Heliosphere News - September 14, 2020
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: Matina Gkioulidou (matina.gkioulidou at jhuapl.edu)
Co-Editor: Jamie Rankin (jsrankin at princeton.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, Matina, or Jamie. Posts are limited to ascii text.
Newsletters are archived on the following website:
http://heliospherenews.unh.edu/.
******************* Announcements *******************
1. MEETING: 3rd Annual Interstellar Probe Exploration Workshop, November 17-19, 2020 - Update
2. MEETING: COSPAR Scientific Assembly, NEW DATES: 28 January - 4 February, 2021
3. MEETING: MUAN 2020: Upper Atmospheres and Ionospheres in the Inner Solar System, September 9-11, 2020, New York, New York
4. ANNOUNCEMENT: Solar Orbiter In-situ Working Groups
5. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Civil Servant Research Scientist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
6. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Research Associate position in the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) at CU Boulder supporting NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI)
7. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Space Weather Forecast Applications Scientist Position in the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES)at CU Boulder supporting NOAA's Space Weather Prediction
Center (SWPC)
8. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Job Opportunity/Physical Scientist/ZP-1301-5/ NOAA NESDIS Office of Projects, Planning, and Analysis (OPPA)/Silver Spring, MD
9. ANNOUNCEMENT: Special Issue on Dynamical Processes in Space Plasmas in Applied Sciences Journal
10. ANNOUNCEMENT: Access to Solar Orbiter Low Latency Data
11. ANNOUNCEMENT: New AGU SPA Student Committee - Join us!
12. ANNOUNCEMENT: Interstellar Probe Study Webinar Series - Thursday, September 17, 2020
13. ANNOUNCEMENT: SPA Registration Waivers for Fall AGU Meeting 2020
14. ANNOUNCEMENT: Extension of Heliophysics 2050 Workshop White Paper Deadline (Due September 25, 2020)
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1. MEETING: 3rd Annual Interstellar Probe Exploration Workshop November 17-19, 2020 - Update
The 3rd Annual Interstellar Probe Exploration Workshop scheduled for November 17Ð19, 2020 in Silver Spring, Maryland will not be held in-person as previously planned. The Organizing Committee has watched developments
of the COVID-19 pandemic closely, and in the interest of community safety are making the decision on how to proceed. Updated information will be posted on this website as it becomes available.
The workshop is being organized for heliophysicists, planetary scientists, astrophysicists, and engineers from all over the world. The purpose of the workshop is to gather together and discuss the objectives,
design, and operations for a near-term, pragmatic interstellar probe mission.
The workshop is organized by a team at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory studying such a mission for the Heliophysics Division in NASA's Science Mission Directorate.
Visit the JHU APL Interstellar Probe website for detailed information about the ongoing study: http://interstellarprobe.jhuapl.edu/
IMPORTANT: To be added to the mailing list to receive pertinent information about this workshop and to indicate your interest in participating, please submit an Indication of Interest.
https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/interstellarprobe2020/
#interstellarprobe2020
For more information, contact:
Meeting and Publication Services
USRA/Lunar and Planetary Institute
meetinginfo at hou.usra.edu
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2. MEETING: COSPAR Scientific Assembly, NEW DATES: 28 January - 4 February, 2021.
43rd COSPAR Scientific Assembly will take place on 28 January - 4 February at the International Convention Center in Sydney, Australia. The 2021 Assembly will combine the latest in space research findings
with activities designed to enrich the global space research community - including helping equip our future leaders, and workshopping with space industry - and inspire the next generation of scientists and engineers. You will have the opportunity of a lifetime
to interact directly with everything
that Australia has to offer - our science and innovation, our people, our heritage, and our beautiful environment. The Assembly website is https://www.cospar2020.org/.
IMPORTANT DEADLINES:
Early Bird Registration Deadline 31 October 2020
Speaker Registration Deadline 31 October 2020
Accommodation Booking Deadline 15 December 2020
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3. MEETING: MUAN 2020: Upper Atmospheres and Ionospheres in the Inner Solar System, September 9-11, 2020, New York, New York
This three-day workshop will bring together scientists interested in the general dynamics of, and coupling between, ionized and neutral atmospheric constituents of three key inner Solar System planets: Mars,
Earth, and Venus. Other bodies, such as comets and moons are also welcome. The objective is to embrace comparative studies between different planetary bodies in addition to the usual Mars aeronomy and plasma physics discussions, as this will lead to a better
understanding of the role of upper atmospheres on planetary evolution and habitability at Mars and in the
Solar System.
The main topics for discussion are:
- Planetary aeronomy - past, present and future.
- Thermosphere-ionosphere-magnetosphere-exosphere (TIME) coupling.
- Lower-upper atmosphere connections.
A significant part of the workshop will be devoted to brainstorming and opportunities to discuss different science aspects, and to help establish fruitful collaborations. Our workshop will be hosted by Columbia
University in New York City, with opportunities to present posters or talks. The workshop will be limited to 100 attendees, so to aid us in planning, we encourage all those interested to please indicate your interest here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdVgrQ8cIQx8mOgF5rVV76Re6hh6u1_xwtK4XXhKSpVSOU2_A/viewform
SOC:
Beatriz Sanchez-Cano (University of Leicester) David Andrews (Swedish Institute of Space Physics) Mark Lester (University of Leicester) Robert Lillis (UC Berkeley Space Sciences Laboratory)
Hermann Opgenoorth (Umea University) Dmitri Titov (ESA) Michael J. Way (NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies) Olivier Witasse (ESA)
Email inquiries about this meeting can be directed to Linda Sohl (LOC) at linda.sohl at columbia.edu.
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4. ANNOUNCEMENT: Solar Orbiter In-situ Working Groups
The Solar Orbiter In-situ Working Groups are now ready for you to sign up!
The goals of these community-driven Working Groups are to form collaborations, to avoid overlap in research activities, to make the community aware of ongoing work with Solar Orbiter data, and to guarantee
the delivery on the Solar Orbiter Science Activity Plan (SAP).
Membership in the Working Groups is open for interested researchers on all career levels and without restrictions. We recommend, however, that you only sign up to the Working Groups that you want to actively
participate in.
You can find more detailed information about the Working Groups,
including short summaries of the groups' objectives and the instructions to sign up, on this website that Andrew Dimmock has set up: https://sites.google.com/view/soloiswg/
We also have created a shared Google Calendar with the information about all meetings. You can subscribe to the calendar to stay up to date about the ongoing meetings.
The Working Groups will start their work in early September.
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5. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Civil Servant Research Scientist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
The Energetic Particle Laboratory at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center is looking to hire a scientist with experience in designing, building and analyzing data from instruments that measure ionized and neutral
high-energy particles in the heliosphere and magnetosphere. The laboratory currently has instruments in development for the Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) mission (launch in 2024), several cubesats for Low-Earth Orbit and interplanetary
space, and the Lunar Gateway.
The Energetic Particle Laboratory is in the Heliospheric Science Laboratory (Code 672) of Goddard's Heliophysics Science Division.
This is a US Government Civil Servant position, therefore applicants are required to be either US citizens or currently holding a green card and are expected to have a PhD in a related field and several years
of experience beyond completion of their PhD. Interested individuals should send a current CV to Adam Szabo (adam.szabo at nasa.gov), Code 672 Lab Chief, and Eric Christian (eric.r.christian at nasa.gov), Code 672 Associate Lab Chief and head of the Energetic
Particle Laboratory.
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6. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Research Associate position in the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) at CU Boulder supporting NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI)
The Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) at the University of Colorado at Boulder has an immediate opening for a Research Associate supporting NOAA's National Centers for Environmental
Information (NCEI). This position is for an Energetic Particle Space Scientist in NCEI's Solar and Terrestrial Physics (STP) Group. A team of dedicated scientists within STP works to ensure that current and future space weather sensors on NOAA satellites provide
effective operational products for use by the NOAA National Weather Service (NWS) Space Weather
Prediction Center (SWPC).
STP's overall responsibilities also include providing access to these environmental data by spacecraft engineers and the
scientific community. The Energetic Particle Space Scientist will be primarily responsible for ensuring the quality and availability of data from the Space Environment In-Situ Suite (SEISS), operated on-board
NOAA's Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES)-R series system.
SEISS measures the local charged particle environment across a broad energy range at multiple pitch angles. The GOES-R series is NOAA's newest generation of GOES spacecraft. The first GOES-R satellite, GOES-16,
was launched in November 2016. The fourth and last GOES-R satellite is expected to launch in 2024. SEISS calibration and validation activities are ongoing.
Required:
- This position involves handling export-controlled documents and data, thus only applications from US citizens or permanent residents (green card holders) can be considered.
- If hired, you will need to pass a National Agency Check with Inquiries(NACI, Federal background check).
- Ph.D. in Physical Science, Engineering or similar technical discipline.
- Four years of experience at the post-bachelor's level in satellite sensor design, algorithm development, and/or scientific research with space environmental data.
What We Would Like You to Have:
- Ph.D. in Space Plasma Physics.
- 1-2 years postdoctoral experience working with space plasma
instrumentation and instrument data.
- Familiarity with NOAA's satellite programs, particularly GOES.
- Willingness to pursue independent funding for research.
For additional information and application instructions go to
https://jobs.colorado.edu/jobs/JobDetail?jobId=23539
Please direct questions about this position to Brian Kress (brian.kress at noaa.gov).
* Note, this position was originally posted on 09-Jan-2020, but the hiring process has been on hold due to rapidly changing hiring policy at CU Boulder during the coronavirus pandemic. We are restarting the
search for this position.
*******************
7. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Space Weather Forecast Applications Scientist Position in the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) at CU Boulder supporting NOAA's Space Weather Prediction
Center (SWPC)
The Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) encourages applications to fill a Research Associate position resident at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA)
Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC)! SWPC is the nation's official source of space weather alerts and warnings. SWPC forecasts and products support a wide range of customers, including power grid operators, Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS), aviation,
satellite operators, and emergency managers.
Our Research Associate will work within the SWPC Testbed section of the Space Weather Prediction Center, working with the wider Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR), Space Weather Follow On - L1 (SWFO-L1),
and Compact Coronagraph teams. Specifically, this position will initially support the DSCOVR mission, with the expectation the candidate will take a lead in developing experimental space weather forecasting applications for the benefit of forecasters and customers.
In addition to data from DSCOVR, the successful applicant is encouraged to investigate future missions including the SWFO-L1 and Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) for their use in crafting new space weather applications. Together, these missions
are important to ensuring the highest quality space weather forecasts and it is encouraged that the applications developed using these missions will be used to improve and enhance SWPC?s geomagnetic and radiation storm forecasts. Through this role, the successful
candidate will participate in preparing these missions, ground systems, and forecast products for post-launch, real-time operations!
For Additional Information and to Apply:
https://jobs.colorado.edu/jobs/JobDetail/?jobId=26121
For Direct Questions Regarding the Position,
Please Contact Eric Adamson: eric.adamson at noaa.gov
*******************
8. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Physical Scientist/ZP-1301-5/ NOAA NESDIS Office of Projects, Planning, and Analysis (OPPA)/Silver Spring, MD
Dear Colleagues,
NOAA is seeking a Project Scientist for the Space Weather Follow-On at L1 (SWFO-L1) Project. The SWFO-L1 project has selected a spacecraft and instrument complement and is on schedule for launch in 2024.
It will provide continuity for the critical space weather observations of coronal imaging and in-situ solar wind parameters. The program scientist will be a senior leader of the joint NOAA/NASA flight project with global prominence and impact and have the
primary responsibility to coordinate instrument and algorithm science efforts to ensure effectiveness of the observations to meet NOAA's mission to issue products and services that respond to user needs to protect life and property from the effects of space
weather.
The SWFO-L1 Project Scientist will perform the following duties:
Act as the Project Scientist for National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Space Weather Follow-On (SWFO) mission and advocate for NOAA on space weather issues and policies.
Chair the SWFO Algorithm Working Group and Product Team(s) and oversee operational space weather product definition and development.
Ensure SWFO and future space weather instruments, missions and products fulfill NOAA space weather requirements.
Interface with the user, and science community including, National Weather Service (NWS), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and other stakeholders to ensure NOAA space weather products support
user and stakeholder needs.
Define and oversee verification and validation campaigns for space weather instrument Integration and Test (I&T) as well as Post-launch Test and on-orbit calibration (Cal/Val).
This position will report to NOAA’s Office of Projects, Planning, and Analysis.
The DHA announcement for one Physical Scientist, ZP-1301-5 position has been posted in the link below. The announcement will open for 14 days; it is open from 9/10/2020 and will close on 9/23/2020.
Job Announcement # (DHA): NESDIS-2020-0065
https://www.usajobs.gov/GetJob/ViewDetails/578390000
Please note per NOAA direct-hire rules, the announcement will be open only for 2 weeks and can only be extended if no qualified candidates respond. Please note that we are reposting this position on USAJobs
and strongly encourage all qualified applicants to apply. Payment of relocation incentives may be authorized.
Best, Elsayed
Director, Office of Projects, Planning, and Analysis
NOAA / NESDIS
*******************
9. ANNOUNCEMENT: Special Issue on Dynamical Processes in Space Plasmas in Applied Sciences Journal
From: Georgios Nicolaou
We are happy to announce our special Issue on Dynamical Processes in Space Plasmas in Applied Sciences Journal by mdpi.
https://www.mdpi.com/journal/applsci/special_issues/Dynamical_Processes_Space_Plasmas
We welcome original papers with theoretical, modelling and/or data-analysis research on dynamical mechanisms in collisionless space plasmas. We strongly encourage papers demonstrating new methods, measurement
and analysis techniques to resolve physical processes in space plasmas.
*******************
10. ANNOUNCEMENT: Access to Solar Orbiter Low Latency Data
The Solar Orbiter teams are making public the Low Latency data from the four in-situ instruments (EPD, MAG, RPW, SWA), available via the ESA Solar Orbiter Archive.
Low Latency data are a limited subset of each instrument's data, downlinked in full during every communications pass. They are primarily an operational product, designed to provide situational awareness to
the Solar Orbiter team, while the spacecraft is far from Earth, and it takes several weeks to months for science data to be returned to Earth. Within the team, low latency data will be used to perform high-level instrument health checks, to help choose the
best targets for the high-resolution imagers, and, for some instruments, to help us select the most interesting events to downlink at the best resolution.
These data will be immediately available to the whole community from now on and for the entire duration of the mission. However they should be used with caution: they are not of a sufficient quality to undertake
science analysis and results derived from them should not be submitted for publication. Full science-quality level 2 data products will be released later this year.
More details on how to access these data, together with a list of caveats are provided in this link: https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/solar-orbiter/access-to-solar-orbiter-low-latency-data
For more information, feel free to contact the instruments' Principal Investigators:
EPD (Energetic Particle Detector) PI: Javier Rodr’guez-Pacheco, University of Alcal‡, Spain, fsrodriguez@uah.es
MAG (Magnetometer) PI: Tim Horbury, Imperial College London, UK, t.horbury@imperial.ac.uk
RPW (Radio and Plasma Waves) PI: Milan Maksimovic, LESIA, Observatoire de Paris, France, milan.maksimovic@obspm.fr
SWA (Solar Wind Analyser) PI: Chris Owen, MSSL, University College London, UK, c.owen@ucl.ac.uk
For mission-level questions, please contact the ESA Project Scientists:
Daniel MŸller: daniel.mueller@esa.int
Yannis Zouganelis: yannis.zouganelis@esa.int
For questions about the Solar Orbiter Archive, please contact the Archive Scientist, Pedro Osuna (Pedro.Osuna@sciops.esa.int).
********************
11. ANNOUNCEMENT: New AGU SPA Student Committee - Join us!
Greetings to all students and early career scientists!
Are you interested in making the upcoming Virtual AGU Fall meeting more accessible and inclusive? Do you have ideas about things that the SPA Section could be doing to serve our community in general? Then
come join me in the new AGU SPA student committee!
My name is Gilly, and I am your student representative on the SPA Executive Committee. Last month, the student representatives from all of the AGU sections had a meeting where we talked about what each section
was doing to support their communities: https://docs.google.com/document/d/163sbXaCpzzsy67I0X-wVXckjfw1r1a2Tf1eArI_2U5I/edit
In response to that meeting, our section has decided to form our own SPA Student Committee. This committee will be responsible for communicating the needs of the students at AGU meetings (and throughout the
rest of the year too!) to the executive committee, and will be well positioned to spearhead initiatives that serve our community. And because this is a new committee, there is a lot of room for the role of the committee to evolve to best meet our needs. If
you are interested in volunteering, please fill this brief form (full link below). Open to anyone who wants to improve the student experience at AGU, including high schoolers, undergraduates, grad students, postdocs, and EC scientists. Feel free to email me
directly at chris.gilly@colorado.edu if you have any comments, questions, or concerns.
I hope to hear from you soon!
Chris Gilly (he/him)
AGU SPA Student Representative
PhD Candidate, Heliophysics
University of Colorado Boulder, APS Dept.
Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics
Public Talk Facilitator, Fiske Planetarium
www.gilly.space
Student Rep Meeting Minutes: https://docs.google.com/document/d/163sbXaCpzzsy67I0X-wVXckjfw1r1a2Tf1eArI_2U5I/edit?usp=sharing
Interest in Joining Form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdElI8G3qjZURc9qjpr7whN7qaLQHXhaCbFvb7eGTfeczUXxg/viewform
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12. ANNOUNCEMENT: Interstellar Probe Study Webinar Series - Thursday, September 17, 2020
Please join the Interstellar Probe Study team for another installment of the Interstellar Probe Study Webinar Series on Thursday, September 17th 2020, at noon EDT via Zoom.
Title: Engineering Discussion: Lifetime Study
Panelists
Glen Fountain, Lifetime Study Lead, Interstellar Probe Study, JHUAPL
Clay Smith, Reliability Engineer, Interstellar Probe Study, JHUAPL
Sally Whitley, Reliability Analyst, Interstellar Probe Study, JHUAPL
For an Interstellar Probe mission to succeed it must operate successfully for 50 years. Although some missions have successfully operated for time approximating 50 years (Voyager at 43 years, for example)
none have had such a requirement. To better understand the implications of this 50 year requirement, the Interstellar Probe study initiated a “lifetime study” task. The study team focuses on three areas: spacecraft reliability, maintenance of the necessary
ground infrastructure, and organizing a team that will be able to operate the mission for multiple generations of engineers and scientists. The Lifetime Study team will provide an overview of the work to date, some initial conclusions and the work planned
to provide guidance for those who plan this mission and for other long duration missions now being considered.
Following the presentations there will be a question and answer session.
To watch this webinar please visit the following event page, which has the zoom link.
http://interstellarprobe.jhuapl.edu/Resources/Meetings/agenda.php?id=89
Also, please visit the following link to watch recordings of the previous webinars.
http://interstellarprobe.jhuapl.edu/Resources/Webinar-Series/index.php
Best regards,
The JHUAPL Interstellar Probe Study Team
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13. ANNOUNCEMENT: SPA Registration Waivers for Fall AGU Meeting 2020
Is the registration cost for the Fall AGU meeting a barrier for your participation (or for someone you know)? We are happy to announce several opportunities that could help.
Since the meeting is all virtual and travel isnÕt required, the Fall 2020 meeting provides a unique opportunity for more scientists with limited means to participate. In order to promote more participation,
AGU has reduced or waived registration fees for some students, teachers, and scientists. Registration rates for undergraduates and for K12 educators who are AGU members is $0. Graduate students and retirees are $100. [Please notice that it is the same cost
or cheaper to become a member and pay the member rate than it is to pay the non-member rate!]
AGU is also waiving registration fees for any participant (member or non-member) from Low Income or Lower-Middle Income countries. A list of eligible countries can be found here:
https://datahelpdesk.worldbank.org/knowledgebase/articles/906519#Low_income
The SPA leadership team recognizes that there may be other scientists who do not qualify for AGUÕs registration waivers but would still have difficulty participating due to financial limitations. Therefore
we are accepting applications for registration waivers for participants in need (members and non-members). Priority will be given to first-time attendees and those from Minority Serving Institutions. Anyone is eligible but priority will also be given to graduate
students and early career scientists (<10 beyond PhD).
Applications are currently being accepted for SPA registration waivers. Selections will be made on or before October 15. The application for registration waiver can be found here:
https://forms.gle/WnEaDsgtFJDiurgC7
We encourage you to forward this email and application link to those you believe would benefit from attending the fall AGU meeting an are in need of financial support to do so.
Sincerely,
The SPA leadership team
Christina Cohen
Geoff Reeves
Larry Paxton
Liz MacDonald
Romina Nikoukar
Christina Lee
Ale Pacini
Chris R. Gilly
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14. ANNOUNCEMENT POSTING: Extension of Heliophysics 2050 Workshop White Paper Deadline (new due date: September 25, 2020)
Earlier this year, the Heliophysics 2050 Workshop was moved to April 2021. This workshop is envisioned as an agency-enabled, community-driven event to help the science community better prepare for the next
Solar and Space Physics Decadal Survey. In order to mitigate some of the impact of COVID-19 on the community, the deadline for the submission of white papers to be used for planning the Heliophysics 2050 Workshop was extended to September 11, 2020.
We have received a large number of white papers from the Heliophysics community, and for this, we thank you!
However, we also heard from a number of individuals and organizations that were having difficulty meeting the extended due date. We understand the situation our community is in, but we must balance that against
the schedule of work to prepare for the Heliophysics 2050 Workshop.
In response to the requests we have received, we have decided to leave the white paper submission open while the workshop organization proceeds. White papers may be submitted after the due date (September
11, 2020), with the expectation that no more white papers will be submitted after September 25.
White papers should be submitted via the USRA meeting portal: https://bit.ly/Helio2050
However, we will be organizing the workshop in parallel with these late submissions. While the content of most late white papers should be accommodatable within the program, it is possible that white papers
that are submitted very late or that cover material that is not in-family with other white papers cannot be addressed within the plenary sessions.
If this happens for any late white papers, we would strongly encourage those individuals to come to the workshop prepared to discuss that content during the plenary sessions and to submit abstracts to the
workshop for presentation as posters.
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