[HeliosphereNews] Heliosphere News - February 7, 2017

ICNS Meetings icnsmeetings at gmail.com
Tue Feb 7 14:08:43 EST 2017


*Heliosphere News*



February 7, 2017



http://heliospherenews.unh.edu/



A newsletter devoted to Heliospheric Science.



Editor: Nathan Schwadron (nschwadron at unh.edu)

Co-Editor: Mihir Desai (mdesai at swri.edu)

Co-Editor: Eric Zirnstein (ejz at princeton.edu)

Co-Editor: Merav Opher (mopher at bu.edu)

Co-Editor: Adele Corona (icnsmeetings at gmail.com)

Co-Editor: Nikolai Pogorelov (np0002 at uah.edu)



Web site editor: Ken Fairchild (Ken.Fairchild at unh.edu)



If you are interested in being added to the list, being removed from the
list, or posting an announcement, please send information to Nathan, Mihir,
Eric, Merav, Adele, or Nick. Posts are limited to ascii text. Newsletters
are archived on the following website: http://heliospherenews.unh.edu/





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Announcements



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1.       The Department of Physics at the University of New Hampshire is
accepting applications to its MS and PhD programs for the Fall 2017.



2.       The Department of Space Science at the University of Alabama in
Huntsville is accepting applications to its MS and PhD programs for the
Fall 2017 semester.



3.       JOB OPENING: Applications are invited for two PhD positions (Early
Stage Researchers, ESR) at the Politecnico di Torino



4.       New SPA Editors for GRL



5.       POLONEZ Funding Program



6.       MEETING: MMS Science Workshop, Boulder, Colorado, June 5-9, 2017



7.       MEETING: 2017 GEM Summer Workshop, Portsmouth, Virginia, June
18-23, 2017



8.       MEETING: Applied Space Environments Conference 2017, Huntsville,
Alabama, May 15-19, 2017



9.       MEETING: Space Weather of the Heliosphere: Processes and
Forecasts, IAU Symposium 335 - July 17-21, 2017 - University of Exeter, UK



10.   MEETING: GOOD HOPE FOR EARTH SCIENCES: IAPSO-IAMAS-IAGA, 27 August to
1 September 2017, Cape Town, South Africa



11.   MEETING: 16th Annual International Astrophysics Conference, March
6-10, 2017, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA



12.   MEETING: 12th International Conference on Numerical Modeling of Space
Plasma Flows (ASTRONUM-2017), Saint Malo, France, 26-30 June, 2017



13.   MEETING: 7th Solar Orbiter Workshop: Exploring the Solar Environs,
April 3-6, 2017, Granada, Spain













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1. The Department of Physics at the University of New Hampshire is
accepting applications (to its MS and PhD programs for the Fall 2017
semester.



http://physics.unh.edu/content/graduate-program



We have a number of graduate research fellowships to award to incoming
students. The Department of Physics is linked to the Space Science Center
(SSC), part of the Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans and Space.
Faculty and students are members of the Department of Physics (
http://physics.unh.edu) with a graduate degree program specializing in
Space Physics/Astrophysics. The Space Science Center fosters research and
graduate education in all of the space sciences with studies ranging from
the ionosphere to the Earth's magnetosphere, the local solar system, and
out to the farthest reaches of the universe. Investigations of the Earth's
environment in the solar system look at space as a laboratory for plasma
physics. We conduct theoretical, computational, data analysis, and
instrument development projects focused on the solar-terrestrial radiation
environment involving both satellite and suborbital missions. High energy
astrophysics investigations involve the sensing of energetic astrophysical
objects with ground, balloon, and satellite detectors. Satellites from NASA
missions are still providing data for ongoing analysis. Students have
opportunities to participate in recent missions that are carrying
SSC-associated instruments including STEREO (launched 2006), IBEX (launched
2008), LRO (launched 2009), Van Allen Probes (launched 2012), Firebird
(launched in Dec. 2013), MMS (launched in 2015), FIREBIRD II (launched in
2015), and GOES-R (launched in 2016). Upcoming missions in which the SSC is
involved include Solar Orbiter and Solar Probe. The SSC is also a Center of
Excellence in theoretical Solar-terrestrial research.





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2. The Department of Space Science at the University of Alabama in
Huntsville is accepting applications to its MS and PhD programs for the
Fall 2017 semester.



We have a number of GRA fellowships to award incoming students, which
provide tuition and a competitive stipend, and allow motivated students to
begin working on a research project from the day they arrive on campus. We
are a small research-focused department that aims to produce proficient and
self-reliant scientists through our MS and PhD programs. Students have the
opportunity to not only work with our world-renowned faculty, but also with
adjunct faculty from the Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research and
NASA's Marshal Space Flight Center. Scientists from both centers share
office space on the UAH campus with faculty from the department. Our
research projects cover topics including: the Sun, solar atmosphere, inner
heliosphere and space weather, the solar wind and its interaction with the
interstellar medium, solar energetic particles and cosmic rays, high energy
astrophysics. Our students graduate with a broad range of professional
scientific skills including: analytic methods for solving physics problems,
computational physics, data analysis, presentation of scientific ideas in
both written and oral formats. UAH is an anchor tenant of the second
largest research park in the country, in a city with a rich history of
space science that dates back to Werner von Braun and the birth of the US
space program.





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3. JOB OPENING: Applications are invited for two PhD positions (Early Stage
Researchers, ESR) at the Politecnico di Torino.



Applications are invited for two PhD positions ("Early Stage Researchers",
ESR) at the Politecnico di Torino, funded by the Marie-Sklodowska- Curie
Innovative Training Network COMPLETE -
Cloud-MicroPhysics-Turbulence-Telemetry: an inter-multidisciplinary
training network for enhancing the understanding and modeling of
atmospheric clouds within the Horizon 2020 Program of the European
Commission. The objectives are the numerical analysis of the transport of
energy, water vapor and droplets across the warm cloud/clear air interface,
the Lagrangian analysis of water droplets (1 - 100 micrometre) in
suspension, the analysis of the data produced by innovative expendable
radio-probes released in warm clouds and their comparison with numerical
simulations.



Contact persons:



Prof. Daniela Tordella, Department of Applied Science and Technology |
Politecnico di Torino 10129 Torino Italy, Tel (+39) 011 090 6812|,
daniela.tordella at polito.it; complete-network at polito.it



Dr. Michele Iovieno, Department of Mechanics and Aerospace Engineering |
Politecnico di Torino 10129 Torino Italy Tel (+39) 011 090 6853,|
michele.iovieno at polito.it ;complete-network at polito.it





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4. New SPA Editors for GRL



From: Bill.Peterson (Bill.Peterson at lasp.colorado.edu)



Bill Peterson and Benoit Lavraud have completed their terms as SPA editors
for Geophysical Research Letters

Andrew Yau and Merav Opher have replaced them effective January 1, 2017.





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5. POLONEZ is a funding program addressed to incoming researchers who may
apply for 12- or 24-month fellowships in host institutions in Poland.



Applicant: a researcher with a PhD degree or at least four years of
full-time equivalent research experience who has not resided or carried out
their main activity (work, studies, etc.) in Poland for more than 12 months
in the 3 years immediately prior to the call announcement Fellowship
duration: 12 or 24 months Researcher receives:

1. Salary (incl. mobility allowance): $ 4,350 gross/month (full time
contract),

2. Family allowance: $ 300 gross/month (for fellows whose families stay in
Poland for at least 3 months),

3. Research grant,

4. Opportunity to participate in research and non-research training
programmes organised by the NCN.



Host Institution receives overheads at a rate of 20%.

Proposals must be submitted in English via OSF submission system.



More information on the website: https://www.ncn.gov.pl/polonez?language=en





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6. MEETING: MMS Science Workshop, Boulder, Colorado, June 5-9, 2017



The next MMS Science Workshop, to be held this June in Boulder, Colorado in
the beautiful foothills of the Rocky Mountains.



All members of the science community are welcome and encouraged to attend
this meeting, which is hosted by the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space
Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado.



The MMS Science Workshop will convene June 6-8 including an evening poster
session and reception on Wednesday June 7. The main science sessions will
be hosted in the Jennie Smoly Caruthers Biotechnology Building (
https://jscbb.colorado.edu/) adjacent to LASP with poster sessions to be
held in the LASP SPSC facility (http://lasp.colorado.edu).



MMS Instrument Team-only splinter meetings will be held at LASP SPSC on
Monday June 5 and Friday June 9 (as needed).



Abstracts will be solicited on MMS observations and numerical simulations
with an emphasis on the six major science topics below:



1) Magnetic Reconnection of the Ion and Electron Diffusion Regions

2) Magnetopause

3) Magnetotail

4) Shock Physics

5) Plasma Turbulence

6) Energetic Particles



Registration details and abstract submissions will be announced in AGU/SPA
this February with final meeting registration deadlines expected in May.



The Local Scientific Organizing Committee:



Narges Ahmadi, Bob Ergun, Stefan Eriksson, Allison Jaynes, Karlheinz

Trattner, and Rick Wilder





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7. The GEM 2017 Summer Workshop will be held during June 18-23, 2017 at the
Renaissance Portsmouth-Norfolk Waterfront Hotel - Portsmouth, Virginia.



Please see more at http://www.cpe.vt.edu/gem/index.html



Student support is open for application now (
http://www.cpe.vt.edu/gem/students.html). A high priority will be given to
the following groups: graduate students engaged in their thesis or
dissertation research, first time attendees and students from small
institutions, and students having specific GEM-related duties. We urge
those of you who qualify and are planning to attend the 2017 GEM Workshop
to act quickly and send applications to Zhonghua Xu (zxu77 at vt.edu) by
Friday, March 17, 2017. Applications or adviser recommendations received
after this date will be on the waiting list.





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8. MEETING: Applied Space Environments Conference 2017, Huntsville, Alabama,
May 15-19, 2017



Abstract Submission Now Open



Applied Space Environments Conference 2017: Measurements, Models, Testing,
and Tools,  http://sti.usra.edu/asec2017



Abstract submission is now open for the Applied Space Environments
Conference (ASEC) that will be held in Huntsville, AL on May 15-19, 2017 at
The Westin. This event is co-sponsored by the Universities Space Research
Association (USRA) and NASA and will focus on a broad range of topics
related to space environments and their effects on space systems.



All abstracts are welcome, with special consideration for presentations
that address aspects of space environment and effects modeling, in-space
observations of space environment impacts on space systems, recent space
environment measurements and using historical data sets for characterizing
space environments for system design and environment specification, and
laboratory testing to better understand material and hardware interactions
with space environments.  Relevant areas of the space environment include
(but are not limited to):



• Charged particles in the solar wind, solar particle events, galactic
cosmic rays, and trapped radiation belts



• Comets, asteroids, and dust



• Electric and magnetic fields



• Extreme ultraviolet, ultraviolet, and infrared photons



• Ionosphere and neutral planetary atmospheres



• Magnetosphere(s)



• Meteoroids and orbital debris



• STEM applications



• Commercial applications



Please go to the following link to submit your abstract:

https://asec2017.exordo.com



Abstracts due March 1, 2017. Contact person: Joseph Minow (joseph.minow at
nasa.gov)





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9. MEETING: Space Weather of the Heliosphere: Processes and Forecast IAU
Symposium 335 - July 17-21, 2017 - University of Exeter, UK



Space weather is increasingly recognised as an international challenge
faced by several communities. The ability to understand, monitor and
forecast the space weather of the Earth and the heliosphere is of paramount
importance for our high-technology society and for the current rapid
developments in knowledge and exploration within our Solar System.



The symposium is planned over 5 days from Monday through Friday (including
half-day excursion on the Wednesday afternoon). Key Topics of the
scientific program are the following: Solar drivers and activity levels;
Solar wind and heliosphere; Impact of solar wind, structures and radiation
on and within terrestrial and planetary environments (including
magnetospheres, ionospheres and atmospheres); Long-term trends and
predictions for space weather; Challenges and strategy plans for Earth and
the heliosphere; Forecasting models; Space weather monitoring,
instrumentation, data and services. The Symposium aims to further knowledge
on space weather by linking various aspects of research in solar,
heliospheric and planetary physics, and by putting great emphasis on
cross-disciplinary developments, merging different communities, learning
from interplanetary comparisons and linking to atmospheric and
meteorological research for the first time at the international level.



http://blogs.exeter.ac.uk/iaus335/





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10. MEETING: GOOD HOPE FOR EARTH SCIENCES: IAPSO-IAMAS-IAGA, 27Aug-1Sep,
2017, Cape Town, South Africa



The Local Organizing Committee is thrilled to welcome you to the 2017 Joint
IAPSO-IAMAS-IAGA Assembly in Cape Town, South Africa. The Joint Assembly,
endorsed by the University of Cape Town and the South African Department of
Science and Technology, will take place from 27 August to 1 September 2017
at the Cape Town International Convention Centre (CTICC).

IAGA Lead Sessions



1.  SPACE WEATHER FROM SUN TO EARTH: BRINGING DATA AND MODELS TOGETHER
(IAGA, IAMAS), Convenor - Sarah Gibson



2.  THE REFERENCING OF GEOPHYSICAL DATA PRODUCTS: THE ROLE OF DOIs (IAGA,
IAMAS, IAPSO), Convenor - Masahito Nose



3.  FRONTIER CHALLENGES IN DATA ASSIMILATION AND ENSEMBLE FORECASTING FOR
THE ATMOSPHERE, OCEAN AND SOLID EARTH. (IAGA, IAMAS, IAPSO), Convenor -
Weijia Kuang, Craig Bishop



4.  SOLAR RELATED VARIABILITY OF THE ATMOSPHERE (IAGA, IAMAS),

Convenor,  Christoph Jacobi



Early Bird Deadline: 5 May 2017

Online Registration Closes: 22 August 2017



http://www.iapso-iamas-iaga2017.com/





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11. MEETING: 16th Annual International Astrophysics Conference, March 6-10,
2017, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA –



From: Gary P. Zank, garyp.zank at gmail.com



The 16th Annual International Astrophysics Conference will be held in Santa
Fe, New Mexico at the La Posada de Santa Fe Hotel from March 6-10, 2017.
(Welcome Reception and Evening Registration begins Sunday, March 5).



www.icnsmeetings.com/conference/16thannual/index.html



REGISTRATION DEADLINES:



Standard Registration fee: $475 USD beginning Jan 1, 2017

Late and Onsite registration is $500 USD beginning March 1, 2017.



ABSTRACT DEADLINE:



Abstract Submission Deadline is February 15.



HOTEL BOOKING DEADLINE HAS PASSED. PLEASE CONTACT HOTEL DIRECTLY FOR
AVAILABILITY: La Posada de Santa Fe Hotel:  *505-954-9615*



The meeting entitled, "Turbulence, Structures, and Particle Acceleration
throughout the Heliosphere and Beyond", will follow the same format as
before with 25-minute presentations punctuated by selected 40-minute
invited talks that will explore various themes in greater detail.



The remarkable ability of nature to accelerate charged particles to
extraordinarily high energies remains, after 100 years, one of the
outstanding puzzles of solar and astrophysical plasmas. Diffusive shock
acceleration (DSA) is thought to energize charged particles at shock waves.
Steady state DSA predictions include the particle intensity peaking at the
shock, after which it is constant, and that the accelerated particle
distribution is a power law with an index depending only on the shock
compression ratio. DSA predictions are often but not always met. The
anomalous cosmic ray spectrum was observed to peak behind the heliospheric
termination shock and to possess a spectrum far harder than predicted by
classical DSA theory. This is frequently true of shocks in the inner
heliosphere and in astrophysical settings. Shocks are effective in
generating magnetic turbulence and structures downstream and amplifying
pre-existing turbulence, all factors in the further energization of charged
particles. Furthermore, certain regions such as the heliospheric current
sheet naturally produce complex turbulent environments in which numerous
structures are present. Not surprisingly, in these regions observed
energetic particle events, sometimes called anomalous solar energetic
particle events, have characteristics quite unlike those predicted of
typical impulsive or gradual solar energetic particle events. The purpose
of this meeting is to explore the role of turbulence and structures
(including magnetic reconnection-related processes, shock waves, etc), in
the acceleration of particles throughout the heliosphere and beyond. The
meeting will include current and past observations from spacecraft in the
inner heliosphere, the distant heliosphere and very local interstellar
medium, expectations and predictions for missions such as Solar Orbiter and
Solar Probe Plus, and of course remote observations.



Please go to the conference website for more information.



www.icnsmeetings.com/conference/16thannual/index.html



E-mail inquiries about the meeting should be directed to Gary Zank at
garyp.zank at gmail.com or icnsmeetings at gmail.com.





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12. MEETING: ASTRONUM 2017 - the 12th International Conference on Numerical
Modeling of Space Plasma Flows, Saint Malo, France, 26-30 June, 2017.



Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research at the University of Alabama
in Huntsville and Maison de la Simulation (CEA/CNRS/UPS/UVSQ), France will
organize ASTRONUM-2017. The conference will cover the following topics:



(1) Advanced numerical methods for space, astrophysical and geophysical
flows;

(2) Large-scale fluid-based, kinetic, and hybrid simulations;

(3) Turbulence and cosmic ray transport;

(4) Magnetohydrodynamics

(5) Software packages for modeling and analyzing plasma

flows /Visualisation



with the application to



(1) Physics of the Sun-Heliosphere-Magnetosphere;

(2) Interstellar medium and star formation;

(3) Cosmology and galaxy formation;

(4) Dynamo effect;

(5) Stellar Physics.



The purpose of the conference is to bring together leading experts in
applied mathematics, space physics, astrophysics, and geophysics to discuss
the application of novel numerical algorithms and petascale parallelization
strategies to computationally challenging problems.



The conference will be structured around invited, 40-minute keynote and
25-minute regular talks, and a limited number of contributed talks, with
the attempt to have no parallel sessions. The conference web site will be
established in a few days and provide the information about the conference
venue, registration, and means of transportation. E-mail inquiries about
the meeting should be directed to Nikolai.Pogorelov at uah.edu and
Edouard.Audit at cea.fr.



The conference website is: http://irfu.cea.fr/ASTRONUM2017/



Program Committee: Tahar Amari (CNRS Ecole Polytechnique), Edouard Audit

(CEA, Maison de la Simulation, co-chair), Amitava Bhattacharjee

(Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory), Phillip Colella (Lawrence

Berkeley National Laboratory), Anthony Mezzacappa (University of

Tennessee, Knoxville), Nikolai Pogorelov (University of Alabama in

Huntsville, chair), Kazunari Shibata (Kyoto University), James Stone

(Princeton University), Jon Linker (Predictive Science Inc.), and Gary

P. Zank (University of Alabama in Huntsville).





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13. MEETING: 7th Solar Orbiter Workshop: Exploring the Solar Environs,
April 3-6, 2017, Granada, Spain



EXPLORING THE SOLAR ENVIRONS



Registration is open. Visit our web page at:  http://spg.iaa.es/solo2017/

Rationale:The Solar Orbiter mission will bring the community an excellent
opportunity for doing unique science that embraces most solar topics from
the interior up to the heliosphere employing novel vantage points. The
combined use of results from its four in-situ and six remote-sensing
instruments will provide an unprecedented view of the Sun and the
interplanetary medium. Aimed at discussing most of these topics, the 7th
Solar Orbiter Workshop entitled "Exploring the solar environs" will be held
in Granada, Spain, from the 3rd through the 6th of April, 2017. Overviews,
prospects, and new science about the solar interior, the photospheric
structure, dynamics, and magnetic fields, the chromosphere, the corona, the
solar wind, and the heliospheric magnetic fields and particles are
scheduled. Synergies with other missions and ground-based observatories
will also be covered. Theoreticians, observers, and instrumentalist
astronomers are encouraged to attend.





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