[HeliosphereNews] FW: Heliosphere News - November 5, 2019: UPDATE
Nikolai Pogorelov
np0002 at uah.edu
Tue Nov 5 18:38:40 EST 2019
Heliosphere News – November 5, 2019
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)
Coordinator: Liz Wilber (Elizabeth.Wilber at unh.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. MEETING: ST1.6 Advancing the Understanding of the Heliosphere and the Very Local Interstellar Medium with IMAP, EGU General Assembly 2020 in Vienna, Austria.
2. MEETING: Open Session on the Sun and Heliosphere at the upcoming EGU General Assembly 2020 in Vienna, Austria
3. MEETING: FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT: The 19th Annual International Astrophysics Conference will be held in Santa Fe, New Mexico, March 9 - 13, 2020.
4. MEETING: 15-th International Conference on Numerical Modeling of Space Plasma Flows (ASTRONUM-2020), Pasadena, CA, July 20-24, 2020.
5. MEETING: SCOSTEP’s 15th Quadrennial Solar-Terrestrial Physics Symposium (STP-15), Alibag, India, February 21-25, 2022
6. INVITATION: to Join the Whole Heliosphere & Planetary Interactions Campaigns
7. JOB OPPORTUNITY: NSF Supported Tenure-Track Assistant Professor in Solar Physics and Astro-informatics at Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA
8. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Job Opening at the Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio, Texas, USA
9. JOB OPENING: Postdoctoral, Early-Career Staff, and Mid-Career Staff Positions at Los Alamos National Laboratory
10. JOB OPENING: Research Chair in Space Weather at South African National Space Agency (SANSA) in South Africa
11. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Research Position in Space Physics at Princeton University
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1. MEETING: ST1.6 Advancing the Understanding of the Heliosphere and the Very Local Interstellar Medium with IMAP at the upcoming EGU General Assembly 2020 in Vienna, Austria.
EGU meeting will be held May 3-8 2020 in Vienna, Austria.
Meeting details can be found at https://www.egu2020.eu/.
The abstract submission site is open. The deadline for all submissions is Wednesday, 15 January 2020, 13:00 CET. Abstracts will not be accepted for review after this date.
Session description:
The Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) is a future space mission dedicated to study the interaction of the solar wind with the interstellar medium and the acceleration of energetic particles. These two topics are crucial for understanding the coupling between the inner and the outer heliosphere. With discoveries of the past (e.g., Mariner, Pioneers,
Ulysses) and the present (e.g., Voyager, SOHO/SWAN, IBEX) heliospheric missions our understanding of the heliosphere, its boundary regions, as well as the Very Local Interstellar Medium (VLISM) still expands. Many methods and techniques have developed to study the heliosphere and its interstellar neighbourhood. The boundaries regions of the heliosphere are probed directly by the two Voyager spacecraft and their investigation is accessible by remote observations of the energetic neutral atoms (ENAs), interstellar neutral (ISN) gas, pickup ions (PUIs), cosmic rays, and heliospheric backscattered ultraviolet emission by instruments in the Earth’s vicinity.
The processes in the inner and the outer heliosphere comprise a complex system to investigate the shape and size of the heliosphere, the plasma flow in the inner and outer heliosheath, as well as the magnetic field, the composition, and the ionization state of the VLISM. This session is dedicated to contributions advancing the understanding of the heliosphere and its interaction with VLISM, this includes theory development, modelling, analysis of data from past and present space missions, and preparations for future heliospheric missions like, e.g., IMAP.
We are looking forward to see you at the session.
Conveners: Justyna Sokol, Andre Galli, Olga Katushkina
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2. MEETING: ST1.1 Open Session on the Sun and Heliosphere at the upcoming EGU General Assembly 2020 in Vienna, Austria.
The EGU meeting will be held May 3-8 2020 in Vienna, Austria.
Meeting details can be found at https://www.egu2020.eu/.
The abstract submission site is open. The deadline for all submissions is Wednesday, 15 January 2020, 13:00 CET. Abstracts will not be accepted for review after this date.
Session description:
This session traditionally provides a forum for the discussion of all aspects of solar and heliospheric physics. Popular topics have included solar cycle dependencies of the Sun, solar wind and heliosphere, Coronal Mass Ejection research, studies of energetic particles throughout the heliosphere, and the outer boundaries of the heliosphere. We encourage contributions related to all ongoing and planned space missions, to ground-based experiments and to theoretical research. Papers presenting ideas for future space missions and experiments are very welcome in this session. The session will consist of both oral and poster presentations.
We are looking forward to see you at the session.
Conveners: Manuela Temmer, Olga Malandraki, Andre Galli
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3. MEETING: FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT: The 19th Annual International Astrophysics Conference will be held in Santa Fe, New Mexico, March 9 - 13, 2020.(Welcome Reception and Evening Registration begins Sunday, March 8).
The theme of the meeting will be “From the Sun's Atmosphere to the Edge of the Galaxy: A Story of Connections” and 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 oldest and the newest heliospheric space missions are distinguished by being the farthest and closest human-made objects ever to the Sun. Plunging into the depths of the atmosphere of the Sun, the Parker Solar Probe, launched in August 12, 2018, has completed the first three closest encounter passes to the Sun, edging closer and closer with each orbit. The venerable Voyager 1 spacecraft, launched in 1977, entered the very local interstellar medium on 25 August 2012 and at ~141 astronomical units from the Sun is now further from the Earth than any other human-made object. Voyager 2, following suit, likewise entered the interstellar medium on 5 November 2018.
It is astonishing that, since the start of the space age in October 1957, humankind is now reaching for the stars and reaching into a star itself.
Despite the immense distance separating the Voyager spacecraft from the Sun, the Sun’s influence is still felt in the immensely cold distant very local interstellar medium. This conference will address the connected story of how the Sun and interstellar medium collectively shape their environment.
Conference Website: www.icnsmeetings.com/conference/19thannual/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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4. MEETING: 15-th International Conference on Numerical Modeling of Space Plasma Flows (ASTRONUM-2020), Pasadena, CA, July 20-24, 2020.
Maison de la Simulation (CEA/CNRS/UPS/UVSQ), France will organize
ASTRONUM-2020 – the 15th International Conference on Numerical Modeling of Space Plasma Flows in Pasadena, CA, USA, on 20–24 July, 2020.
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 soon be established to provide you with useful information about the conference venue, registration, and means of transportation, etc. E-mail inquiries about the meeting should be directed to Nikolai dot Pogorelov at uah dot edu and Edouard dot Audit at cea dot fr.
Program Committee: Tahar Amari (CNRS Ecole Polytechnique, France), Edouard Audit (CEA, Maison de la Simulation, France, co-chair), Amitava Bhattacharjee (Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, USA), Phillip Colella (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA), Jon Linker (Predictive Science Inc., USA), Anthony Mezzacappa (University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA), Ewald Müller (Max-Planck-Institute for Astrophysics, Garching, Germany), Nikolai Pogorelov (University of Alabama in Huntsville, USA, chair), Kazunari Shibata (Kyoto University, Japan), James Stone (Princeton University, USA), and Gary P. Zank (University of Alabama in Huntsville, USA).
*******************
5. MEETING: SCOSTEP’s 15th Quadrennial Solar-Terrestrial Physics Symposium (STP-15), Alibag, India, February 21-25, 2022
We are happy to announce that the SCOSTEP’s 15th Quadrennial Solar-Terrestrial Physics Symposium (STP-15) will be held at Alibag, India, on February 21-25, 2022.
The Scientific Committee on Solar-Terrestrial Physics (SCOSTEP) organizes the Solar-Terrestrial Physics (STP) symposium once every four years. SCOSTEP is engaged in three major activities: long-term scientific programs, capacity building and public outreach. The scientific programs are of interdisciplinary nature involving scientists from around the world. They are designed to advance our understanding of the solar-terrestrial relationship using space- and ground-based observations, cutting-edge models and theory. Under what ways the Sun affects the Earth and its environment over various time scales is the underlying theme of the scientific programs pursued under SCOSTEP. Having addressed the variability component during the recently concluded Variability of the Sun and its Terrestrial Impact
(VarSITI) program, the new program of SCOSTEP, Predictability of the variable Solar-Terrestrial Coupling (PRESTO,
2020-2024,http://www.issibj.ac.cn/Publications/Forum_Reports/201404/W0201906
20592906717714.pdf), address the predictability component of those phenomena that have impact on the Sun-Earth system as a whole in various time scales.
The STP-15 will aim to gather eminent scientists from solar, magnetospheric, ionospheric and atmospheric physics communities to discuss and deliberate on the cutting-edge sciences pertaining to STP. STP-15 will address the predictability as a focus area in each of the traditional topics deliberated upon during the earlier STP meetings, namely, the mass and radiation chains and intra-atmospheric coupling.
Please put the date of STP-15 into your calendar, and prepare to join in with the new SCOSTEP program PRESTO.
With best regards,
Kazuo Shiokawa, SCOSTEP President
Daniel Marsh, SCOSTEP Vice President
Nat Gopalswamy, SCOSTEP Past President
Patricia Doherty, SCOSTEP Scientific Secretary SCOSTEP Bureau members and their liaison organization: Aude Chambodut (WDS), Jorge Chau (URSI) , Kyung-Suk Cho (IAU), Yoshizumi Miyoshi (COSPAR), Renata Lukianova (IAGA), Annika Seppala (SCAR), Prasad Subramanian (IUPAP), and Peter Pilewskie
(IAMAS) S. Gurubaran, LOC chair (Indian Institute of Geomagnetism)
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6. INVITATION: to Join the Whole Heliosphere & Planetary Interactions Campaigns
It's solar minimum. In the tradition of Whole Sun Month (1996) and Whole Heliosphere Interval (2008), it's time for Whole Heliosphere & Planetary Interactions (2019) - WHPI!
Goal:
A coordinated observing and modeling effort to characterize the three-dimensional interconnected solar-heliospheric-planetary system. By focusing on specific solar rotations near solar minimum, structures and activity can be unambiguously traced throughout the heliosphere and into planetary space environments.
When:
3 target intervals:
Jul 2019 - Solar eclipse
Sep 2019 - Parker Solar Probe at perihelion Dec 2019 - Parker Solar Probe Venus flyby
Who:
Everyone is welcome - it's a grassroots effort. Sign up - we will have telecons and workshops to coordinate analyses. Seehttps://whpi.hao.ucar.edu for further details.
Contact: Sarah Gibson (sgibson at ucar.edu)
*******************
7. NSF Supported Tenure-Track Assistant Professor in Solar Physics and Astro-informatics at Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA
The Department of Physics and Astronomy at Georgia State University (GSU) is seeking to fill a tenure-track faculty position by Fall 2020 at the assistant professor level. We are looking for a solar physicist with significant expertise in both the MHD of the solar corona and flares and in Big Data and Machine Learning, along with a desire to enhance GSU's solar physics and big data curriculum, with a focus on minority and female education and mentoring. The new hire will join our Astro-informatics Cluster, a close collaboration between the solar/stellar physics and remote sensing for space sciences groups in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, and the Computer Science department at GSU. Our Cluster is currently focused on space weather forecasting and is looking to merge two techniques (numerical simulations (SIM) and Machine Learning (ML)) into a fully integrated approach for data-driven solar physics research and space weather prediction. With our new hire the Cluster will achieve the critical mass needed to succeed in this initiative.
This position is funded for the first five years through NSF's prestigious Faculty Development in the Space Sciences (FDSS) program. NSF support includes summer salary, travel, publications, and graduate student support.
Upon the awarding of tenure in the fifth year GSU further supports the faculty line.
Georgia State University, an enterprising R-1 university is located in the heart of downtown Atlanta, a vibrant international city in the Southeast.
GSU enrolls and graduates one of the most diverse student bodies in the nation and advances innovative research by building a diverse faculty. We encourage applications from women and members of underrepresented groups in the physical sciences.
Applicants should have the following basic qualifications: 1) Ph.D. in astronomy, physics, or closely related field, 2) postdoctoral research experience, 3) evidence of the ability to establish and maintain a successful research program, 4) evidence of the motivation and ability to teach at the undergraduate and graduate levels with a diverse student body,
5) evidence of the ability and clear desire to work in a large, collaborative effort (i.e. the Cluster).
Applications should include 1) a CV, including a publication and grant list,
2) a statement of the candidate’s research interests and how the research fits into the above program, 3) a statement of teaching experience and philosophy, and 4) contact information for at least three references. All materials should be sent via email to martens at astro.edu. Questions regarding the position can be addressed to Dr. Piet Martens at the same email address.
Applications received by December 15, 2019, will receive full consideration.
An offer of employment will be conditional on background verification.
Georgia State University is an Equal Opportunity Employer and does not discriminate against applicants due to race, ethnicity, gender, veteran status, or on the basis of disability or any other federal, state or local protected class.
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8. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Job Opening at the Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio, Texas, USA
The Department of Space Research of the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas seeks candidates for positions at the research scientist or senior research scientist levels in Heliospheric Physics. The selected candidate is expected to lead and support the development and calibration of energetic neutral atom and plasma instruments to be flown on upcoming heliophysics or planetary missions such as the Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe or IMAP. The candidate is also expected to publish results in peer-reviewed scientific journals, and present results at scientific meetings, workshops, and conferences. Research will also involve interactions with Institute Staff engaged in a broad range of experimental, observational, and computational research.
Click on the following link for more information about this position.
15-01317 Research Scientist/Sr. Research Scientist -
Heliophysicshttps://resapp.swri.org/ResApp/Job_Search_Results.aspx?DETAIL=15
-01317
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9. JOB OPENING: Postdoctoral, Early-Career Staff, and Mid-Career Staff Positions at Los Alamos National Laboratory
The Space Science and Applications (ISR-1) Group at Los Alamos National Laboratory is hiring postdocs and staff scientists at the early- and mid-career level to support our research programs in magnetospheric and heliospheric science and our national security mission focused on space-based verification of the Limited Test Ban Treaty.
Positions are available for candidates with expertise in modeling & simulation, data analysis, and/or instrumentation. We particularly seek strong candidates with expertise in our core research areas including inner magnetospheres, natural and man-made radiation belts, space weather, and plasma, energetic particle, and neutral particle sensors. Candidates are also sought who can contribute to developing topic areas including ionospheric physics and magnetosphere-ionospheric coupling, GICs, EMP, and heliospheric and planetary science.
For the staff scientist positions, candidates are sought who have the flexibility and interest in contributing to both basic science research and our national security mission. Staff scientist positions require the ability to obtain a Q clearance, which normally requires U.S. citizenship.
For the postdoc positions, candidates are expected to contribute to our basic science research. Postdoc positions are open to all citizenships. The ability to obtain a Q clearance, which normally requires U.S. citizenship, is desirable but not required.
Los Alamos has been named a "Top 10" small town to live in, with its abundant outdoor recreation, highly ranked public school system, and available community facilities and activities.
Two-body problem? Maybe we can help! LANL has recently launched an aggressive hiring campaign to meet future staffing needs across many disciplines, including a new system to promote dual-career hires into strategic areas.
Interested candidates should contact Daniel Reisenfeld <dreisenfeld AT lanl.gov> or Vania Jordanova <vania AT lanl.gov>. More about the ISR Division and the ISR-1 group can be found at <space.lanl.gov>. The ISR-1 postdoc and staff scientist (Scientist 2, 3, and 4) job ads can be found by clicking on "Space Science and Applications" on the right menu.
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10. JOB OPENING: Research Chair in Space Weather at South African National Space Agency (SANSA) in South Africa
The South African National Space Agency (SANSA) is searching for a Research Chair in Space Weather, preferably specialising in Solar Physics. The Research Chair would be mainly responsible for undertaking research within the specialised area, providing guidance to the operational space weather centre, and supervising postgraduate students.
The successful candidate will: • have an extensive research track record within an area of Space Weather (preferably Solar Physics) • high and sustained publication record in reputable research journals • international collaborations • lead large projects • raise and manage research funds • lead research groups and postgraduate student supervision and training.
The position is based in Hermanus in South Africa, and would be for an initial 5 year period renewable for an additional 5 years based on performance. The applicants do not have to be South African – this is a global recruit initiative for a specialised scarce skill area.
You can find out more about SANSA at the following links:
http://www.sansa.org.za
http://spaceweather.sansa.org.zahttp://research.sansa.org.za
SANSA has 3 campus locations. The position is to be based at the Hermanus Campus within the Western Cape province of South Africa. Here is a link to more information on Hermanushttps://www.whalecoast.info/
https://hermanus-tourism.co.za/
More information including full requirements and application process can be found at:
https://www.sansa.org.za/2019/07/29/sansa-sarchi-chair-in-space-weather/
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11. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Research Position in Space Physics at Princeton University
The Space Physics Group in the Department of Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton University, is expanding and anticipates offering one or more postdoctoral or more senior research positions in experimental/observational space physics.
The Space Physics Group carries out research in many aspects of space physics (aka heliophysics), and currently leads NASA’s Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) mission, the Parker Solar Probe (PSP) Integrated Science Investigation of the Sun (ISʘIS) instrument suite, and the Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) mission. The successful candidate(s) can play a major role in 1) the development of the experimental capability of the group and development of space flight instrumentation for IMAP, 2) the analysis and publication of SEP observations from ISʘIS, and 3) the analysis and publication of ENA observations from IBEX, and/or other funded space physics research. Preferred qualifications include having prior experience in the development of space flight instrumentation, analyzing these type(s) of particle data, the proven ability to lead/participate in the rapid development and publication of numerous excellent research articles.
For more information about this position, please visit https://www.princeton.edu/acad-positions/position/14383.
Nikolai V Pogorelov
Distinguished Professor
Department of Space Science
University of Alabama in Huntsville
320 Sparkman Dr.
Huntsville, AL 35805
Tel. 256-961-7617
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