Heliosphere News – June 29, 2023
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. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Researcher in Space Physics (outer heliosphere and local interstellar medium) - Space Research Centre PAS (CBK PAN), Warsaw, Poland
2. JOB OPPORTUNITIES: Postdoctoral and Research Scientist positions in Heliophysics Research and Space Plasma Instrumentation at Los Alamos National Laboratory
3. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Tenure-track assistant professor position at the Department of Space Science of the University of Alabama in Huntsville
4. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Researcher in the Department of Space Research at Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio, Texas
5. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Research Associate and/or Senior Research Positions in Space Physics at Princeton University
6. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Position in the Heliophysics Research Group, University of New Hampshire, Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans and Space (EOS), Space Science Center
7. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Associate - Space Sciences Laboratory - UC Berkeley
8. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Researcher in the Solar-Heliospheric Physics Research Group at the University of California Berkeley's Space Sciences Laboratory (UCB/SSL)
9. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Fellow Position in Inner Heliospheric Physics at the Johns Hopkins University (JHU) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, USA
10. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral position in heliophysics (Space Plasma) at FIT
11. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoc Positions at Queen Mary University of London
12. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Program Scientist Positions at NASA HQ
13. MEETING ANNOUNCEMENT: Non-Extensive Statistical Mechanics and Kappa Distributions In Space Plasma Physics and Complexity Science Workshop (W10), July 10-14, 2023 in Chania, Crete, Greece
14. MEETING: Mini-conference 11.06 Collisionless and Weakly Collisional Shocks in Laboratory and Space Plasmas at the 65th Annual Meeting of the APS DPP, Oct. 30-Nov. 3, 2023 in Denver, Colorado
15. MEETING: DASH Meeting Abstract Submission is Open
16. ANNOUNCEMENT: Call for Community Input to LWS Focused Science Topics (due July 21)
17. ANNOUNCEMENT: Heliophysics Town Hall Announcement, July 10, 2023, at 10am EDT
18. ANNOUNCEMENT: Like, Follow and Share IMAP on social media!
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1. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Researcher in Space Physics (outer heliosphere and local interstellar medium) - Space Research Centre PAS (CBK PAN), Warsaw, Poland
Space Research Centre PAS (www.cbkpan.pl/en/)
is seeking a Postdoctoral Researcher who will conduct research on the outer heliosphere and the very local interstellar medium as part of the project entitled “The outer heliosphere and its interstellar surrounding revealed in neutral atom and pickup ion observations”
led by Dr. Pawel Swaczyna. The successful candidate will study interstellar neutral atoms, pickup ions, and energetic neutral atoms by developing related models and comparing their predictions with available observational data from space missions.
The application deadline is July 16, 2023. For more information about the position, required qualifications, and application details, please see https://euraxess.ec.europa.eu/jobs/113111
For questions, please email Dr. Pawel Swaczyna at pswaczyna@cbk.waw.pl.
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2. JOB OPPORTUNITIES: Postdoctoral and Research Scientist positions in Heliophysics Research and Space Plasma Instrumentation at Los Alamos National Laboratory
Los Alamos National Laboratory seeks candidates for postdoctoral and early- to mid-career research scientist positions in space plasma instrumentation for heliospheric and/or magnetospheric missions with the Space Science and
Applications Group (ISR-1). The candidates chosen for these positions will be expected to support the development and calibration of current and next generation space plasma and energetic neutral atom (ENA) instrumentation. It is also expected that candidates
carry out original research addressing the structure and evolution of the heliosphere and/or dynamics of the magnetosphere, through analysis of data from ongoing NASA and/or national security missions. Additional opportunities exist to conduct laboratory-based
research to investigate plasma measurement techniques. The selected candidates will have the opportunity to interact with Laboratory staff engaged in a broad range of observational, computational, and theoretical research in heliophysics. Our scientists lead
or have led experiments on many NASA missions such as IBEX, Van Allen Probes, ACE, Ulysses, TWINS, Mars Odyssey, Cassini, and IMAGE. ISR-1 is currently leading the development of two instruments, IMAP-Hi and SWE, for the upcoming NASA IMAP mission to understand
the Sun’s interaction with the interstellar medium.
Applicants should have a doctoral degree in Space Physics, Physics, Astronomy, Engineering, or appropriate similar fields. Interested postdoctoral candidates should send their applications electronically (https://lanl.jobs/,
posting IRC117467) including a CV, a publication list, and statement of research interests. Interested research scientist candidates should directly contact dreisenfeld at lanl.gov for
further information.
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3. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Tenure-track assistant professor position at the Department of Space Science of the University of Alabama in Huntsville
The Department of Space Science of the University of Alabama in Huntsville is seeking an outstanding scientist and teacher to fill a tenure-track assistant professor position in the field of heliophysics. Areas of particular interest
include solar and interplanetary physics, especially research that supports the new Parker Solar Probe, Solar Orbiter, IMAP, and HelioSwarm missions in which the Department is engaged, particularly in the areas of coronal and solar wind physics. The ideal
candidate will complement existing strengths within the Department while expanding significantly research capabilities and competencies. We are seeking someone who uses theory, and/or modeling, and observations to address these areas of interest. The successful
candidate will teach in accordance with a typical teaching load in the Department, develop at least two new advanced graduate level courses reflecting their research expertise, and will support and mentor graduate students pursuing MSc and PhD degrees and
undergraduate students in summer programs. The successful candidate will have a PhD or equivalent degree in a field appropriate to the job description above and will have and pursue independent research funding.
Applicants must submit a complete CV, a list of publications, a list of awarded research grants, a research statement, a teaching statement, and arrange to have three letters of reference sent by email to pittsa@uah.edu with
the header Faculty Space Physics Search Committee 2023. Applications will remain open until position is filled. More detailed information can be found at https://www.uah.edu/hr/careers/faculty-careers#COS
Inquiries about the position can be directed to Prof. Gary Zank and Ms Antonia Pitts, respectively.
The University of Alabama in Huntsville is an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer of minorities/females/veterans/disabled.
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4. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Researcher in the Department of Space Research at Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio, Texas
The Department of Space Research at Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in San Antonio, Texas is seeking applications for a postdoctoral scientist position to participate in and carry out original research in experimental space
physics and supporting laboratory experiments. SwRI is involved in the development of current missions such as the Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP), TRACERS, PUNCH, Europa Clipper, JUICE, and CuSP. SwRI also leads or contributes to currently
operating missions such as Juno, MMS, PSP, New Horizons, and IBEX.
The successful candidate is expected to support the development, testing, and calibration of energetic neutral atom and plasma instruments to be flown on upcoming heliophysics or planetary missions. The candidate is expected to
publish original research and results in peer-reviewed scientific journals, and present results at scientific meetings, workshops, and conferences. The research will involve interactions with Institute Staff engaged in a broad range of experimental, observational,
and computational research.
The candidate should have a PhD degree in space physics, experimental physics, or directly related physics degree with a GPA of 3.0 or greater. The candidate should have work experience in related experimental physics. The candidate
should have demonstrated the ability to program and utilize software tools such as Simion and Lua, LabView, TRIM, Geant4, IDL, C, Python, or MATLAB.
Interested candidates should apply online at https://resapp.swri.org/ResApp/Job_Details.aspx?JOB_CD=15-01533&JOB_TITLE=POSTDOCTORAL%20RESEARCHER%20-%20SPACECRAFT%20INSTRUMENTATION
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5. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Research Associate and/or Senior Research Positions in Space Physics at Princeton University
The Space Physics Group (see https://spacephysics.princeton.edu/)
in the Department of Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton University, anticipates offering one or more postdoctoral or more senior research positions in the observational study of Solar Energetic Particles (SEPs) and Energetic Neutral Atoms (ENAs).
The Space Physics Group researches many aspects of space physics (aka Heliophysics), with a strong emphasis on experimental and observational space plasma physics. The Group currently leads NASA's Parker Solar Probe (PSP) Integrated
Science Investigation of the Sun (ISOIS) energetic particle instrument suite, the Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) mission and the Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) mission, which will launch in 2025 to explore the details of particle
acceleration and the Sun's interaction with the local interstellar medium.
The successful candidate(s) will play a significant role in the analysis and publication of SEP observations from ISOIS and/or ENA observations from IBEX and must have both significant prior experiences analyzing at least one
of these type(s) of particle data, as well as the proven ability to lead and participate in the rapid development and publication of numerous excellent research articles. A Ph.D. is required in physics, astrophysics, space science, or a closely related field.
Interested persons must apply online at https://puwebp.princeton.edu/AcadHire/apply/application.xhtml?listingId=26909 selecting
Space Physics as the position you are interested in.
For further inquiries, contact spacephysics at princeton.edu
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6. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Position in the Heliophysics Research Group, University of New Hampshire, Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans and Space (EOS), Space Science Center
The Heliophysics research group in the Space Science Center at the University of New Hampshire (UNH) is seeking an exceptional candidate to fill a Postdoctoral position under the general supervision of Prof. Nathan Schwadron.
Working on NASA's Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) Mission, and in collaboration with associated project personnel, the PostDoc will develop new data products for IBEX, study the effects of global heliosphere on the inflow of interstellar neutral atoms
and study the changing radiation environment of the global heliosphere.
The University of New Hampshire is a major research institution, providing comprehensive, high-quality undergraduate and graduate programs (https://www.unh.edu/).
UNH is located in Durham on a 188-acre campus, 60 miles north of Boston and 8 miles from the Atlantic coast, and is convenient to New Hampshire's lakes and mountains. The Department of Physics confers both undergraduate (B.A., B.S.) and graduate (M.S., Ph.D.)
degrees and currently includes 26 faculty members. EOS is the largest research institute at UNH, with more than 275 faculty, staff and students.
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7. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Associate - Space Sciences Laboratory - UC Berkeley
The Space Sciences Laboratory (SSL) at the University of California, Berkeley, seeks applicants for Postdoctoral Associate positions to support NASA Heliophysics and/or Planetary missions via planetary and heliophysics research
and/or hardware development. The specific projects that are hiring include ICON, MAVEN, PADRE, Parker Solar Probe (PSP), HERMES, LuSEE, THEMIS, MMS, Van Allen Probes, Wind and others. Responsibilities may include but are not limited to data analysis, space
plasma or planetary atmosphere research, simulations/software development, and spaceflight hardware systems development, including instruments, power and communications.
For more information about the position, including required qualifications, application materials, and deadlines, and to apply, please go to https://aprecruit.berkeley.edu/JPF03423.
The positions will remain open until filled. For questions, please email Dr. Chadi Salem at salem at ssl.berkeley.edu.
All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age, or protected veteran status.
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8. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Researcher in the Solar-Heliospheric Physics Research Group at the University of California Berkeley’s Space Sciences Laboratory (UCB/SSL)
The Solar and Heliospheric Physics Research Group at the UC Berkeley Space Sciences Laboratory is seeking a candidate to fill one full-time (100%) Postdoctoral position under the general supervision of Dr. Christina Lee. The successful
candidate will collaborate with Dr. Lee and the project team members to investigate the role of magnetic connectivity to interplanetary shocks (e.g., driven by coronal mass ejections, CMEs) in determining the large longitudinal extents of solar energetic particle
(SEPs) events observed from multiple vantage points throughout the inner heliosphere. A combination of analysis of existing in-situ data sets and remote observations and data-driven modeling will be used to carry out the investigation.
The ideal candidate will have skills and/or experience with
- multi-spacecraft data analysis of quiescent solar wind, CME, SIR, and SEP event intervals from in-situ observations (e.g., ACE, GOES, STEREO-A, ACE, PSP, Solar Orbiter, BepiColombo, MAVEN, etc.)
- remote sensing data analysis of multiwavelength solar disk and coronagraph data
- 3D MHD simulations of solar wind and CME propagation using coupled solar corona-solar wind models (e.g., Wang-Sheeley-Arge (WSA) + ENLIL, EUFORIA, Gamera, etc.)
- modeling transport of solar energetic particles
- programming and utilizing software tools in IDL, Matlab, or Python
For more information about the position, including required qualifications, application materials, and deadlines, go to https://aprecruit.berkeley.edu/JPF03705.
The position will remain open until filled. For questions, please email Dr. Christina Lee at clee (at) ssl.berkeley.edu.
All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age, or protected veteran status.
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9. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral Fellow Position in Inner Heliospheric Physics at the Johns Hopkins University (JHU) Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, USA
The JHU/APL Space and Solar Physics Group (SRP) is seeking a Postdoctoral Fellow to conduct basic scientific research in the field of Solar and Space Physics with an emphasis on inner-heliospheric physics and the analysis of particle
data from the ISOIS/EPI-Lo instrument of the Parker Solar Probe mission. The successful candidate will work in an exciting environment, interfacing with experts in comprehensive data analysis and instrument development for a multitude of Solar and Space Physics
missions as well as state-of-the-art modeling of geospace and other space environment systems. The SRP group has a broad and active basic research program that includes data analysis, theory and modeling studies of Earth's magnetosphere and Sun-Earth connections,
planetary magnetospheres throughout the solar system, and heliospheric and solar physics. It also has a significant and long-running history of developing space instrumentation hardware and mission concepts. Current science and instrument participation in
active missions includes ACE, Geotail, Juno, MMS, New Horizons, Parker Solar Probe, Solar Orbiter, STEREO, and Voyager. Future missions in development include Europa Clipper, EZIE, JUICE, and IMAP. In addition, the Group is playing the leading role in the
multi-institutional, cross-disciplinary Center for Geospace Storms, and partners with Our Heliospheric Shield (SHIELD), two of the three NASA DRIVE Science Centers recently selected for Phase II.
The research position focuses on inner-heliospheric physics and the analysis of suprathermal and energetic data from the ISOIS/EPI-Lo instrument of the Parker Solar Probe Mission. The successful candidate would be expected to
publish original research in peer-reviewed journals and team with SRP and other APL Space Exploration Sector staff to pursue external support for continued research and instrument development work. Duties will include: conducting original inner-heliospheric
research and analysis of the ISOIS/EPI-Lo particle data; authoring papers for publication in peer-reviewed journals; preparing for and participating in scientific conferences; and developing innovative scientific research and instrument development efforts
and proposing to competed solicitations. The required qualifications include the following: a PhD in Physics, Electrical Engineering or in a related technical field, or the demonstrated equivalent experience, an in-depth knowledge of space plasma physics,
experience in analysis and scientific interpretation of space physics data, proficiency with advanced technical computing using languages such as Python, IDL, Matlab, or another comparable programming language, and a record of published first author scientific
papers in peer-reviewed journals. Although not required, it is desirable that a candidate has demonstrated understanding of the workings of space particle instruments, and the ability to analyze their performances with computer algorithms and other tools or
previous experience with spaceflight hardware and/or space mission projects.
Please contact Matt Hill for additional information about the exciting science or other aspects of this position (matt.hill at jhuapl.edu).
The complete job posting, including more information about why APL is a great place to work, Equal Opportunity Employment information, and a link for submitting an online application can be found at https://careers.jhuapl.edu/jobs/51892.
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10. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoctoral position in heliophysics (Space Plasma) at FIT:
The department of Aerospace, Physics and Space Sciences (APSS) at the Florida Institute of Technology (FIT) is looking to fill a postdoctoral research position in space plasma physics. The successful candidate will conduct research
at the frontier of solar wind turbulence using theory and/or data analysis, including Parker Solar Probe and Solar Orbiter, and/or high-performance numerical simulations. The initial appointment will be for one year renewable for one more year subject to
satisfactory performance. The successful candidate will have the opportunity to actively participate in future proposal submissions to secure extramural funding, which could result in an extension of their appointment beyond the second year. Required qualifications:
(1) PhD in Physics or closely related area, (2) research experience in the analysis of spacecraft data from the Heliophysics System Observatory (HSO), (3) Basic knowledge of the plasma theory and numerical simulations, (4) familiarity with Python and/or
IDL and other programing languages, and (5) strong written and oral communication skills, and ability to prepare scientific documents to be submitted to peer reviewed journals. Strong familiarity with Linux and other Unix-like platforms and environments
commonly present in most supercomputer facilities is also desirable.
Applicants should e-mail curriculum vitae, list of publications, and contact information for three references to Prof. Sofiane Bourouaine at sbourouaine@fit.edu.
The position will remain open until filled, however, priority consideration will be given to applications received by March 1st, 2023.
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11. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Postdoc Positions at Queen Mary University of London
We are advertising several postdoc positions at Queen Mary University of London to work in the Space & Astrophysical Plasmas group. The available postdoc positions cover spacecraft observations, numerical simulations, plasma theory,
and laboratory experiments in areas of heliospheric physics, magnetospheric physics, fundamental plasma processes, and space weather. Available projects:
Comparing particle acceleration at bow shocks of Venus and Earth, and interplanetary shocks. Contact: Dr Heli Hietala (h.hietala@qmul.ac.uk). Application link and
more information: https://www.qmul.ac.uk/jobs/vacancies/items/8516.html
Role of plasma turbulence in heliophysics, space weather, and lab experiments. Contact: Dr Christopher Chen (christopher.chen@qmul.ac.uk). Application link
and more information: https://www.qmul.ac.uk/jobs/vacancies/items/7718.html
Turbulence as a Controlling Agent in the Inner Heliosphere. Contact: Prof David Burgess (D.Burgess@qmul.ac.uk). Application link and more information: https://www.qmul.ac.uk/jobs/vacancies/items/8056.html
The application deadline for all positions is: 9th July 2023
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12. JOB OPPORTUNITY: Program Scientist Positions at NASA HQ
The Science Mission Directorate (SMD) at NASA Headquarters is seeking candidates to serve as a Program Scientists within multiple organizations. These positions may be located in the Earth Science, Heliophysics, Planetary Science,
Biological and Physical Sciences, and Astrophysics Divisions, the Exploration Science Strategy & Integration Office, Front Office, and/or other SMD program offices. Duties range from overseeing research programs, reviewing proposals, and leading research with
academia and industry.
Title: Program Scientist (AST Science Program Management): Grade: GS-1301-14/15
Major Duties of the position: 1) Plans, directs, and leads the integration of cross functional scientific programs in various technical disciplines. 2) Implements balanced programs across the breadth of a science portfolio within
technological, scientific, budgetary, and programmatic constraints. 3) Oversees research and analysis programs for peer reviews to include the development, solicitation, and evaluating scientific merit proposals. 4) Develops recommendations to management for
selections that integrate peer review and programmatic considerations, initiates and monitors research contracts, grants, and cooperative agreements. 5) Provides innovative and implementable solutions that are strategic and tactical, and in alignment with
the priorities of NASA, and national guidance. 5) Communicates, engages, and builds consensus with multiple stakeholders, including the scientific community, external advisory committees, senior NASA leaders, interagency and international partners, and programs
and projects at NASA Centers. 6) Manages multiple and competing responsibilities using effective time management and organizational skills. 7) Actively promotes diversity and inclusiveness, within NASA appointed teams and committees, and within the science
community..
Application Process: The job announcement will open for applications at https://USAJobs.gov/ on
Thursday, June 22, and will close on Wednesday, June 28. The announcement number will be HQ-23-DE-11986063-DS. This will be a Direct Hire Authority (DHA) announcement through https://www.USAJOBS.gov/,
so it will only be open for 5 workdays. The short period that the announcement is open is due to the type of hiring authority, which streamlines the hiring process and assists with rapidly filling competitive positions. It is not a reflection of the openness
of the position. This competitive announcement will be open to all U.S. Citizens and Status candidates. Advance notice of the vacancy is being provided to allow interested candidates to prepare. In order to apply for this position, you will only need to (i)
submit your resume and (ii) answer the screening questions and supplemental information through USAJOBS.
Simon Plunkett, Program Scientist, Heliophysics Division, Science Mission Directorate, Mary W. Jackson NASA Headquarters, 300 Hidden Figures Way SW, Washington, DC 20546, Office: 202-358-2034, Email: simon.p.plunkett@nasa.gov
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13. MEETING ANNOUNCEMENT: Non-Extensive Statistical Mechanics and Kappa Distributions In Space Plasma Physics and Complexity Science Workshop (W10), July 10-14, 2023 in Chania, Crete, Greece
The Non-Extensive Statistical Mechanics and Kappa Distributions In Space Plasma Physics and Complexity Science Workshop (W10) at the International Conference on Statistical Physics from July 10-14, 2023 in Chania, Crete, Greece
is seeking abstracts until April 13, 2023.
This workshop focuses on understanding the statistical origin of particle distributions throughout geophysical, space, and astrophysical plasmas, from the solar wind and the planetary magnetospheres to the outer heliosphere, the
inner heliosheath, and beyond. Additionally, we seek abstracts using statistical techniques to process the growing volume of measurements, and analysis of faint signals where the statistical nature of the measurements and noise sources is important.
Link for Conference and Abstracts (on left): http://www.sigmaphi.polito.it/
Workshop Description: https://sites.google.com/view/workshop-kappa-distributions-2/
Primary Convener:
George Livadiotis, Princeton University, USA, glivadiotis@princeton.edu
Co-Conveners:
Manfred Leubner, University of Innsbruck, Austria;
Peter Yoon, University of Maryland, USA;
Heather Elliott, Southwest Research Institute, USA, helliott@swri.edu;
Konstantinos Dialynas, Academy of Athens, Greece
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14. MEETING: Mini-conference 11.06 Collisionless and Weakly Collisional Shocks in Laboratory and Space Plasmas at the 65th Annual Meeting of the APS DPP, Oct. 30-Nov. 3, 2023 in Denver, Colorado
Collisionless and Weakly Collisional Shocks in Laboratory and Space Plasmas
Conveners: Nikolai Pogorelov (University of Alabama in Huntsville), Derek Schaeffer (University of California, Los Angeles), and Lynn Wilson III (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)
Collisionless shocks (CSs) are one of the most fundamental, strongly nonlinear phenomena in plasmas. They are ubiquitous in many space physics, astrophysics, and laboratory settings. CS waves are important mechanisms for converting
the dynamic pressure of a supersonic flow into thermal energy and affect the distributions of particles and fields across the universe. Shocks are also frequently associated with plasma oscillations and radio emissions.
We call for papers addressing the wealth of in situ measurements of collisionless and weakly collisional shocks in nature and laboratory. This mini-conference will also address the physical mechanisms that govern the behavior
of charged particles crossing such shocks. The abstracts should be submitted to the sorting category 11.06 at https://engage.aps.org/dpp/meetings/annual-meeting/abstract-submission.
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15. MEETING: DASH Meeting Abstract Submission is Open
We are happy to announce a conference dedicated to software, analysis, and data of the Heliophysics community. The Data, Analysis and Software in Heliophysics (DASH) meeting will provide a unique venue for practitioners to share
ideas, learn about new and emerging trends, and connect with others. We are aiming to avoid the death-by-powerpoint approach to meetings, and we are striving for interactive sessions, with many chances for discussion. In the era of burgeoning open science,
collaboration is becoming a new currency for progress, and we hope for this meeting to become an annual opportunity to enhance our collective knowledge. Missions and small projects alike are becoming more software and data intensive, so this is a good time
to bolster our community and learn from each other. Submissions to the meeting will be captured and archived online as a Zenodo collection.
The meeting is Oct 9-11, 2023 and will be in Laurel, MD USA at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab. It is adjacent to the IHDEA meeting (Oct 12-13, same venue).
Abstract submission is now open:
https://secwww.jhuapl.edu/EventLink/Event/295
Registration will open in July.
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16. ANNOUNCEMENT: Call for Community Input to LWS Focused Science Topics
Anthea Coster (ajc at
haystack.mit.edu) and Sabrina Savage (sabrina.savage at
nasa.gov)
The 2023 executive committee of the NASA Living with a Star (LWS) Program Analysis Group (LPAG) is beginning to develop the next round of input for LWS Focused Science Topics (FSTs) for ROSES 2024 and beyond. The LWS program provides
an essential funding opportunity for Heliophysics, focusing on systems-science and driven by community interests and needs with potential topics ranging from solar dynamo to planetary habitability.
It is vital for the success of the LWS Science program that there be active community engagement in the development of FSTs. We are therefore asking the Heliophysics community to provide input by July 21, 2023 for these topics.
Suggested science topics should be organized around achieving the goals set out in the recently revised Strategic Science Areas (SSAs;
https://lwstrt.gsfc.nasa.gov/strategic-science-areas-ssas). See Key Resources below for more information.
Enter *NEW* FST suggestions by using the following link (on or before July 21, 2023):
https://lwstrt.org/communityinput/input/. View Input and Comment on *Roll-over* FSTs *AND* community input in response to this call (on or before July 21, 2023) at:
https://lwstrt.org/communityinput/viewinput/2023/
All FSTs suggested by the community prior to and during 2020 that were not selected by NASA for the ROSES 2021 – 2023 LWS science calls will also be reviewed by the LPAG executive committee. Community input regarding updates to
those topics is welcome through the same View Input and Comment page above.
For reference, the full list of topics that were developed from the last set of community input on FSTs by the previous LPAG committee in 2020 are available in the final report of that committee at:
https://lwstrt.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/docs/lpag/LPAG_2020_Report.pdf We greatly look forward to your input and to continuing on the path of innovation and scientific exploration in the LWS program.
On behalf of the LPAG Executive Committee: Anthea Coster, Sabrina Savage, Ian Cohen, Chuanfei Dong, Heather Elliott, Fan Guo, Thomas Immel, Robert McCoy, Ryan McGranaghan, Alexei Pevtsov, Olga Verkhoglyadova, Angelos Vourlidas,
Shasha Zou
LPAG,
https://lwstrt.gsfc.nasa.gov/lpag
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17. ANNOUNCEMENT: Heliophysics Town Hall Announcement, July 10, 2023, at 10am EDT
NASA’s Heliophysics Division invites you to participate in the second Heliophysics Town Hall of 2023. This one-hour community meeting will be held on Monday, July 10, 2023, at 10am EDT.
The Heliophysics Town Hall will start with a division update from Peg Luce. It will include discussions on current activities of interest to the community and an open question and answer session.
The update and discussions include but are not limited to the Heliophysics budget, Mission updates, the Heliophysics Big Year, and a Research and Analysis (R&A) update.
Members of the Heliophysics community, academia, and the public are invited to participate by joining at the link below.
Join from the webinar link |
https://nasaenterprise.webex.com/nasaenterprise/j.php?MTID=m0c9f59308a4f818db92d772c2a02dadf |
Join by the webinar number |
Webinar number (access code): 2760 534 3422 |
Webinar password: XFaf43m5nJ* (93234365 from phones and video systems) |
Join by phone |
+1-929-251-9612 USA Toll 2 +1-415-527-5035 US Toll |
Access code: 276 053 43422 |
Individuals may submit questions before and during the town hall and view and up-vote submitted questions using the link below.
NASA Heliophysics Community
Town Hall - NASA (cnf.io)
If you have any questions about the virtual town hall meeting, please contact Abby Conners at
abigail.c.conners@nasa.gov. The information in this announcement, along with presentation materials will be posted on SMD’s Community Town Hall Meetings.
https://science.nasa.gov/researchers/virtual-townhall
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18. ANNOUNCEMENT: Like, Follow and Share IMAP on social media!
The IMAP Team invites you to follow the IMAP Story on social media.
Tell your family, friends and neighbors!
Facebook
Instagram
@IMAPSpaceMission
Help us grow our audience: Like, Follow and Share!
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