[HeliosphereNews] Heliosphere News - November 21, 2017
Ken Fairchild
ken at porter.sr.unh.edu
Wed Nov 22 01:04:41 EST 2017
Heliosphere News - Nov. 21, 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: Nick 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, or Nick. Posts are limited to ascii text.
Newsletters are archived on the following website:
http://heliospherenews.unh.edu/.
******************* Announcements *******************
1. SCOSTEP/VarSITI Grants for 2018
2. MEETING: "Cosmic Accelerators: Understanding Nature's High-energy
Particles and Radiation", November 6-9, 2017, Annapolis, Maryland
3. MEETING: Fourteenth European Space Weather Week, Nov 27 - Dec 1 2017,
Ostend, Belgium
4. MEETING: 17th Annual International Astrophysics Conference, March
5-9, 2018, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
5. Triennial Earth-Sun Summit (TESS) Meeting, Leesburg, Virginia, 20-24
May 2018
6. MEETING: ASTRONUM 2018, June 25-29, 2018, Panama City Beach, Florida,
USA
7. EWASS 2018 (Liverpool, UK 3- 6 April 2018)
Symposium S4: High Resolution Solar Physics - the dawn of a new era
8. Graduate Student Opportunities at University of Alabama, Huntsville
9. Graduate Studies in Solar and Heliospheric Physics at the University
of Arizona
10. Job vacancy: Space Physics Department, Geophysics Institute
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
******************
1. SCOSTEP/VarSITI Grants for 2018
From: Kazuo Shiokawa and Katya Georgieva (shiokawa at nagoya-u.jp)
Dear AGU/SPA Colleagues,
The submission of applications for SCOSTEP/VarSITI grants for 2018 is
now open. The deadline is December 1, 2017, and the guidelines can be
found on the VarSITI web-site: http://www.varsiti.org/
We are looking forward to your proposals,
Kazuo Shiokawa and Katya Georgieva, VarSITI co-chair shiokawa at
isee.nagoya-u.ac.jp, kgeorg at bas.bg
******************
2. MEETING: "Cosmic Accelerators: Understanding Nature's High-energy
Particles and Radiation", November 6-9, 2017, Annapolis, Maryland
The Joint Space Science Institute at the University of Maryland and the
Goddard Space Flight Center is sponsoring a meeting on "Cosmic
Accelerators: Understanding Nature's High-energy Particles and
Radiation". The meeting will take place over 3.5 days on November 6-9,
2017, in the historic city of Annapolis, Maryland (see link below). The
goal of this meeting is to bring together scientists working on the
detection of high-energy particles and radiation signatures and
theorists and modelers to engage in a discussion of the dynamics of
astrophysical systems and the mechanisms for particle acceleration. We
are soliciting scientific contributions to this meeting that can take
the form of oral presentations (15 minute presentation + 5 minute for
discussion) or posters. The deadline for the submissions for oral
presentations is October 9 with a final deadline for posters of October
27.
The conference will cover a broad range of topics, including the latest
observations from new observatories and insights into the mechanisms for
particle acceleration coming from theoretical developments and
large-scale simulations. The goal of the meeting is to assess where we
stand in our effort to understand the sources of energetic particles
throughout the universe and the implications for understanding the
dynamics of those systems. A list of the topical sessions is below. In
addition to overview and invited talks, we are soliciting contributed
talks and poster presentations. Thus, we are encouraging a broad range
of participation, including early career scientists and students.
Students qualify for a reduced registration fee.
SOC members: Gianfranco Brunetti, Steven Christe, James Drake, Jordan
Goodman, Alice Harding, Maxim Markevitch, Angela Olinto, Jeremy Perkins,
Eun-Suk Seo, Anatoly Spitkovsky, Toni Venters
https://jsi.astro.umd.edu/conferences/2017-jsi-workshop
Meeting Sessions:
• Setting the Stage: overviews of observations and acceleration
mechanisms
• Cosmic Rays
• Supernova Remnants
• Pulsars, Pulsar Winds, Pulsar Wind Nebulae
• Black Holes, AGN, Jets and GRBs
• The Heliosphere: a local laboratory
• Galaxy Clusters
• Fast Radio Bursts
******************
3. MEETING: Fourteenth European Space Weather Week, Nov 27 - Dec 1,
2017, Ostend, Belgium
The ESWW is the main annual event in the European Space Weather
calendar. It is the European forum for Space Weather as proven by the
high attendance to the past editions. The agenda will be composed of
plenary/parallel sessions, working meetings and dedicated events for
service end-users. The ESWW will again adopt the central aim of bringing
together the diverse groups in Europe working on different aspects of
Space Weather.
Following an excellent response to the call for sessions, the Program
Committee is pleased to invite contributions to sessions, addressing a
wide range of scientific and application related themes.
ESWW14 will be held from November 27 - December 1 in Ostend, Belgium.
The meeting website is: http://www.stce.be/esww14/
******************
4. MEETING: 17th Annual International Astrophysics Conference, March
5-9, 2018, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT: The 17th Annual International Astrophysics
Conference will return to Santa Fe, New Mexico at the La Posada de
Santa Fe Hotel from March 5-9, 2018. (Welcome Reception and Evening
Registration begins Sunday, March 4).
The website and more details will be available soon. For now, please
mark your calendars and contact us with your interest in attending.
E-mail inquiries about the meeting should be directed to Gary Zank at
garyp.zank at gmail.com or icnsmeetings at gmail.com.
******************
5. Triennial Earth-Sun Summit (TESS) Meeting, Leesburg, Virginia, 20-24
May 2018
The Triennial Earth-Sun Summit (TESS) is a joint meeting of the Space
Physics and Aeronomy Section of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) and
the Solar Physics Division (SPD) of the American Astronomical Society.
Following the successful inaugural meeting in Indianapolis in 2015, the
next meeting will take place 20-24 May 2018 at the Lansdowne Resort and
Spa in Leesburg, VA.
TESS welcomes participation by the entire Heliophysics community,
including all four traditional sub-disciplines devoted to studies of the
Sun, Heliosphere, Magnetosphere, and Ionosphere-Thermosphere-Mesosphere.
TESS not only promotes greater interaction and unity within
Heliophysics, but also connections to astrophysics and planetary
physics.
The scientific program will include four interdisciplinary plenary
sessions of interest across Heliophysics: Space Weather, Heliophysics
Applied to Stellar-Planet Systems, Ion-Neutral Coupling Throughout the
Heliophysical System, and Magnetic Reconnection in Space Plasmas. There
will also be many sessions devoted to other topics, both
interdisciplinary and more narrowly focused. Some of these sessions will
be led by organizers, in the conventional "AGU style", while others will
be created by the Scientific Organizing Committee after the abstracts
have been submitted (SPD style). The SOC invites you to help organize
and then join us for the second TESS meeting.
To suggest a session, please contact one of the organizers below by 6
November.
Dana Longcope (dana at solar.physics.montana.edu) Larry Paxton
(larry.paxton at jhuapl.edu)
******************
6. MEETING: ASTRONUM 2018, June 25-29, 2018, Panama City Beach, Florida,
USA
Maison de la Simulation (CEA/CNRS/UPS/UVSQ), France will organize
ASTRONUM-2018 - the 14th International Conference on Numerical Modeling
of Space Plasma Flows in Panama City Beach, Florida, USA, on 25-29 June,
2018.
The conference will cover the following topics:
(1) Advanced numerical methods for space and astrophysical 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
icnsmeetings.com will soon 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.
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), Ewald Mueller (Max-Planck-Institute for
Astrophysics, Garching), 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).
******************
7. EWASS 2018 (Liverpool, UK 3- 6 April 2018)
Symposium S4: High Resolution Solar Physics - the dawn of a new era
Abstracts submission for the EWASS symposium on High Resolution Solar
Physics is now open, and we encourage you to submit your abstracts
before the deadline of 27 Nov.
The topics of the symposium are:
• Solar dynamo and its surface manifestations
• Flux emergence and evolution
• Photospheric dynamics and magnetism
• Chromospheric dynamics and magnetism
• Energy transport and waves
• Eruptive events
And we welcome contributions from theorists, ground and space-based
observers alike.
More information on the symposium goals, abstract submission and
registration can be found at:
http://eas.unige.ch/EWASS/session.jsp?id=S4
Sarah Matthews, Manolo Collados, Mihalis Mathioudakis, Ilaria Ermolli,
Hector Socas-Navarro
*********************************************************************
8. Graduate Student Opportunities at the University of Alabama,
Huntsville
The Department of Space Science at The University of Alabama in
Huntsville is accepting applications to its M.S. and Ph.D. programs for
the Fall 2018 semester. We are a graduate-only, student and research
focused department that aims to produce proficient and self-reliant
scientists through our M.S. and Ph.D. 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 including gamma ray bursts and
gravitational waves. 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 Wernher von
Braun and the birth of the US space program. Contact person is Dr. Jacob
Heerikhuisen, e-mail: jh0004 at uah.edu.
******************
9. Graduate Studies in Solar and Heliospheric Physics at the University
of Arizona
The Department of Planetary Sciences, and Lunar & Planetary Laboratory,
at the University of Arizona seeks prospective graduate students
interested in pursuing research in heliophysics and space physics.
Successful candidates will (nominally) enter the program in the fall
2018 semester. The deadline for application is December 8, 2017;
prospective students should apply at
https://www.lpl.arizona.edu/graduate/admission. Research assistantships
in solar and heliospheric physics are available.
The Solar and Heliospheric research group
(https://www.lpl.arizona.edu/research/heliophysics), consists of eight
faculty and researchers, whose broad research interests include: cosmic
ray acceleration and transport in the solar system, the nature of the
heliosphere, the solar wind and interplanetary magnetic field, space
weather and the space radiation environment, and fundamental topics in
space plasma physics and astrophysics. We are involved in existing
NASA spacecraft missions, including Voyager and the Advanced Composition
Explorer, and future NASA missions such as the Parker Solar Probe ? a
mission to ?touch? the Sun ? launching next summer.
Students admitted to our program will take courses covering broad
aspects of planetary sciences, including physics, chemistry, and geology
of the solar system, in addition to research in solar and heliospheric
physics. Further details can be found at
https://www.lpl.arizona.edu/graduate
Questions about the program, application process, research projects, or
other general questions, should be directed to either Prof. Joe
Giacalone (giacalon at lpl.arizona.edu) or Prof. Kristopher Klein
(kgklein at lpl.arizona.edu).
******************
10. Job vacancy: Space Physics Department
Geophysics Institute Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Topic: Cosmic Rays
Title: Plaza de Investigador Titular “A” de Tiempo Completo, interino
Number: 78712-47
Salary: The basic salary is 20,534.84 MXN, but the stimuli provided by
different institutions augment this sum by roughly 100% in the beginning
and potentially much more afterwards.
Geophysics Institute at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
(UNAM) in Mexico City is announcing a full time job as a scientist in
the field of Physics of cosmic rays with emphasis on operation,
simulation and analysis of the data from cosmic rays detectors. If
selected, the candidate will have access to several research facilities
including High-Altitude Water Cherenkov Observatory (HAWK) located on
the flanks of the Sierra Negra volcano near Puebla.
The candidates are expected to have a PhD or equivalent experience in
the topic of cosmic rays and at least four years of experience in
research and teaching. The research experience is expected to be backed
up by their original publications in relevant journals. The candidates
are also expected to have graduated students on different levels.
In order to be considered, candidates will have to do the following:
• They have to write a research project on usage of the cosmic radiation
data in the studies of modulation and solar activity (maximum 15 pages).
In the project the candidates have to indicate which products they will
deliver and what is the infrastructure required for the completion of
the proposed project.
• The candidates will have to make an oral presentation of their project
(duration 30 minutes).
In order to participate in the concourse the candidates have to contact
the Secretaría Académica of the Geophysics Institute
(s.academica at igeofisica.unam.mx) located in the Ciudad Universitaria
(University Campus), Ciudad de México before December 4 2017 and present
the following documents:
I. An application to participate in the concourse (stating the Title and
the Number provided above).
II. Curriculum Vitae accompanied by the copies of the documents that
prove the validity of the CV.
III. All academic titles (University, Masters, PhD).
The candidates will be notified about the admission of their application
and the date and place of the oral presentation. The results will be
published within 15 workdays after the date when the Consejo Técnico de
la Investigación Científica takes its decision.
The candidates are encouraged to contact Dr. Rogelio Caballero
(rogelioc at geofisica.unam.mx) or Dr. Alejandro Lara
(alara at geofisica.unam.mx) prior submitting their applications in order
to discuss possible future collaborations.
Best regards,
Nikolai V Pogorelov
Professor
Department of Space Science
University of Alabama in Huntsville
320 Sparkman Dr.
Huntsville, AL 35805
Tel. 256-961-7617
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