Issue 25-07, Apr 13, 2025
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- 2025 DPS PRIZE NOMINATIONS CLOSING APRIL 15, 2025
- ABSTRACT SUBMISSION OPEN EPSC-DPS JOINT MEETING 2025
- 2025 DPS TRAVEL GRANT APPLICATION FORM IS OPEN
- CHANGED ABSTRACT DEADLINE FOR PROGRESS IN UNDERSTANDING THE PLUTO SYSTEM: 10 YEARS AFTER FLYBY MEETING
- AGU 2025 SESSION PROPOSALS NOW OPEN
- TEAM-UP TOGETHER SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM
- ABSTRACT SUBMISSION EPSC-DPS 2025 SESSION “ICY MOONS AND OCEAN WORLDS IN THE ERA OF JUICE AND EUROPA CLIPPER”
- ABSTRACT SUBMISSION EPSC-DPS 2025 SESSION “EXOA16: ADVANCES IN TERRESTRIAL PLANET FORMATION: A COMPARISON OF THE THREE CURRENTLY LEADING SCENARIOS
- INTRODUCTION TO ARCGIS PRO FOR PLANETARY SCIENCE WORKSHOPS
- HOW TO SUBMIT GUEST OBSERVER PROPOSALS FOR CHEOPS STEP BY STEP
- SPRING PLANETARY DATA TRAINING WORKSHOP IN TEMPE, ARIZONA
- ANNOUNCING THE 33RD COMMUNITY MEETING OF THE NASA SMALL BODIES ASSESSMENT GROUP (SBAG), JUNE 24-25, 2025
- DRAGONFLY STUDENT AND EARLY CAREER INVESTIGATOR PROGRAM
- NEW HORIZONS SCIENCE SPOTLIGHT WEBINAR
- EXPLOITING GAIA TO STUDY MINOR BODIES OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM: RESULTS, CHALLENGES, AND PERSPECTIVES
- MENTOR BOYS & GIRLS CLUB STUDENTS
- NASA L’SPACE PROGRAM – SUMMER 2025
- NASA PLANETARY DATA TRAINING WORKSHOP – REGISTER BY APRIL 15, 2025
- CURRENT TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR ICARUS AND THE PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL
- JOBS, POSITIONS, AND OPPORTUNITIES
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2025 DPS PRIZE NOMINATIONS CLOSING APRIL 15, 2025
Every year the DPS recognizes exceptional achievement in our field. Please consider nominating a respected colleague for one of the annual DPS prizes. The 2025 Prize Nominations are due by April 15, 2025.
The DPS sponsors six prizes:
- The Gerard P. Kuiper Prize [https://dps.aas.org/prizes/kuiper] recognizes and honors outstanding contributors to the field of planetary science.
- The Claudia J. Alexander Prize [https://dps.aas.org/prizes/alexander] recognizes excellence and achievements by a mid-career scientist.
- The Harold C. Urey Prize [https://dps.aas.org/prizes/urey] recognizes and encourages outstanding achievements in planetary research by an early-career scientist.
- The Harold Masursky Award [https://dps.aas.org/prizes/masursky] recognizes and honors individuals who have rendered outstanding service to planetary science and exploration through – but not limited to – engineering, managerial, programmatic, editorial, or public service activities.
- The Carl Sagan Medal [https://dps.aas.org/prizes/sagan] recognizes and honors outstanding communication by an active planetary scientist to the general public.
- The Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Sciences Journalism Award [https://dps.aas.org/prizes/eberhart] recognizes and stimulates distinguished popular writing on planetary sciences.
DPS members and the planetary science community-at-large are encouraged to submit nominations for DPS prizes.
A complete nomination submitted by the deadline will be considered by the DPS Prize subcommittee for 3 years (i.e. for this year’s award, next year’s award, and the year after that), or for the duration of a candidate’s eligibility, whichever is less. Please fill out the nomination form [https://dps.aas.org/prizes/nomination-form], and it will be submitted to the prize subcommittee. The Eberhart Award has different rules and procedures than the other DPS
Prizes, please see its page [https://dps.aas.org/prizes/eberhart-nomination-form] for more information.
Scroll to the bottom of https://dps.aas.org/prizes for rules and procedures.
Questions: Email [email protected]
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ABSTRACT SUBMISSION OPEN EPSC-DPS JOINT MEETING 2025
The EPSC committee, the DPS Committee, the Scientific Organizing Committee and Copernicus Meetings invite the world-wide community of planetary scientists to submit an abstract for presentation of their recent work at the EPSC-DPS2025 meeting, which will take place at the Finlandia Hall Helsinki, Finland, 7–12 September 2025. EPSC-DPS2025 will be organised as a fully hybrid meeting and will allow virtual access to all oral and poster sessions. EPSC-DPS2025
We are looking forward to meeting everyone in person this year in Helsinki. The ethos for EPSC-DPS2025 is to create a simple, flexible, and inclusive meeting that provides multiple opportunities for interaction, scientific discussion, and networking. The programme of the congress will contain oral and poster sessions, as well as workshops and panel discussions.
The current list of sessions is organised around the following Programme Groups:
- Terrestrial Planets (TP)
- Outer Planet Systems (OPS)
- Missions, Instrumentation, Techniques, Modelling (MITM)
- Small Bodies (comets, KBOs, rings, asteroids, meteorites, dust) (SB)
- Exoplanets, Origins of Planetary Systems and Astrobiology (EXOA)
- Outreach, Diversity, Amateur Astronomy (ODAA)
Submit your abstract now by accessing the scientific programme and the abstract submission tool. Please browse the list of sessions and identify the session that most closely matches your area of interest; your abstract can be submitted directly to that session.
Abstract deadline: 7 May 2025, 13:00 CEST.
For future deadlines including (early) registration, refer to the deadlines & milestones of the conference. Information on registration and social events, as well as a separate online form for requesting splinter meetings & workshops will also be available soon on the meeting website.
We look forward to seeing you in Helsinki!
- Lena Noack & Noah Jäggi on behalf of the EPSC committee
- Athena Coustenis & Scott Murchie on behalf of the DPS committee
- Stavro Ivanovski, Ákos Kereszturi, Connor Nixon, and James Roberts
on behalf of the Scientific Organizing Committee - Katrin Krüger on behalf of Copernicus Meetings
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2025 DPS TRAVEL GRANT APPLICATION FORM IS OPEN
The DPS Travel Grant application form is open to support participation in the joint meeting of the Europlanet Science Congress and DPS (EPSC-DPS 2025) in Helsinki, Finland 7-12 September 2025, or the National Society of Black Physicists- National Society of Hispanics Physicists annual meeting, via the Hartmann and the Under-Represented Minority (URM) Travel grants.
The Hartmann Student Travel Grant supports student presentations at the annual DPS-EPSC meeting. (Postdoctoral scholars may also be eligible, but students are prioritized.)
The Underrepresented Minority (URM) Communities in Planetary Science Travel Grant supports attendance by students and professionals who are members of groups that have had inadequate access to the planetary science community, in an effort to ensure broad engagement and access to planetary science. Applications are especially encouraged from members of group(s) whose contributions to STEM may have been overlooked, students and professionals hailing from colleges and non-R1 academic or research institutions* that have not traditionally benefited from connections to the planetary science community, and/or students and professionals with degrees in broader STEM disciplines (e.g., chemistry, physics, engineering, mathematics) who are new to the planetary science community — to support in-person or virtual attendance at the joint DPS-EPSC or joint NSBP-NSHP meetings.
* Relevant institutions include small colleges and universities, primarily undergraduate institutions, and minority serving institutions (MSIs), including but not limited to Hispanic Serving Institutions (HSIs), Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Native American-Serving Non-Tribal Institutions, and Tribal Colleges and Universities.“
Apply here to both/either type of DPS grant: https://dps.aas.org/news/dps-travel-grants-application/ The deadline is July 3.
Note: Members of Europlanet should apply for Europlanet awards through the abstract submission form.
Community donations are critical for the health of these awards. Instructions to donate are linked at https://dps.aas.org/news/dps-travel-grants-application/
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CHANGED ABSTRACT DEADLINE FOR PROGRESS IN UNDERSTANDING THE PLUTO SYSTEM: 10 YEARS AFTER FLYBY MEETING
The “Progress in Understanding the Pluto System: 10 Years after Flyby” meeting will be held July 14–18, 2025 at the Kossiakoff Conference Center of The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland.
NASA’s New Horizons mission conducted the first and only exploration flyby of the Pluto system, culminating at the closest approach on July 14, 2015. This meeting will assess advances made since then using New Horizons and all other data (ground-based, JWST, HST, etc.), as well as theory and modeling regarding all aspects of the Pluto system and the dwarf planets of the Kuiper Belt. Session topics will include: Pluto, Charon, Pluto’s Small Satellites, Kuiper Belt Dwarf Planets, Pluto and Satellite System Origins, and Past and Future Exploration of Pluto, the Kuiper Belt, and the Outer Solar System.
Abstract submission is open now, with a revised deadline of Friday April 25th:
For more information and abstract submission please see https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/plutosystem2025/
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AGU 2025 SESSION PROPOSALS NOW OPEN
This December, AGU25 returns to New Orleans, Louisiana with the theme: Where Science Connects Us. We invite you to propose a Planetary Science focused session.
Whether through collaborative research, innovative technologies, or shared experiences, your session can inspire and advance our collective understanding. Submit your proposal by April 23 (23:59 EDT/03:59 +1 GMT)
https://www.agu.org/annual-meeting/present#overview
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TEAM-UP TOGETHER SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM
The TEAM-UP Together Scholarship is now open for 2025, supporting students in physics and astronomy, including those who face the starkest barriers, by helping remove financial barriers to degree completion.
By offering financial support to promising undergraduates, including those who face the starkest barriers, we seek to encourage more students to follow their passion for science.
Scholarship Details:
- Open to undergraduate physics & astronomy students with financial need and a demonstrated understanding of issues related to enhancing access and opportunities for all physics & astronomy students, including those facing the starkest barriers
- Awards of $10,000 help students persist and complete their degrees
- Application deadline: 23 May, 2025
For further guidance, visit teamuptogether.org/scholarship or contact us at [email protected].
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ABSTRACT SUBMISSION EPSC-DPS 2025 SESSION “ICY MOONS AND OCEAN WORLDS IN THE ERA OF JUICE AND EUROPA CLIPPER”
Dear Colleagues,
The next EPSC-DPS Joint Meeting 2025 (EPSC-DPS2025), which will take place at the Finlandia Hall Helsinki, Finland 7–12 September 2025, is slowly approaching. The abstract submission is now open, with submission deadline on 7 May 2025, 13:00 CEST.
We would like to bring to your attention and invite you to submit abstract to the session:
“Icy Moons and Ocean Worlds in the Era of Juice and Europa Clipper” as part of the “Outer Solar systems” program. Detailed information about the session can be found at: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EPSC-DPS2025/session/55078.
In preparation for the arrival of ESA Juice and NASA Europa Clipper missions to the Jupiter system, this session invites contributions from across the planetary science community that will advance our understanding of topics relevant to the Galilean moons and maximize the scientific return of the missions.
This session welcomes presentations concerning laboratory experiments, numerical modeling, terrestrial analog studies, and Earth-based observations (such as those from JWST, ALMA, or HISAKI), as well as analyses of past or ongoing mission data and comparative investigations of icy moons across systems. Topics of interest include the surface geology and composition of the icy Galilean moons, their interior structures and subsurface ocean dynamics, their interactions with Jupiter’s magnetosphere, surface weathering processes, and the formation, structure, and composition of their exospheres. The detection and characterization of potential Europa plumes is also highly relevant. We additionally welcome discussions on the recent Juice Moon-Earth flyby and the Europa Clipper Mars flyby, examining how these events inform upcoming observations at Jupiter.
The deadline for abstract submission is 7 May 2025, 13:00 CEST.
Best regards
Cecilia Tubiana, Samantha Trumbo, Kristian Chan, Wes Patterson, Gabriel Tobie
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ABSTRACT SUBMISSION EPSC-DPS 2025 SESSION “EXOA16: ADVANCES IN TERRESTRIAL PLANET FORMATION: A COMPARISON OF THE THREE CURRENTLY LEADING SCENARIOS
Dear Colleagues,
It gives us the greatest pleasure to announce the EPSC/DPS session:
EXOA16: Advances in Terrestrial Planet Formation: A Comparison of the Three Currently Leading Scenarios
The past few years have witnessed major developments in the field of terrestrial planet formation. Thanks to the advances in computational technology, the three leading scenarios, namely, the traditional model, pebble accretion, and formation in rings, have become more complex, and have demonstrated their expansive success. How these approaches compare and contribute to developing a comprehensive model are among outstanding questions in planetary astrophysics. This session aims at introducing each scenario and assessing their capabilities by comparing their results to our knowledge of terrestrial planets in our solar system. We also organize a press conference or town hall, where experts from each scenario will answer questions from the press and audience.
We cordially invite abstracts for oral and poster contributions in all areas of theoretical, observational, and experimental studies of terrestrial planet formation.
Abstracts can be submitted using the link below. The deadline is 7 May 2025, 13:00 CEST.
https://www.epsc-dps2025.eu/programme/how-to-submit.html
We strongly encourage contributions from early career scientists.
Looking forward to seeing you in Helsinki.
Convenors: Nader Haghighipour, Jeffrey Sudol, Nikolaos Georgakarakos
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INTRODUCTION TO ARCGIS PRO FOR PLANETARY SCIENCE WORKSHOPS
The Planetary Data Training Workshops program is pleased to announce our next Introduction to ArcGIS Pro for Planetary Science workshops, facilitated by Cornell’s Spacecraft Planetary Image Facility (SPIF).
May 23
- Online, 10am – 6pm EDT
- Notice of Interest (deadline is May 16, required to receive the Zoom registration)
- Facebook Event
June 11-12
- In-person at Cornell
- Registration (deadline is May 28)
- Travel Grant Application (deadline is May 2, up to $1500 each)
- Day 1: ArcGIS workshop, dinner at a local restaurant
- Day 2: further ArcGIS discussion (including which topics should be covered in the next workshop we will develop as a follow-up to this one), meet with the COMPASSE research group, tour of SPIF, outreach workshop, geology tour of a local waterfall and gorge (weather permitting)
- Facebook Event
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HOW TO SUBMIT GUEST OBSERVER PROPOSALS FOR CHEOPS STEP BY STEP
The European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Characterising Exoplanet Satellite (CHEOPS) mission opened its 6th Announcement of Opportunity (AO-6) on the 18th of March of 2025. This Call invites the submission of research proposals to the Guest Observers (GO) Programme.
Key Dates: The AO-6 Call is foreseen to close on the 8 May 2025 (12:00 CEST).
Observing Cycle: The selected proposals will be part of the observing cycle from 1 October 2025 to 30 September 2026. This period marks the last year of the first mission extension of CHEOPS.
Scientific Opportunities: CHEOPS provides observers with access to space-based pointed ultra-high precision photometry. Research areas include the observations of exoplanet transits, eclipses, occultations, and phase curves. Furthermore, the scientific scope may extend to phenomena such as exomoons, ring structures, stellar activity, trans-Neptunian objects or more.
Collaborative Synergies: The timely overlap of several space- and ground-based missions may provide exciting opportunities for synergies with NASA/ESA/CSA JWST, NASA/ESA HST, NASA TESS, ESO ground-based facilities, and more.
Novelties in cycle 6:
- More targets: only 50 GTO reserved targets, with all the rest being open to the entire community
- More time: up to 30% science observing time (around 1500 orbits) dedicated to the GO Programme
- Double-anonymous peer-review of proposals
- Zero-installation tools: cloud-based visibility, feasibility and ETC web tools
Step by step tutorial: Check our easy-to-follow tutorial of seven steps to submit a CHEOPS GO proposal without having to install anything:
Find out more about the CHEOPS mission via https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/cheops, stay up-to-date about this opportunity via https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/cheops-guest-observers-programme, and feel free to email us with any questions. We look forward to receiving your observing proposals and advancing our understanding of exoplanetary and stellar systems.
Happy proposing!
Contact: [email protected]
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SPRING PLANETARY DATA TRAINING WORKSHOP IN TEMPE, ARIZONA
Arizona State University is hosting our Spring Planetary Data Training Workshop in Tempe, Arizona on May 20-23, 2025. This event is IN PERSON ONLY. We will be providing hands-on training in JMARS, ArcGIS Pro, USGS’ ISIS3 image processing software, and an introduction to planetary geologic mapping. We have space for 16 participants. We also are offering two $2000 travel grants (US domestic travel only) to support development of our workforce. Travel grant application deadline is April 16, 2025. For access to the registration link and travel grant application, please visit this webpage: https://rgcps.asu.edu/gis-pdtw-2025-may/
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ANNOUNCING THE 33RD COMMUNITY MEETING OF THE NASA SMALL BODIES ASSESSMENT GROUP (SBAG), JUNE 24-25, 2025
The 33rd Community Meeting of the NASA Small Bodies Assessment Group (SBAG) is scheduled for June 24–25, 2025, at the Arvada Center in Arvada, Colorado (just outside of Denver). The meeting will include opportunities for virtual participation. Please add these dates to your calendar.
Registration fees are not being collected for this meeting, but registration is required and available via the link below. Registration will be open through June 25. Before the meeting, all registrants will receive an email from Houston Meeting Info with virtual connection information.
https://www.hou.usra.edu/meeting_portal/registration/?mtg=sbagjune2025
Although registration is open, the agenda for the meeting is still being organized and the SBAG website is currently unavailable. Please stay tuned for updates.
The SBAG Steering Committee
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DRAGONFLY STUDENT AND EARLY CAREER INVESTIGATOR PROGRAM
Application Deadline: June 9
Contact: [email protected]
Set to launch in 2028, NASA’s Dragonfly mission will send a rotorcraft lander to explore a variety of locations on Saturn’s moon Titan. Graduate students are invited to apply for a two-year term to work with Dragonfly mission team members to conduct Titan research, help formulate Dragonfly mission science and operations plans, or assist in the development of instrumentation, hardware, or testing.
Applicants must be U.S. citizens pursuing a master’s or doctoral degree in the physical sciences, biological sciences, computer sciences, mathematics, or engineering. Undergraduate STEM students who will be graduating with bachelor’s degrees in May 2025 are also eligible to apply, provided that they will be enrolled in STEM graduate programs in fall 2025.
Click here for program details.
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NEW HORIZONS SCIENCE SPOTLIGHT WEBINAR
Join us on 24 April 2025, 2:30-3pm EDT (11:30-12 PDT,12:30-1pm MDT,1:30-2pm CDT)
New Horizons continues its operation, now at 61au from the Sun. Since 2015 it has made ground-breaking discoveries of the Pluto-Charon system, flown past the small contact KBO binary Arrokoth and collected phase and light curve data for some three dozen additional KBOs and the ice giants. It has also been sampling dust density throughout the solar system and studying the cosmic optical background. To raise awareness of New Horizon’s scientific impact we are beginning a new spotlight seminar series (30 min, fourth week each month) which we invite you to attend online, or watch recorded at your convenience.
Our speaker will be Al Emran, JPL and he will be speaking on:
“Kiladze Caldera: A Possible Cryovolcano on Pluto”
Connection Link:
https://zoom.us/j/97317697636?pwd=MTAzMjJmNThTeFppR3JoYzlkUXVCQT09
Meeting ID: 973 1769 7636
Calendar for future seminars:
Recordings are archived and posted at:
https://pluto.jhuapl.edu/News-Center/index.php#Spotlight-Presentations
For questions, contact New Horizons CoI Susan Benecchi, [email protected]
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EXPLOITING GAIA TO STUDY MINOR BODIES OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM: RESULTS, CHALLENGES, AND PERSPECTIVES
Are you using Gaia data for your Solar System science? Please consider submitting an abstract to this dedicated session including all aspects: astrometry, photometry, spectroscopy, and derived applications (such as stellar occultations) at the next EPSC/DPS meeting. Co-organised with the “Small Body” session category:
https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EPSC-DPS2025/session/55129
“Exploiting Gaia to study minor bodies of the Solar System: results, challenges, and perspectives”
Co-organized by SB
Convener: Paolo Tanga | Co-conveners: Daniel Hestroffer, Davide Farnocchia, Josef Durech, Julia de Leon, Karri Muinonen, Federica Spoto
The Gaia mission is publishing a large amount of data concerning the minor bodies of the Solar System, with unique properties and quality. However, peculiarities of Gaia data, consequence of the typical complexity intrinsic to space missions, make an appropriate exploitation complex. This session has the ambition of gathering the community of planetary scientists exploiting Gaia through any of its data products, for sharing and discussing results, difficulties, experiences, and future perspectives. Several publications have made use of the Data Release 3 (2022) including astrometry for more than 150 thousand asteroids at milli-arcsec level accuracy. Minor planet positions by Gaia, used alone or combined with other data sources, have led to progress in detection and modeling of subtle dynamical effects, and to changes in observational approaches, especially in the domain of stellar occultations. The Focused Product Release in 2023 extended this data set in time, up to the duration of the nominal mission (5 years), pushing the limit of investigation further. High-precision unfiltered photometry and a first batch of reflectance spectra for 60 thousand asteroids have also been made available, leading to new results by photometric inversion and taxonomic classification. Altogether, the observations by Gaia are contributing to the evolution of our knowledge of the asteroid belt, are offering renewed approaches to ground based observations, and are a precious data source for planning future in-situ space missions. Looking forward to Data Release 4, it is the appropriate time for an evaluation of the impact of Gaia on Solar System science that can also provide useful feedback for the data processing consortium.
EPSC/DPS will be in Helsinki, September 7 to 12.
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MENTOR BOYS & GIRLS CLUB STUDENTS
NASA-funded researchers who work in extreme environments are invited to become Mentors for the Virtual Trips to Extreme Environments (VIRTEX) project! With training and support, Mentors act as STEM role models as they connect with teams of students (ages 10-15) at a partnering Boys & Girls Club. We’re looking for NASA-funded scientists, engineers, and technicians (including graduate students and other early career researchers) who conduct research in exciting, “extreme” environments such as remote field locations, unique laboratory settings, aircraft, mountain tops, underwater laboratories, and more. We anticipate up to 7 hours of your time, spread across several weeks. More information and applications are at https://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/VIRTEX/mentors.
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NASA L’SPACE PROGRAM – SUMMER 2025
Application Deadline: Sunday, May 4
Contact: [email protected]
The NASA Lucy Student Pipeline Accelerator and Competency Enabler (L’SPACE) Program is a free, online, interactive program for students interested in pursuing a career with NASA or other organizations in the space ecosystem.
L’SPACE consists of two academies: the Mission Concept Academy and the NASA Proposal Writing and Evaluation Experience Academy. Students may participate in one academy per semester. Each 15-week academy is designed to provide unique, hands-on learning and insight into the dynamic world of the space industry. Students can expect to learn NASA mission procedures and protocols from industry professionals as they collaborate with fellow team members to complete mission-related projects.
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NASA PLANETARY DATA TRAINING WORKSHOP – REGISTER BY APRIL 15, 2025
The NASA Planetary Data Training Workshops project will hold a VIRTUAL training on ASU’s Java Mission-planning and Analysis for Remote Sensing (JMARS) software on Tuesday, April 22, 2025, from 9am-1pm PDT (12-4pm EDT). There is no registration fee for this workshop, and it will be virtual only. JMARS is a GIS-based tool that is popular for analysis of planetary image data, and this workshop will be geared for NEW USERS. Please register here for this Workshop by April 15, 2025: https://forms.gle/t4UDBTLYExtuEGvZ8
Registrants will receive the Zoom link for the Workshop several days prior.
NOTE: Please register for a JMARS account and install the software on your own computer BEFORE the workshop at: https://jmars.mars.asu.edu/index.php?q=user/register. Any PC, Mac or Linux system and browser should work, but you will want to verify the install works ahead of time, as there won’t be time to troubleshoot during the Workshop. If you have problems, please contact: [email protected].
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CURRENT TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR ICARUS AND THE PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL
The current issues for both DPS-affiliated journals are here:
Icarus:
Icarus | Vol 430, In progress (April 2025) | ScienceDirect.com by Elsevier
The Planetary Science Journal:
Issue 4 – Volume 6 – The Planetary Science Journal – IOPscience
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JOBS, POSITIONS, AND OPPORTUNITIES
Job seekers and employers are encouraged to browse DPS’s job listings and advertise open positions **for free** on the DPS job board.
Full details for several new positions can be found on the DPS job board.
A summary of recent job announcements and postdoc opportunities are listed below.
- ESA Archival Research Visitor Programme – Due Apr 30, 2025
To increase the scientific return from its space science missions, the European Space Agency (ESA) welcomes applications from scientists interested in pursuing research projects based on data publicly available in the ESA Space Science Archives (https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/esdc).
The ESA Archival Research Visitor Programme is open to scientists, at all career levels, affiliated with institutes in ESA Member States and Collaborating States, although we will also consider strong applications from outside those states. Early-career scientists (within 10 years of the PhD) and PhD students are particularly encouraged to apply. We encourage applications from women and minorities. The peer-review evaluation process is anonymised to ensure equal opportunities for all applicants.
Applications received before 1 May 2025 will be considered for visits in autumn and winter 2025/2026.
For further details, including areas of research and contact information, please refer to:
https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/esdc/visitor-programme or write to the programme coordinators at [email protected]
- Full-time staff scientist to work with Roman team at IPAC
IPAC, part of the Physics, Math, and Astronomy Division at Caltech, provides science operations, user support, data and archive services, and scientific vision to enhance discovery with observatories both in space and on the ground. IPAC invites applications from highly qualified individuals for a full-time position at the junior scientist level to work with the Roman team at IPAC.
The Roman Space Telescope is a NASA observatory designed to address key questions in the areas of dark energy, exoplanets, and infrared astrophysics. It is slated for launch in late 2026. The Roman Science Support Center (SSC) at IPAC is part of the Roman Ground Data System, providing algorithm and software development and data processing for the Galactic Bulge Time Domain Survey and all Roman spectroscopic data. In addition, the SSC will support the operations of the Coronagraph Instrument, manage the Roman General Investigator Program proposal solicitations and related data analysis funding, and provide community support for exoplanet and wide-field spectroscopy science with Roman.
For more details, see: https://roman.ipac.caltech.edu
Link to the full job description: https://dps.aas.org/7526/
- Postdoctoral Scholar: Asteroid Radar – University of Central Florida
The incumbent will be expected to participate in data analysis, physical and dynamical characterization of near-Earth asteroids using radar and optical data, and support archiving asteroid shape models in the Planetary Data System (PDS). This position is open until filled.
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Send submissions to: Denise Stephens, DPS Secretary, at this address [email protected]
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