientific analysis, tempered by fiscal realism. I urge you to support continued investment in the technological and scientific future of America as laid out in the Decadal Survey. I strongly believe that exploration of the solar system resonates with the American people; it is something that NASA needs to be doing, and it is something the American people support even in tight budget times.
Thank you very much for consideration of my views

You name, address, and telephone number.

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DPS STATEMENT

The Golden Age of Planetary Exploration is in Grave Danger from Deep Cuts in the President’s Proposed Budget.

The planetary exploration program has delivered a golden age of robotic exploration of the Solar System that over the past decade that has included a long series of stunningly successful missions. Among many examples are the Mars rovers which have discovered that standing bodies of water once existed on Mars, indicating past habitable environments; the Cassini mission to Saturn which discovered water erupting from Saturn’s moon Enceladus, imaged previously unseen structure in the rings, and is mapping methane lakes and seas on Saturn’s moon Titan; MESSENGER which is now orbiting and mapping Mercury, revealing how terrestrial planets evolve; Dawn, which is orbiting and mapping the asteroid Vesta, revealing the earliest history of planet formation; and Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and GRAIL which are orbiting our Moon exploring deeply into its structure and origins. Other low-cost missions have returned samples of a comet and the solar wind. These missions have revolutionized our understanding of Earth, its origins, and its place within the solar system and the larger universe. The planetary science program complements and extends the discoveries and breakthroughs in earth science, astrophysics, and heliophysics.
The Planetary Science community recently finished its Decadal Survey under the auspices of the National Research Council of the National Academies. Vision and Voyages for Planetary Science in the Decade 2013-2022 recommends to NASA a program of balanced exploration and scientific analysis, tempered by fiscal realism, which builds on the immense progress of the last decade to continue expanding our understanding of our solar system, and search for evidence of past or even current life elsewhere in our solar system. The current golden age of planetary exploration — the result of years of effort by scientists and engineers supported at relatively low cost by a fascinated public and bipartisan political support — is in grave danger from deep budget cuts just as the next wave of discoveries beckons.
The President’s proposed Fiscal Year 2013 budget for NASA focuses almost all the Agency’s financial cuts onto the planetary science program. The Planetary Science Division budget falls in FY13 to $1.2 billion from a current $1.5 billion, a drop of 20%. These cuts will force NASA to cancel its plans for its most ambitious exploration missions, cancel collaborations with the European Space Agency (ESA) on the 2016 Mars Trace Gas Orbiter and the 2018 ExoMars rover, slash the Mars Exploration Program, cancel the Lunar Quest Program, delay the very successful Discovery and New Frontiers competitive programs, and force cuts in mission operations and data analysis for several current missions, reducing the science return on an investment already made by the taxpayers.
Implementation of the balanced, consensus, budget-conservative plan outlined in the Decadal Survey will not be possible under the President’s proposal. Reductions of this magnitude focused narrowly on planetary science indicate that NASA is stepping away from one of its most popular and successful programs. This is a program that rewrites the textbooks and cements American leadership in space science. This is a program that trains young Americans in science and engineering and enables America to dominate space science. This is a program that thrills and engages the public with a stream of pictures and discoveries from incredible new worlds. This program provides excellent value to America.
The Division for Planetary Sciences (DPS) of the American Astronomical Society, the world’s largest professional association of planetary scientists, urges Congress to support and fund a vigorous planetary science program as recommended by the National Research Council. We strongly believe that the robotic exploration of the solar system resonates with the American people; it is something that NASA needs to be doing and doing exceptionally well, and it is something the American people will support even in tight budget times.

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