From david.cooke at spaceforce.mil Thu Dec 1 16:12:13 2022 From: david.cooke at spaceforce.mil (COOKE, DAVID L DR-04 USSF AFMC AFRL/RVBX) Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2022 23:12:13 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: FW: New civilian positions/opportunities for RVBX In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Friends, We have 3 openings coming up. Please pass on to any who might be interested. Note the short fuse to apply. Start date would presumably be more comfortable. These are open for job levels: DR2( PhD or Postdoc; $80-124K), DR3( PhD and/or experience) through DR4 (Sr. leader AND researcher; $140-170K) Let me know if you have problems with the links or any other questions. david From: HUSSEY, TYLER B Capt USAF AFMC AFRL/RVBX Sent: Thursday, December 1, 2022 2:50 PM To: AFRL/RVBX All Distro List Subject: New civilian positions/opportunities for RVBX RVBX, We have 3 new positions that just opened up, and are currently closing on 16 Dec. The position is available to current AFRL employees and external applicants. Feel free to send the links below to anyone you think may be interested. Let me know if you have someone in mind for a position, internal endorsements can go a long way in vetting applicants. Systems and Experimentation Engineer: AFRL Job Board: https://airforcestem.recsolu.com/jobs/xfzx1YecV7oFm4BN8wSV6Q?job_board_id=g193rQ-SUdupijEbTiPUvw Red Rover: https://usaf.dps.mil/sites/RDRV/Lists/RDRV%20News/DispForm.aspx?ID=3930&ContentTypeId=0x010400FE13B9D457F6B74C929C1A E30361D76E Thermosphere-Ionosphere Modeling/Experimentation Systems Lead AFRL Job Board: https://airforcestem.recsolu.com/jobs/cwa5rJyBuezYDMkYf9trhw?job_board_id=g193rQ-SUdupijEbTiPUvw Red Rover: https://usaf.dps.mil/sites/RDRV/Lists/RDRV%20News/DispForm.aspx?ID=3931&ContentTypeId=0x010400FE13B9D457F6B74C929C1A E30361D76E Geospace-Cislunar Environment Scientist AFRL Job Board: https://airforcestem.recsolu.com/jobs/ANlJcdUHz_r6Mnq3LJKwRg?job_board_id=g193rQ-SUdupijEbTiPUvw Red Rover: https://usaf.dps.mil/sites/RDRV/Lists/RDRV%20News/DispForm.aspx?ID=3932&ContentTypeId=0x010400FE13B9D457F6B74C929C1A E30361D76E V/R Tyler TYLER "Uncle" HUSSEY, CAPT, USAF Chief, Geospace Env Impacts & Applications Branch Air Force Research Laboratory DSN 263-6364 // Comm 505-853-6364 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: smime.p7s Type: application/pkcs7-signature Size: 6638 bytes Desc: not available URL: From john.p.mccormack at nasa.gov Fri Dec 2 07:39:26 2022 From: john.p.mccormack at nasa.gov (McCormack, John (HQ-DJ000)) Date: Fri, 2 Dec 2022 14:39:26 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: NASA LWS Town Hall at Fall 2022 AGU Message-ID: <0A1E9392-4C49-4097-9030-0324FE00A8A8@contoso.com> The NASA Living With a Star (LWS) Town Hall at the Fall 2022 AGU meeting in Chicago will be held Monday December 12 at 6:30-7:30pm Central in McCormick Place S102ab. The session number is TH15A in the AGU program. The town hall is an opportunity for the community to hear updates on the program status and to participate in an open discussion of the LWS program with representatives from the Heliophysics Division at NASA Headquarters. The event will include a report from program staff on the status of LWS missions, the annual ROSES LWS Science program element, and announcement of new Focused Science Topics to be solicited in ROSES-2023. There will be ample opportunity for questions and open discussion with LWS program staff. Please join us! _____________________ John McCormack, PhD Program Scientist Heliophysics Division, Science Mission Directorate Mary W. Jackson NASA HQ Building 300 Hidden Figures Way SW, Washington, DC 20546 john.p.mccormack at nasa.gov mobile: (202) 422-2796 [A picture containing logo Description automatically generated] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 24169 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: From ryan.mcgranaghan at gmail.com Fri Dec 2 08:32:14 2022 From: ryan.mcgranaghan at gmail.com (Ryan McGranaghan (he/him)) Date: Fri, 2 Dec 2022 10:32:14 -0500 Subject: CEDAR email: An uncommon AGU event for the CEDAR community Message-ID: Good day We hope this email finds you well, all things considered, and enjoying the Fall/Winter transition. Please join us for an unexampled Town Hall event to be held at the very outset of the American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting (Monday November 12 from 6:30-7:30 PM CT) online and virtually everywhere: ?Data and Open Science for Capable Communities and Scientific Discovery.? For scientific communities to embrace and robustly and responsibly practice data science, including AI/ML, they require transdisciplinary communities of practice (CoP). We will explore developing, maintaining, and amplifying these CoPs by hearing from frontier thinkers that across different contexts (e.g., different science domains, different sectors of society). Please join us to help cultivate a rich discussion, learn from thought-leaders, and broaden your own network. More details are below. Warm Regards, Ryan McGranaghan on behalf of The NASA Center for HelioAnalytics (Chris Bard, John Dorelli, Michael Kirk, Ayris Narock, and Barbara Thompson); and in cooperation with an entire network of data and open science communities. ?--------- In many ways, open science is defining the future of Earth and Space Science (indeed much more broadly, science and knowledge creation). Many places have pioneered these conversations for years (e.g., the Center for Open Science and the National Academy of Sciences ) and now there are exciting new initiatives like NASA?s Transformation to Open Science . Open science raises important questions for all fields of inquiry. We will use a premier platform during the largest annual gathering of Earth and Space Scientists, the American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, to hold a discussion around one of the central ideas: for scientific communities to embrace and robustly and responsibly practice data science, including AI/ML, they require transdisciplinary communities of practice. We are planning a town hall event to be held at the very outset of the conference (Data and Open Science for Capable Communities and Scientific Discovery ) that will consist of a panel and community exchange to discuss the technical and cultural challenges to using data science robustly and responsibly for scientific discovery. ?--------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From maute at ucar.edu Fri Dec 2 10:47:32 2022 From: maute at ucar.edu (Astrid Maute) Date: Fri, 2 Dec 2022 10:47:32 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: Research Experience for Undergraduates: Boulder Solar REU Program OPEN Message-ID: *For undergraduate students/ advisors of undergraduates* *Research Experience for Undergraduates:* *Boulder Solar REU Program* The application for the 2023 BSA REU summer program is now open! See the link button below. *Applications must be submitted by February 1st, 2023. * *Boulder Solar REU Program* The University of Colorado Boulder invites undergraduates to apply for a paid summer research experience for highly motivated students interested in solar and space physics. Students will come to Boulder, Colorado for 10 weeks to work on a research project with a mentor. The topic areas span the field of solar and space physics, from instrument hardware to data analysis to modeling of the Sun, the Sun-Earth system, the near-Earth environment, or the heliosphere. Please read through our FAQs for further details at https://lasp.colorado.edu/home/information/undergraduates/reu/ For more information, email: bouldersolarreu at lasp.colorado.edu *APPLY HERE TO THE 2023 REU PROGRAM* https://cuboulder.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_cTSS6bT4X40vPts Successful applicants will work with scientist mentors at one of these Boulder institutes: ? Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) ? National Solar Observatory (NSO) ? High Altitude Observatory (HAO) ? NOAA?s Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC) ? Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) ? Northwest Research Associates (NWRA) ? Space Science Institute (SSI) ? Orion Space Solutions The program begins with a week-long summer school in solar and space physics and continues with seminars and discussions while you work at one of the participating laboratories, providing peer collaboration opportunities. At the end of the summer, you will present your research findings. Please read through our FAQs for further details at https://lasp.colorado.edu/home/information/undergraduates/reu/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From maute at ucar.edu Fri Dec 2 13:35:24 2022 From: maute at ucar.edu (Astrid Maute) Date: Fri, 2 Dec 2022 13:35:24 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: New civilian positions/opportunities for RVBX - additional information Message-ID: >From David Cook additional information to the earlier posting about open positions. This is also explained in the website, but I can help. *These jobs are for US citizens only,* *and you must be able to qualify for a Secret clearance,* which is not too hard. The basic principle for a clearance is nothing undisclosed that could be a source for compromise. I have heard of folks with a lot to disclose that had a long process, but they ultimately succeed. For instance, a naturalized citizen from a number of "adversary" countries, Iran, China, with extended families back home can expect a long slog of it. I recall a recent story of a US person with a green card spouse. They ultimately succeeded, but it took a while. Turns out that we don't have many OSI agents in Iran to conduct the interviews. *For the deadline, you just submit a resume. It will be extended if we don't get folks we feel fit the job.* We have 3 openings coming up. Please pass on to any who might be interested. Note the short fuse to apply. Start date would presumably be more comfortable. These are open for job levels: DR2( PhD or Postdoc; $80-124K), DR3( PhD and/or experience) through DR4 (Sr. leader AND researcher; $140-170K) Let me know if you have problems with the links or any other questions. david cook From: HUSSEY, TYLER B Capt USAF AFMC AFRL/RVBX < tyler.hussey.1 at spaceforce.mil> *We have 3 new positions that just opened up, and are currently closing on 16 Dec.* The position is available to current AFRL employees and external applicants. Feel free to send the links below to anyone you think may be interested. Let me know if you have someone in mind for a position, internal endorsements can go a long way in vetting applicants. *Systems and Experimentation Engineer:* AFRL Job Board: https://airforcestem.recsolu.com/jobs/xfzx1YecV7oFm4BN8wSV6Q?job_board_id=g193rQ-SUdupijEbTiPUvw Red Rover: https://usaf.dps.mil/sites/RDRV/Lists/RDRV%20News/DispForm.aspx?ID=3930&ContentTypeId=0x010400FE13B9D457F6B74C929C1A E30361D76E < https://usaf.dps.mil/sites/RDRV/Lists/RDRV%20News/DispForm.aspx?ID=3930&ContentTypeId=0x010400FE13B9D457F6B74C929C1 AE30361D76E> *Thermosphere-Ionosphere Modeling/Experimentation Systems Lead* AFRL Job Board: https://airforcestem.recsolu.com/jobs/cwa5rJyBuezYDMkYf9trhw?job_board_id=g193rQ-SUdupijEbTiPUvw Red Rover: https://usaf.dps.mil/sites/RDRV/Lists/RDRV%20News/DispForm.aspx?ID=3931&ContentTypeId=0x010400FE13B9D457F6B74C929C1A E30361D76E < https://usaf.dps.mil/sites/RDRV/Lists/RDRV%20News/DispForm.aspx?ID=3931&ContentTypeId=0x010400FE13B9D457F6B74C929C1 AE30361D76E> *Geospace-Cislunar Environment Scientist* AFRL Job Board*:* https://airforcestem.recsolu.com/jobs/ANlJcdUHz_r6Mnq3LJKwRg?job_board_id=g193rQ-SUdupijEbTiPUvw Red Rover: https://usaf.dps.mil/sites/RDRV/Lists/RDRV%20News/DispForm.aspx?ID=3932&ContentTypeId=0x010400FE13B9D457F6B74C929C1A E30361D76E < https://usaf.dps.mil/sites/RDRV/Lists/RDRV%20News/DispForm.aspx?ID=3932&ContentTypeId=0x010400FE13B9D457F6B74C929C1 AE30361D76E> V/R Tyler TYLER "Uncle" HUSSEY, CAPT, USAF Chief, Geospace Env Impacts & Applications Branch Air Force Research Laboratory DSN 263-6364 // Comm 505-853-6364 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From douglas.e.rowland at nasa.gov Mon Dec 5 11:17:25 2022 From: douglas.e.rowland at nasa.gov (Rowland, Douglas (GSFC-6750)) Date: Mon, 5 Dec 2022 18:17:25 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Engaging with GDC at AGU -- GDC Town Hall Thursday Dec 15 1245-1345 In-Reply-To: <8A199DDF-8AC0-4122-8F6E-39A98AF6C3CF@contoso.com> References: <8A199DDF-8AC0-4122-8F6E-39A98AF6C3CF@contoso.com> Message-ID: <70F52B70-CCA3-4EC3-A2F1-A0593EF1C25F@nasa.gov> NASA?s Geospace Dynamics Constellation (GDC) mission is a Living With a Star mission designed to to provide the first multipoint measurements of the global ionosphere-thermosphere response to high latitude magnetospheric energy inputs, and the processes that redistribute mass, momentum, and energy from the high latitudes throughout the globe. GDC is currently expected to launch by the end of the decade, and will consist of six identically-instrumented spacecraft in 350-400 km altitude circular orbits with inclinations near 80-82 degrees. The six orbit planes will have different inclinations so that they precess differentially, allowing the constellation to scan a range of latitudinal/longitudinal scales over its three-year primary mission. GDC is currently in Phase A, and NASA HQ has selected three Interdisciplinary Science teams (IDS) and three science investigations/instruments: AETHER (plasma density and electron temperature), CAPE (?auroral? energetic ion and electron populations), and MoSAIC (neutral and ionized gas wind/drift, density, temperature, and chemical composition). NASA HQ is expected to wrap up the final two instrument selections in the near term (magnetometer and thermal plasma instrument). Each GDC spacecraft will transmit a low-latency ?space weather? data stream that will be of high value to space weather users and operators. At the upcoming AGU meeting, there are a number of opportunities to engage with GDC, and we welcome discussions with the science community. A great chance to engage is at the GDC Town Hall (Thursday, 1245-1345 Central, McCormick S103ab). This is an open meeting focused on providing status updates on plans for the Geospace Dynamics Constellation (GDC) mission, NASA?s next Living With a Star mission. In addition to the status updates, this Town Hall will include some community discussion and Q&A about the current status and future plans for the mission. Of particular interest are 1) avenues by which GDC observations could be leveraged to serve as a strategic hub for other projects; 2) ways to leverage GDC?s measurements to support R2O activities that can support National Space Weather goals; 3) community plans for ground-based observations that could work in concert with GDC to produce unique science. Other opportunities to engage with GDC include (listed are sessions where GDC material will be presented / discussed, but of course there are a large number of additional sessions about science topics of high relevance to GDC): 1. (Sunday Dec 11, 330-5 PM Central, Hilton Chicago Hotel 720 S Michigan Avenue) At the mini-GEM TRACERS session there will be a short GDC presentation describing the mission and how it is complementary to TRACERS 2. (Monday Dec 12, 9-1030 AM Central, McCormick Place S401cd) Session SA12A ? Leveraging Multi-point and Multi-Source Observations to Advance Frontier ITM Science (oral session) 3. (Monday Dec 12, 630-730 PM Central, McCormick Place S102ab) Session TH15A -- The Living With a Star Town Hall 4. (Tuesday Dec 13, 1035-1050 AM Central, Hall A, NASA Booth 1937, South / Level 3) Hyperwall presentation ?GDC: A Mission to Explore the Heart of Geospace? 5. (Tuesday Dec 13, 1345-1445, online) SA24B: online posters for Leveraging Multi-point and Multi-Source Observations to Advance Frontier ITM Science 6. (Tuesday Dec 13, 1445-1815, Poster Hall-A) SA25C: posters for Leveraging Multi-point and Multi-Source Observations to Advance Frontier ITM Science ? this will include a large number of GDC posters describing instruments, mission, and some science that will be adjacent ? great time to have detailed discussions 7. (Wednesday Dec 14, 9-1030 AM Central, McCormick Place S401cd) Session SA32A -- Distributed Auroral Measurements and Heterogeneous Data-Driven Physics-Based Simulations for Ionospheric System Science III (oral session) 8. (Wednesday Dec 14, 9 AM-1230 PM Central, Poster Hall-A) Session SA32D -- In particular poster SA32D-1693, ?Supporting Space Weather with the Geospace Dynamics Constellation? (by K. Garcia-Sage et al.) 9. (Thursday Dec 15, 1245-1345 Central, McCormick Place S103ab) Session TH43J ? GDC Townhall ? one hour of GDC status update and open Q&A See you at AGU! On behalf of GDC and the Science Team, Doug Rowland, GDC Project Scientist (douglas.e.rowland at nasa.gov) Katherine Garcia-Sage, GDC Deputy Project Scientist Larry Kepko, GDC Deputy Project Scientist -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From vania at lanl.gov Mon Dec 5 13:05:22 2022 From: vania at lanl.gov (Vania Jordanova) Date: Mon, 5 Dec 2022 13:05:22 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: URSI GASS 2023 Call for Papers - Commission H Session H02 Message-ID: <7c06ea20-b8ba-5024-3482-4c10e9eded01@lanl.gov> Dear colleagues, Next URSI General Assembly & Symposium 2023 (https://www.ursi-gass2023.jp/ ) will take place in Sapporo (Japan), August 19-26, 2023.For information on convened sessions (conveners and session descriptions), please visit: https://cloud.ilabt.imec.be/index.php/s/6jp5tnASX5DbY2n. The deadline for abstract submission is 25 January 2023, through this website: https://www.eventure-online.com/eventure/login.form?A1c4fbc04-5ebf-4a04-a174-0447a681f5d9. Please consider submitting an abstract to the URSI Commission H Session H02 ?Wave-particle interactions and radiation belt dynamics?. Session H02 Description: ?In the collisionless magnetospheric environment, plasma waves are crucial for the rapid storm-time enhancements in the radiation belts, as well as abrupt dropouts and gradual rebuilding of the belts, in combination with radial transport. However, major uncertainties remain on the spatial distribution, propagation, and spectral properties of key plasma waves in the inner magnetosphere and their feedback on energetic particle dynamics. Improved knowledge on the inclusion of nonlinear wave-particle interactions and the role of cold and hot plasma in the wave growth and propagation are needed. This session invites studies that advance our current understanding of wave-particle interactions and their role in radiation belt dynamics from observational, theoretical, and numerical points of view. We especially welcome investigations related to the development of new methods and mission concepts, as well as those that can gain insights on the global dynamics from multi-spacecraft and ground-based network observations.? If you need any complementary information, do not hesitate to contact us. Vania Jordanova, David Hartley, and Yoshizumi Miyoshi Session H02 Conveners -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr. Vania K. Jordanova Tel: +1 505 667 9908 Space Science and Applications, MS B241 Fax: +1 505 665 7395 Los Alamos National Laboratory, PO Box 1663 E-mail:vania at lanl.gov Los Alamos, NM, 87545, USA (/pronouns: she/her/hers/) CORRESPONDENCE/Technical Data or Software Publicly Available ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From daniel.billett at usask.ca Mon Dec 5 14:29:20 2022 From: daniel.billett at usask.ca (Billett, Daniel) Date: Mon, 5 Dec 2022 21:29:20 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: DASP Workshop 2023 Call for Abstracts Message-ID: <3CC35F7D-8D42-49D8-9076-0470650C894A@usask.ca> Hi all, The 2023 Canadian Association of Physicists (CAP) Division of Atmospheric and Space Physics (DASP) Workshop will be hosted by the Canadian Space Agency on the week of February 21-24, 2023. In anticipation of the event, abstract submission is now open. Anyone interested in presenting at the 2023 DASP Workshop should submit their abstract information at the following link prior to Midnight Eastern Time on January 20th, 2023. https://forms.gle/TS2v9eJwgpb1MKRb7 More information regarding Workshop travel, registration, and other DASP-related events will be made available in mid-December; however, do note that this will be an in-person meeting. Also, this year will see the return of the DASP Student Workshop, which will be held on February 20th, 2023. If you have any questions about the workshops, please don?t hesitate to get in touch at dasp.dpae at gmail.com. DASP Executive David Themens Daniel Billett Meghan Gillies Victoria Foss -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hyunju.k.connor at nasa.gov Mon Dec 5 15:58:11 2022 From: hyunju.k.connor at nasa.gov (Connor, Hyunju K. (GSFC-6730)) Date: Mon, 5 Dec 2022 22:58:11 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: TRACERS session during a mini-GEM workshop Message-ID: <884CEC81-9B14-4D73-B73A-CE4C23E40FD5@nasa.gov> Dear CEDAR colleagues, We?d like to invite you to a special mini-GEM session on the upcoming TRACERS mission. Our session will be held at the Williford C room, Hilton Chicago Hotel (720 South Michigan Avenue) during 15:30 ? 17:00 on Dec 11, Sunday before the AGU fall meeting. The goal of this session is to find strong science rationale with CEDAR and GEM scientists so that TRACERS can expand the high-resolution data collection region to auroral zone and low-latitude/equatorial ionosphere. Currently, TRACRES will observe only the northern cusp. Your input is highly valuable! Here is a tentative session schedule. 1. Introduction to TRACERS mission - Craig Kletzing (15min) 2. TRACERS potential data collection in low-latitude/equatorial ionosphere and aurora zone - John Dorelli/Steve Fuselier (15-20min) 3. GOLD mission and science investigations with TRACERS - Richard Easters & Wenbin Wang (15min) 4. GDC mission and science investigations with TRACERS - Doug Rowland (15min) 5. Discussion ? inputs from CEDAR and GEM scientists on science with expanded TRACERS dataset (25-30min) Please visit the following link to find the mini-GEM schedule, hotel floor map, and online meeting links for virtual attendants. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vRQX2u2UJkqRi8w3hk2KhSduS-3mok0E6O9OYZLY6ySdkLG5sh7efeXdABJq0_x8pu5tox0n0ccbFt3/pubhtml You can register the mini-GEM workshop for free using the following link. It takes less than a minute. https://gemworkshop.org/pages/miniRegistration.php Below is the TRACERS session abstract. === The Tandem Reconnection And Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance Satellites (TRACERS) mission is the NASA Heliophysics Explorer mission with expected launch in 2024. The overarching mission goal is connecting the magnetospheric cusp to the magnetopause ? discovering how spatial or temporal variations in magnetic reconnection drive cusp dynamics. The TRACERS mission consists of two identically instrumented satellites in the same low-Earth, sun-synchronous orbit with the spacecraft separated by 10-120 s along the orbital track. TRACERS makes field and particle observations in the northern cusp. Its instrumentation includes ion and electron spectrometers, DC electric and magnetic field and AC wave measurements. The TRACERS team currently considers expanding its data collection area from the northern cusp to a global ionosphere (especially near the equator and the auroral region), and thus supports the upper atmosphere research. In this session, we will introduce mission details and discuss potential science opportunities of TRACERS with the GEM and CEDAR communities. === Thank you very much, Hyunju Connor, John Dorelli, Li-jen Chen, Reiner Friedel, and Craig Kletzing --------------------------------------------------------------- Hyunju Kim Connor (she/her/hers) Research Astrophysicist Geospace Physics Laboratory, Code 673 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, USA Hyunju.k.connor at nasa.gov --------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From thuang at nsf.gov Tue Dec 6 07:35:55 2022 From: thuang at nsf.gov (Huang, Tai-Yin) Date: Tue, 6 Dec 2022 14:35:55 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: FW: NSF/AGS Update - Significantly revised Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) solicitation released In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: From: AS Email List On Behalf Of Anderson, Nicholas F. Sent: Monday, November 21, 2022 4:02 PM To: AS-AGS at LISTSERV.NSF.GOV Subject: NSF/AGS Update - Significantly revised Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) solicitation released Colleagues, This is a quick note to let you know that the new Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) solicitation has been released. While the full solicitation text is not available for another day or two, the high-level summary and updates are. There are several very significant changes to the solicitation: * Per the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act, cost sharing requirements for new awards in the MRI Program are waived for a period of 5 years beginning with the FY 2023 MRI competition. * Correspondingly, the Track request limits have changed, with Track 1 proposals requesting from $100,000 to less than $1,400,000 and Track 2 from $1,400,000 to $4,000,000. * Also per the CHIPS and Science Act, a third track has been added to specifically encourage the purchase, installation, operation, and maintenance of equipment and instrumentation to conserve or reduce the consumption of helium. Track 3 proposals can range from $100,000 to $4,000,000. * Institutional limits remain, and are as follows: Two Track 1 proposals, One Track 2 proposal, and One Track 3 proposal. * The proposal window for the 2023 solicitation is January 16th to February 21st. After the upcoming proposal window, the MRI submission period will shift to the Fall. The Fall 2023 window will run from October 16th to November 15th. If you have questions about the solicitation or MRI in general, please feel free to contact Nick Anderson (nanderso at nsf.gov). Thank you. Best regards, Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences Directorate for Geosciences National Science Foundation ######################################################################## To unsubscribe, send an email to: AS-AGS-signoff-request at LISTSERV.NSF.GOV -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Rebecca.L.Bishop at aero.org Tue Dec 6 08:27:36 2022 From: Rebecca.L.Bishop at aero.org (Rebecca L Bishop) Date: Tue, 6 Dec 2022 15:27:36 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: AGU Monday Townhall: The Space Weather Advisory Group (SWAG) User Needs Survey. Message-ID: Please join us on Monday, December 12, 2022, at 6:30-7:30 pm CST at McCormick Place room S102cd for the Town Hall meeting: TH15E: The Space Weather Advisory Group (SWAG) User Needs Survey. The Promoting Research and Observations of Space Weather to Improve the Forecasting of Tomorrow (PROSWIFT) Act established the Space Weather Advisory Group (SWAG). The SWAG is directed to inform the interests and work of the White House Space Weather Operations, Research, and Mitigation (SWORM) subcommittee and conduct a comprehensive User Needs survey for space weather products. The survey?s goal is to identify the space weather research, observations, forecasting, prediction, and modeling advances required to improve space weather products. This Town Hall will provide a summary of the planned User Needs survey including the user sectors of focus, the survey schedule, and baseline questions. The four user sectors to be examined in the survey?s first year and discussed at the Town Hall include: 1) Global Navigation Satellite System (e.g., GPS), 2) Space Situational Awareness/Space Traffic Management-Coordination, 3) Human Space Flight, and 4) Research. Dr. Tamara Dickinson SWAG Chair ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rebecca L. Bishop, Ph.D Principal Scientist Phone: 310-336-1750 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Ian.Cohen at jhuapl.edu Tue Dec 6 14:42:18 2022 From: Ian.Cohen at jhuapl.edu (Cohen, Ian J.) Date: Tue, 6 Dec 2022 21:42:18 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Three Atmospheric/Ionospheric Postdoc Positions at JHU/APL Message-ID: The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) is searching for applicants to three (3) potential postdoctoral positions to conduct basic scientific research in the field of space physics and aeronomy. The positions are specifically focusing on 1) upper atmospheric UV remote sensing, 2) upper atmospheric RF remote sensing, and 3) upper atmospheric data analysis. 1. Upper atmospheric UV remote sensing - focusing on analysis of ground- and/or space-based UV remote sensing datasets and the design, development, and testing of novel future UV remote sensing instrumentation 2. Upper atmospheric RF remote sensing - focusing on analysis of ground- and/or space-based RF remote sensing datasets and the design, development, and testing of novel future UV remote sensing instrumentation 3. Upper atmospheric data analysis - including numerical analysis of ground and/or space-based datasets, preferably leveraging data assimilation and/or machine learning techniques For further details please contact Ian Cohen (Ian.Cohen at jhuapl.edu). Interested applicants can submit their applications online at the links above. Cheers, Ian Cohen ?????????? Ian J. Cohen, Ph.D. (he/him/his) Space Physicist The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory 11100 Johns Hopkins Road, MS200-W254 Laurel, MD 20723 Office: 200-E278 Email: ian.cohen at jhuapl.edu Office Phone: 240-228-1637 Cell Phone: 240-584-7261 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Ian.Cohen at jhuapl.edu Tue Dec 6 15:08:45 2022 From: Ian.Cohen at jhuapl.edu (Cohen, Ian J.) Date: Tue, 6 Dec 2022 22:08:45 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: {{CORRECTED}} Three Atmospheric/Ionospheric Postdoc Positions at JHU/APL Message-ID: <1ABA3070-B785-4EFF-8939-846DFF0D14B4@contoso.com> <> The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) is searching for applicants to three (3) potential postdoctoral positions to conduct basic scientific research in the field of space physics and aeronomy. The positions are specifically focusing on 1) upper atmospheric UV remote sensing, 2) upper atmospheric RF remote sensing, and 3) upper atmospheric data analysis. 1. Upper atmospheric UV remote sensing - focusing on analysis of ground- and/or space-based UV remote sensing datasets and the design, development, and testing of novel future UV remote sensing instrumentation 2. Upper atmospheric RF remote sensing - focusing on analysis of ground- and/or space-based RF remote sensing datasets and the design, development, and testing of novel future UV remote sensing instrumentation 3. Upper atmospheric data analysis - including numerical analysis of ground and/or space-based datasets, preferably leveraging data assimilation and/or machine learning techniques For further details please contact Ian Cohen (Ian.Cohen at jhuapl.edu). Interested applicants can submit their applications online at the links above. Cheers, Ian Cohen ?????????? Ian J. Cohen, Ph.D. (he/him/his) Space Physicist The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory 11100 Johns Hopkins Road, MS200-W254 Laurel, MD 20723 Office: 200-E278 Email: ian.cohen at jhuapl.edu Office Phone: 240-228-1637 Cell Phone: 240-584-7261 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From john.p.mccormack at nasa.gov Wed Dec 7 07:16:08 2022 From: john.p.mccormack at nasa.gov (McCormack, John (HQ-DJ000)) Date: Wed, 7 Dec 2022 14:16:08 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: UPDATE: NASA LWS Town Hall at Fall 2022 AGU Message-ID: Please join special guest speaker Nicky Fox, Director of NASA?s Heliophysics Division, and NASA HQ program staff for the Living With a Star (LWS) Town Hall at the Fall 2022 AGU meeting in Chicago! The LWS Town Hall will provide the community with program and mission updates, discussion on the annual ROSES LWS Science program element, and the announce the Focused Science Topics to be solicited in ROSES-2023. There will be ample time for open discussion of the LWS program and any Q&A. Session Date, Time: Monday, December 12th, 6:30-7:30pm CST Session Location: McCormick Place, S102ab Session Number in AGU Program: TH15A -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cstolle at iap-kborn.de Thu Dec 8 05:16:20 2022 From: cstolle at iap-kborn.de (Claudia Stolle) Date: Thu, 8 Dec 2022 13:16:20 +0100 Subject: CEDAR email: Tenured professor positions in "Theoretical Atmospheric Physics" and in "Atmosphere Optical Soundings" at the Leibniz Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Germany Message-ID: <9e6fc667-31f9-adaf-1c4d-3412cd2b4314@iap-kborn.de> The Leibniz Institute of Atmospheric Physics at the University of Rostock in K?hlungsborn, Germany invites applications for two tenured professor positions in "Theoretical Atmospheric Physics" and in "Atmosphere Optical Soundings" with topical emphasize on the mesosphere and lower thermosphere. The positions include leading a research department at the institute. Details of the announcements are available at:https://www.iap-kborn.de/en/news/jobs/ orhttps://www.uni-rostock.de/en/stellen/professuren/ From thuang at nsf.gov Thu Dec 8 11:37:46 2022 From: thuang at nsf.gov (Huang, Tai-Yin) Date: Thu, 8 Dec 2022 18:37:46 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: NSF 21-029: NSF-AFRL INTERN Supplemental Funding Opportunity Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, Here is a great research internship opportunity for graduate students, Dear Colleague Letter: Research Internships for Graduate Students at Air Force Research Laboratory (NSF-AFRL INTERN) Supplemental Funding Opportunity (nsf21029) | NSF - National Science Foundation. The PI or co-PI of an active NSF award may request supplemental funding for one or more graduate students to gain knowledge, skills and experiences that will augment their preparation for a successful long-term career through an internship at the AFRL. PIs are encouraged to discuss with the cognizant NSF program director activities that are synergistic with the NSF grant project scope. Best, Tai-Yin [signature_1079744945] Tai-Yin Huang, PhD Program Director, Geospace Section Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences National Science Foundation (703) 292-4943 | thuang at nsf.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 48240 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: From dominiquepautet at gmail.com Thu Dec 8 21:10:30 2022 From: dominiquepautet at gmail.com (Dominique Pautet) Date: Thu, 8 Dec 2022 21:10:30 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: AWE graduate research assistant positions Message-ID: The Atmospheric Waves Experiment (AWE) is the first dedicated NASA mission to investigate global gravity waves (GWs) properties in the upper atmosphere and their impacts on the ionosphere-thermosphere-mesosphere (ITM). Expected launch date is December 2023. The Utah State University Physics department will host the AWE Science Operations Center (SOC). As part of this mission, several graduate research assistant positions will be available starting in Fall 2023. For more information, see the USU physics website: https://www.usu.edu/physics/graduate_student_position_awe_6dec2022.pdf Thank you, USU AWE science team -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dominiquepautet at gmail.com Thu Dec 8 21:14:18 2022 From: dominiquepautet at gmail.com (Dominique Pautet) Date: Thu, 8 Dec 2022 21:14:18 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: ANGWIN graduate research assistant position Message-ID: The Antarctic Gravity Wave Imaging Network (ANGWIN) is a cooperative effort of six international Antarctic programs to collect continent-wide gravity wave (GW) data. The network capitalizes on existing optical and radar measurement capabilities around the Antarctic continent and at the South Pole. Utah State University operates several infrared (IR) all-sky mesospheric OH imagers, and Advanced Mesospheric Temperature Mapper (AMTM) instruments in Antarctica, to develop unprecedented resources for studying GW properties on a continental scale. As part of this project, a graduate research assistant position will be available in Fall 2023. For more information see the USU physics website: https://www.usu.edu/physics/graduate_student_position_ANGWIN_1Dec2022.pdf Thank you, USU ANGWIN team -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From radicell at bc.edu Fri Dec 9 04:40:02 2022 From: radicell at bc.edu (Sandro Radicella) Date: Fri, 9 Dec 2022 12:40:02 +0100 Subject: CEDAR email: URSI GASS 2023 Message-ID: Dear CEDAR community, We would like to ask you cordially to submit abstracts to our upcoming *G11* session at the *URSI GASS2023 *(*Limits of predictability of ionosphere variability: search for its chaotic and deterministic components*, which will be held in Sapporo, Japan, from 19-26 August 2023. The abstract submission deadline is 25th January 2023. Paper submission page: https://www.ursi-gass2023.jp/papers.html Session Description: The understanding of the complex nature of the near-Earth plasma is crucial for Ionosphere and Space Weather modelling and applications. The goal of this Session is to discuss to which extent the Magnetosphere ? Ionosphere system is predictable in terms of the physics of dynamical systems and statistical results. Ionospheric models attempt to predict ionospheric parameters variations, but quantitative limits of predictability have not been given and justified. To determine and understand such limits is essential to define the predictability of the ionospheric parameter variations searching for the chaotic and deterministic components of such variations. This can be done also making use of modern techniques like big data and machine learning. The Session, therefore, seeks to have invited and contributed papers dealing with recent numerical simulations, case studies and theoretical as well as modelling perspectives of the problem. With best regards, G11 conveners Yenca Migoya-Oru?, yenca at ictp.it Massimo Materassi, massimo.materassi at isc.cnr.it Tatsushiro Yokohama, yokoyama at rish.kyoto-u.ac.jp Sandro Radicella, sandro.radicella at gmail.com, -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From maute at ucar.edu Fri Dec 9 10:30:17 2022 From: maute at ucar.edu (Astrid Maute) Date: Fri, 9 Dec 2022 10:30:17 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: The call for papers of the URSI 2023 General Assembly and Scientific Symposium (Sapporo, 19-26 August, 2023) is now open. Message-ID: Please consider to submit your latest achievements or a review paper to session: *G12 - Ionosphere monitoring & modeling review:* The ionosphere is a highly variable medium with dependencies on geographic location, time of day, season, solar and geomagnetic activity. It is most important because it reflects and modifies radio waves used for communication and navigation. Space Weather influences the ionosphere in many ways, which, in turn, have adverse effects on telecommunication and navigation. Commission G focuses on ionospheric studies in order to provide the broad understanding necessary to support space and ground-based radio communications. This session aims to solicit review contributions from the earliest studies of ionospheric morphology to transforming advancements in diagnostic techniques, ionospheric modeling, theory and radio system applications. This session is in memory of the huge contribution of Pat Doherty to the field. *Please visit the conference website https://www.ursi-gass2023.jp/ and submit your abstract to our session by 23 January 2023.* Looking forward to receiving your contribution. Sincerely, Manuel Hern?ndez-Pajares (manuel.hernandez at upc.edu) Tim Fuller-Rowell (tim.fuller-rowell at noaa.gov) Susumo Saito -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From thuang at nsf.gov Fri Dec 9 14:14:36 2022 From: thuang at nsf.gov (Huang, Tai-Yin) Date: Fri, 9 Dec 2022 21:14:36 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: NSF Presence at AGU In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: From: Liu, Zhuangren > 1. The Directorate for Geosciences at NSF will have an Exhibition Booth (1313). At the booth, there will be lightning talks covering a broad range of topics from Monday afternoon through Thursday morning. The schedule of the lightning talks and recordings can be found via this link, NSF GEO Outreach | NSF - National Science Foundation. 2. Several of us in the AGS Geospace section will be attending the meeting in person. We will take turns to be at the booth (see the schedule below). Please come talk with us, and we love to hear from you! Mon (12/11) 2-3, Roman Makarevich (Program Director for Geospace Facilities) Tue (12/12) 2-3: Tai-Yin Huang (Program Director for Aeronomy, Data Infrastructure) Tue (12/12) 3-4: Mangala Sharma (Program Director for Space Weather Research) Wed (12/13) 10-11: Alan Liu (Geospace Section Head) Wed (12/13) 3-4: Mangala Sharma (Program Director for Space Weather Research) Wed (12/13) 4-5: Tai-Yin Huang (Program Director for Aeronomy, Data Infrastructure) 1. There will be a NSF-NOAA Agency Town Hall on Thursday 12/15 from 6-8 CT at Hilton Chicago (720 S. Michigan Ave) . The Town Hall will be in the Waldorf Max Room on the 3rd floor. We will give update on recent NSF activities and answer questions. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pje at mit.edu Fri Dec 9 15:09:03 2022 From: pje at mit.edu (Phil Erickson) Date: Fri, 9 Dec 2022 17:09:03 -0500 Subject: CEDAR email: URSI 2023 General Assembly Session G8 is now open Message-ID: The call for papers of the URSI 2023 General Assembly and Scientific Symposium (Sapporo, 19-26 August, 2023) is now open. We encourage the community to submit achievements, results, and thoughts on next generation incoherent scatter facilities and networks to the session G08: New results and contemporary developments in incoherent scatter radar This session will focus on advances in technique and scientific results within the field of incoherent scatter radar (ISR) observations of the geospace environment. The ISR technique represents the most powerful ground-based probe of the ionospheric plasma, and allows extensive and precise studies of processes and features in the ionosphere, atmosphere, plasmasphere, and magnetosphere. The session provides a platform concentrating on results from coordinated, multi-radar experiments along with opportunities for discussion of upcoming plans using existing and future facilities. Topics of interest include long-period continuous runs for long term trend studies, World Day program operations and suggested changes, sensor fusion analysis with ISR data as a central feature, harmonization of ISR data outputs, and advanced derived scientific products. Contributions are also welcome regarding planning of next generation observations using future advanced ISR facilities and networks. ------ Please visit the conference website https://www.ursi-gass2023.jp/ and submit your abstract to our session by 23 January 2023. We are looking forward to receiving your contribution. Sincerely, Philip Erickson, MIT Haystack Roger Varney, UCLA David Hysell, Cornell University Anders Tjulin, EISCAT Scientific Association ----- Philip Erickson, Ph.D. Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences Group MIT Haystack Observatory Westford, MA 01886 USA email: pje at haystack.mit.edu WWW: http://www.haystack.mit.edu voice: +1 617 715 5769 fax: +1 781 981 5766 Public key: http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x54878872 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From khadka at njit.edu Mon Dec 12 09:29:24 2022 From: khadka at njit.edu (Khadka, Sovit) Date: Mon, 12 Dec 2022 10:29:24 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: 2023 EGU General Assembly session (ST3.5) - Dynamics, Chemistry, and Coupling in the MLT Regions Message-ID: Dear CEDAR Community, You are cordially invited to submit abstracts to our 2023 EGU General Assembly session (ST3.5) - Dynamics, Chemistry, and Coupling in the MLT Regions. The 2023 EGU General Assembly will be held on 23?28 April 2023, both on-site in Vienna, Austria, and virtually. ****Session Details**** Session Title: Dynamics, Chemistry, and Coupling in the MLT Regions Program Group: ST3 ? Ionosphere and Thermosphere Session Link: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU23/session/46351 Convener: Sovit Khadka, New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA Co-Conveners: Claudia Stolle, Leibniz Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Germany Tatsuhiro Yokoyama, Kyoto University, Japan David Themens, University of Birmingham, UK Andrew Akala, University of Lagos, Nigeria Session Description: The Earth's mesosphere and lower thermosphere (MLT) region is a great platform to study ionospheric dynamics, disturbances, eddy mixing, and controlling parameters. This transition region is sandwiched between the lower and upper atmosphere which is strongly driven by the forcing from both the above (e.g., solar and magnetospheric inputs) and below (e.g., gravity waves and atmospheric tides). The thermal structure of the MLT region is controlled by numerous sources and sinks of energy including solar radiation, chemical, and dynamical processes. Solar atmospheric tides related to global-scale variations of winds and waves are responsible for the coupling of the lower and upper layers of the atmosphere. During the coupling process, the precipitation of energetic particles into the MLT region also has a great influence on the vertical profiles of the temperatures, chemistry, and dynamics of the upper atmosphere. This is a suitable forum/time to encourage the science community to present, discuss, update, and improve our understanding of dynamics, chemistry, and coupling in the MLT region that ultimately affect the electrodynamics of the whole coupled geospace environment. This session invites presentations on scientific work related to various experimental/observational techniques, numerical and empirical modeling, and theoretical analyses on the dynamics, chemistry, and coupling processes in the altitude range of ~ 60 km ? 180 km of the MLT regions. We look forward to your contribution to our EGU General Assembly session. Please note that the abstract submission deadline is *Tuesday, 10 January 2023 at 13:00 CET*. Thank you. Sincerely, Sovit Khadka, Claudia Stolle, Tatsuhiro Yokoyama, David Themens, and Andrew Akala -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From kim.baugh at noaa.gov Tue Dec 13 11:02:51 2022 From: kim.baugh at noaa.gov (Kim Baugh - NOAA Affiliate) Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2022 11:02:51 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: =?utf-8?b?VXBjb21pbmcg4oCcTkdEQyBTYXRkYXTigJ0gVVJM?= =?utf-8?q?_Change?= Message-ID: NCEI is updating the URL for access to these 4 datasets: POES Space Environment Monitor (POES-SEM) GOES Space Environment Monitor (GOES-SEM) GOES Solar X-ray Imager (GOES-SXI) DMSP Space Environment Sensors (DMSP SSJ4/5, SSIES, SSM) Please update your URLs for these datasets. The old URL ( satdat.ngdc.noaa.gov) will retire on January 18, 2023. NCEI will also discontinue FTP access entirely, continuing to support HTTPS access at the new location. Old ?satdat? base URL -> New base URL https://satdat.ngdc.noaa.gov/sem/goes/ -> https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/data/goes-space-environment-monitor/access/ https://satdat.ngdc.noaa.gov/sxi/ -> https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/data/goes-solar-xray-imager/access/ https://satdat.ngdc.noaa.gov/dmsp/ -> https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/data/dmsp-space-weather-sensors/access/ https://satdat.ngdc.noaa.gov/sem/poes/ -> https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/data/poes-metop-space-environment-monitor/access/ There have been some changes to underlying subdirectories to cleanup and improve structure. The most significant is with the POES/MetOp Space Environment Monitor data. If you access POES-SEM data from satdat.ngdc.noaa.gov, please update your scripts/bookmarks as follows: POES-SEM path mappings from ?satdat? to new location OLD POES-SEM URL -> NEW POES-SEM URL https://satdat.ngdc.noaa.gov/sem/poes/data/processed/ngdc/uncorrected/full/ -> https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/data/poes-metop-space-environment-monitor/access/l1b/v01r00/ https://satdat.ngdc.noaa.gov/sem/poes/data/raw/ngdc/ -> https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/data/poes-metop-space-environment-monitor/access/l1a/v01r00/ https://satdat.ngdc.noaa.gov/sem/poes/data/processed/swpc/uncorrected/avg/ -> https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/data/poes-metop-space-environment-monitor/access/l2/v01r00/ https://satdat.ngdc.noaa.gov/sem/poes/data/raw/swpc/ -> https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/data/poes-metop-space-environment-monitor/access/l0b/v01r00/ Please reach out if you have any questions regarding this change. I will be more than happy to help ease the transition where possible. Kim Baugh (Data Manager, primary POC) kim.baugh at noaa.gov 720-460-0652 -- Kimberly Baugh Senior Associate Scientist Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information Kim.Baugh at noaa.gov 720-460-0652 (office) 303-819-2627 (cell) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dominiquepautet at gmail.com Wed Dec 14 04:05:35 2022 From: dominiquepautet at gmail.com (Dominique Pautet) Date: Wed, 14 Dec 2022 04:05:35 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: AWE postdoc position Message-ID: The Atmospheric Waves Experiment (AWE) is the first dedicated NASA mission to investigate global gravity waves (GWs) properties in the upper atmosphere and their impacts on the ionosphere-thermosphere-mesosphere (ITM). Expected launch date is December 2023. The Utah State University Physics department will host the AWE Science Operations Center (SOC). As part of this mission, a postdoctoral position will be available starting in November 2023. More details and the application procedure can be found on the USU Human Resources website (login required): https://internal-usu.icims.com/jobs/5966/postdoctoral-fellow-ii/job?hashed=864667780&back=none&redirect=job Thank you, USU AWE science team -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dominiquepautet at gmail.com Wed Dec 14 04:08:26 2022 From: dominiquepautet at gmail.com (Dominique Pautet) Date: Wed, 14 Dec 2022 04:08:26 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: ANGWIN postdoc position Message-ID: The Antarctic Gravity Wave Imaging Network (ANGWIN) is a cooperative effort of six international Antarctic programs to collect continent-wide gravity wave (GW) data. The network capitalizes on existing optical and radar measurement capabilities around the Antarctic continent and at the South Pole. Utah State University operates several infrared (IR) all-sky mesospheric OH imagers, and Advanced Mesospheric Temperature Mapper (AMTM) instruments in Antarctica, to develop unprecedented resources for studying GW properties on a continental scale. As part of this project, a postdoctoral position will be available in September 2023 or earlier. More details and the application procedure can be found on the USU Human Resources website (login required): https://internal-usu.icims.com/jobs/5972/postdoctoral-fellow-ii/job Thank you, USU ANGWIN team -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hmq512 at gmail.com Wed Dec 14 15:07:06 2022 From: hmq512 at gmail.com (hmq512 at gmail.com) Date: Wed, 14 Dec 2022 23:07:06 +0100 Subject: CEDAR email: EGU23 abstracts: ST3.4 session on couplings in the atmosphere-Ionosphere system Message-ID: <022501d91008$6cffda70$46ff8f50$@gmail.com> Dear Colleagues, The 2023 EGU General Assembly will be held on 23-28 April 2023. We invite you to consider submitting your abstract to the ST3.4 session, "Couplings in the atmosphere-Ionosphere system". The session is hybrid and welcomes contributions from both in-person and remote participants. Session Description: The ionosphere-thermosphere system is the portion of geospace where the neutral atmosphere interacts with plasma. These interactions are driven by numerous periodic and transient processes across broad temporal and spatial scales. Our session aims to communicate the recent advances in atmosphere-ionosphere couplings. We solicit observational and modeling studies on relevant couplings through, e.g., long-term trends, regular atmospheric circulation and oscillations (e.g., the El Ni?o-southern oscillation and the quasi-biennial oscillation), geological and meteorological transient atmospheric disturbances (e.g., sudden stratospheric warmings, volcanic eruptions, and earthquakes), waves and wave-like perturbations (e.g., planetary waves, tides, gravity waves, and traveling ionospheric disturbances), and turbulent and other nonlinear processes. Abstract submission: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU23/session/46347 Note that the abstract submission deadline is Tuesday, 10 January 2023 at 13:00 CET. We look forward to your contribution. Sincerely, Conveners: Maosheng He, Yosuke Yamazaki, Larisa Goncharenko, Chao Xiong, Gunter Stober -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From guram.kervalishvili at gfz-potsdam.de Thu Dec 15 03:50:22 2022 From: guram.kervalishvili at gfz-potsdam.de (Guram Kervalishvili) Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2022 11:50:22 +0100 Subject: CEDAR email: EGU23 abstracts: ST4.2 session in Space Weather and Space Climate In-Reply-To: <7F98915A-D8E8-465A-9E37-755F0D55FC5E@gfz-potsdam.de> References: <7F98915A-D8E8-465A-9E37-755F0D55FC5E@gfz-potsdam.de> Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, We would like to draw your attention and invite you to consider submitting an abstract to the ST4.2 session in Space Weather and Space Climate programme group to be held at the EGU General Assembly 2023, April 23-28 in Vienna, Austria. Abstract submission: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU23/session/46343 (the deadline is Tuesday, 10 January 2023, 13:00 CET) ST4.2 - Nowcasting, forecasting, operational monitoring and post-event analysis of the space weather and space climate in the Sun-Earth system Session details: Space Weather (SW) and Space Climate (SC) are collective terms that describe the Sun-Earth system interactions on timescales varying between minutes and decades and include processes at the Sun, in the heliosphere, magnetosphere, ionosphere, thermosphere and at the lower atmosphere. Prediction of the extreme events (forecast and nowcast) and development of the mitigation strategy are vital as the space assets and critical infrastructures, such as communication and navigation systems, power grids, and aviation, are all extremely sensitive to the external environment. Post-event analysis is crucially important for the development and maintenance of numerical models, which can predict extreme SW events to avoid failure of the critical infrastructures. This session aims to address both the current state of the art of SW products and new ideas and developments that can enhance the understanding of SW and SC and their impact on critical infrastructure. We invite presentations on various SW and SC-related activities in the Sun-Earth system: forecast and nowcast products and services; satellite observations; model development, validation, and verification; data assimilation; development and production of geomagnetic and ionospheric indices. Talks on SW effects on applications (e.g. on airlines, pipelines and power grids, space flights, auroral tourism, etc.) in the Earth?s environment are also welcomed. Confirmed invited speaker Matt Taylor (ESTEC, European Space Agency) will speak about the cross-discipline approach to examine the physical links between Weather in Space and the Lower Atmosphere. We look forward to receiving your contributions and thank you very much for your attention. Sincerely yours, session conveners, Guram Kervalishvili, Yulia Bogdanova, Therese Moretto Jorgensen, Claudia Borries --- Dr. Guram Kervalishvili Section 2.3: Geomagnetism Tel.: +49 331 288 1882 Fax: +49 331 288 1266 Email: gmk at gfz-potsdam.de _______________________________________ Helmholtz Centre Potsdam GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences Foundation under public law of the federal state of Brandenburg Telegrafenberg, D-14473 Potsdam -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From vtr at ufa.cas.cz Thu Dec 15 13:39:07 2022 From: vtr at ufa.cas.cz (Vladimir Truhlik) Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2022 21:39:07 +0100 Subject: CEDAR email: Call for papers for URSI GASS 2023 Scientific event G04 (International Reference Ionosphere) Message-ID: <0ec2cec4-2a75-6f54-130c-625d183e17da@ufa.cas.cz> Dear Colleagues, The next URSI GASS 2023 will take place in Sapporo, Japan on Aug. 19 ? 26, 2023. Please visit the web page at https://www.ursi-gass2023.jp/ for details. The Call for Papers is open, submission deadline is 25 January 2023 (extended abstracts or summary papers - https://www.ursi-gass2023.jp/paper_submission.html) and we would like to draw your attention to the scientific event G04 International Reference Ionosphere: Improvement, Validation and Usage. The session is organized by the COSPAR/URSI IRI Working Group and solicits presentations discussing improvements, validation, and usage of ionospheric models with special focus on the International Reference Ionosphere (IRI). IRI is an empirical model that was built with a large volume of space- and ground-based data and is recognized as the international standard for Earth?s ionosphere. Parameters represented by the IRI model include electron density, ion composition, electron temperature, ion temperature, ionospheric total electron content, vertical ion drift at equatorial latitudes, F1 layer and spread-F occurrence probabilities, and a kp-driven representation of auroral oval boundaries. This session aims at reviewing the status of the IRI project and invites talks and posters that report on comparisons of IRI model parameters with measurements and potential improvements of the model. Contributions that introduce new modeling approaches or new data sources are particularly welcome. Of special interest are studies that use assimilative techniques to bring IRI closer to representing real-time conditions. We are looking forward to seeing you in Sapporo, Dieter Bilitza dbilitza at gmu.edu Vladimir Truhlik vtr at ufa.cas.cz Shigeto Watanabe shw at ep.sci.hokudai.ac.jp From sampadpanda at gmail.com Mon Dec 19 21:48:15 2022 From: sampadpanda at gmail.com (Sampad Kumar Panda) Date: Tue, 20 Dec 2022 10:18:15 +0530 Subject: CEDAR email: AOGS 2023 Abstract submission AS52 - Ionospheric Space Weather Monitoring and Forecasting - Session Message-ID: Dear Colleagues and friends, The Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS) 2023 will take place in Singapore between 30 July and 04 August 2023: https://www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2023/public.asp?page=home.asp. We would like to encourage you to participate and submit an abstract to the session AS52 ?Ionospheric Space Weather Monitoring and Forecasting?, covering various topics including ionosphere modeling, forecasting, and validation, as well as the impact of the ionospheric space weather on the GNSS application and service. Please find below the session description, also available here: https://www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2023/public.asp?page=sessions_and_conveners.asp. It will be chaired by Haixia Lyu, Sampad Kumar Panda, and Punyawi Jamjareegulgarn. The abstract submission is open. Please notice that the deadline for abstracts is due 14 February, 2023 https://www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2023/public.asp?page=submit_abstracts.asp. Please consider submitting an abstract to session-AS52 Ionospheric Space Weather Monitoring and Forecasting. It would be a great pleasure to see you on this occasion. *AS52 Ionospheric Space Weather Monitoring and Forecasting* The Earth?s ionosphere is highly variable due to the complex interaction in the solar wind-magnetosphere-ionosphere system, and the atmosphere-mesosphere-ionosphere coupling. It exhibits variation in different time scales and in different forms, e.g. gradients, disturbances, storms, etc. These abnormal or irregular behaviors of the ionosphere can adversely affect satellite navigation and communication systems on which nowadays human activities rely, thus the importance of ionosphere state monitoring and forecasting. Presently more and more observation instruments, networks, and satellite missions are built and launched for a better and deeper understanding of ionospheric climate features and space weather events. Benefiting from these observation plans, whether by state and/or commercial initiatives from different countries or by international collaboration, the impact of the ionosphere on GNSS positioning, telecommunication, and other techniques can be analyzed and evaluated. This session will cover the advancements in ionosphere modeling, forecasting, and validation, both globally and regionally. Analysis of the ionospheric space weather impact on the GNSS application and service is also welcome. If you need any complementary information, do not hesitate to contact us. With best regards, AS52 conveners Haixia Lyu, hxlyu at whu.edu.cn Sampad Kumar Panda, sampadpanda at gmail.com Punyawi Jamjareegulgarn, kjpunyaw at gmail.com ================================= DR. SAMPAD KUMAR PANDA, M.Tech., Ph.D. Associate Professor Space Technology & Atmospheric Sciences Research Centre (STAR) Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering Koneru Lakshmaiah Education Foundation (K L Deemed To Be University) [Former Postdoctoral fellow, Frederick University, Nicosia, CYPRUS Fellow Alumni, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Mumbai, INDIA] Green Fields, Vaddeswaram, Guntur Dist-522502 Andhra Pradesh, INDIA Mobile: +91-9757031298 Alt. Email: sampadpanda at kluniversity.in Google scholar: https://sampadpanda.scholar.google.co.in/ ====================================== [image: Mailtrack] Sender notified by Mailtrack 12/20/22, 10:12:08 AM -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From maxime.grandin at helsinki.fi Tue Dec 20 10:33:20 2022 From: maxime.grandin at helsinki.fi (Grandin, Maxime T J) Date: Tue, 20 Dec 2022 17:33:20 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: =?windows-1252?q?EGU23_abstracts_=96_Session_ST3=2E?= =?windows-1252?q?6=3A_Ionosphere_=96_upper_atmosphere_physics_with_ground?= =?windows-1252?q?-based_instrumentation?= Message-ID: Dear Colleagues from the CEDAR community, The EGU General Assembly will take place as a hybrid conference (in Vienna, Austria and online) on 23?28 April 2023 (conference website: https://www.egu23.eu/). We would like to draw your attention to Session ST3.6: Ionosphere ? upper atmosphere physics with ground-based instrumentation (https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU23/session/46384). ** Session description ** The Earth?s upper atmosphere and ionosphere are subject to significant variability associated with solar forcing. While in situ observations of the ionosphere-upper atmosphere are only possible with spacecraft and sounding rockets, a wealth of information is obtained thanks to remote sensing techniques using ground-based instruments. For instance, ground-based magnetometers, used in dense networks, routinely enable the derivation of ionospheric currents and geomagnetic indices. Optical instruments not only provide measurements of auroral and airglow emissions, but are also used to observe upper atmospheric winds and temperatures, e.g. in the thermosphere and mesosphere. Such parameters can also be measured with radars, spanning a wide range of active (ionosondes, meteor radars, coherent and incoherent scatter radars, VLF transmitters, Lidars) and passive (riometers, VLF receivers) systems. Combining ground-based observations from various instruments enables the development of novel data analysis methodologies which in turn enhance our understanding of the underlying physics of space weather and ionosphere-upper atmosphere processes. This includes the study of densities, temperatures and composition of the ionosphere?upper atmosphere, monitoring of its dynamics and chemistry, and measuring of fluxes from precipitating particles and current systems. In this session, we invite contributions featuring the use of ground-based instruments in studies of the ionosphere?upper atmosphere system across all latitudes and of space weather and ionospheric?atmospheric physics processes of various time and spatial scales. We are happy to announce that Dr. Axel Steuwer (EISCAT Scientific Association) has accepted to give an invited talk on the current status of EISCAT_3D and the new science it will enable in the near future. Please note that the abstract submission deadline for EGU23 is on Tuesday, 10 January 2023 at 13:00 CEST (UTC+1). Guidelines on the abstract submission process can be found on the following page: https://egu23.eu/programme/how_to_submit.html. Please do not hesitate to forward this announcement to your colleagues who make use of ground-based instrument data in their studies of upper atmospheric and ionospheric processes. We are looking forward to your contributions and to seeing you at EGU23! Best regards, The EGU ST3.6 session convening team: Veronika Haberle, Maxime Grandin, Jia Jia, and Frederic Pitout -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From thuang at nsf.gov Tue Dec 20 10:33:46 2022 From: thuang at nsf.gov (Huang, Tai-Yin) Date: Tue, 20 Dec 2022 17:33:46 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: New NSF funding opportunity - Geosciences Open Science Ecosystem (GEO OSE) (NSF 23-534) Message-ID: New NSF funding opportunity - Geosciences Open Science Ecosystem (GEO OSE) (NSF 23-534) In alignment with the 2023 Federal Year of Open Science, the NSF Directorate for Geosciences (GEO) recently announced a new funding opportunity, the Geosciences Open Science Ecosystem (GEO OSE). The GEO OSE program seeks to support sustainable and networked open science activities to foster an ecosystem of inclusive access to data, physical collections, software, advanced computing, and other resources toward advancing research and education in the geosciences. The purpose of this support is to broadly enable geoscientists to leverage expanding information resources and computing capabilities to address interdisciplinary grand challenge research questions at the forefront of the geosciences. Proposals to the GEO OSE program solicitation (NSF 23-534) are due March 16, 2023. Two tracks of support are available based on the size and scope of expected efforts. Track 1 will support smaller-scale activities to advance early stage GEO OSE activities, with funding provided for 2 years with a maximum budget size of $400,000 per project. Track 2 will support larger-scale activities, with funding provided for 3 years with budget size commensurate with the size and scope of the project up to about $1,600,000. NSF will be holding an informational webinar (tentatively, Friday, January 20, 2023, at 1 PM EST) to offer guidance on the GEO OSE program and to provide an opportunity for Q&A. Please mark your calendars. We expect that registration details for the webinar will be provided in early January and posted on the GEO OSE program page. [signature_1079744945] Tai-Yin Huang, PhD Program Director, Geospace Section Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences National Science Foundation (703) 292-4943 | thuang at nsf.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 48240 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: From delzanno at lanl.gov Wed Dec 21 14:24:15 2022 From: delzanno at lanl.gov (Delzanno, Gian Luca) Date: Wed, 21 Dec 2022 21:24:15 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: 2023 Los Alamos Space Weather Summer School Message-ID: <293990c00ce447289e474a83a933a263@lanl.gov> Dear colleagues, the Los Alamos National Laboratory is accepting applications for its 2023 Space Weather Summer School, scheduled for June 5th-July 28th 2023. The school, which will be in-presence, combines lectures and summer research projects. Information about the school can be found at: https://www.lanl.gov/projects/national-security-education-center/space-earth-center/space-weather-school/index.php The list of suggested projects and mentors can be found at: https://www.lanl.gov/projects/national-security-education-center/space-earth-center/_assets/docs/Suggested-Projects.pdf Students interested in a specific project are welcome to contact the relevant mentor ahead of the application. Students are also welcome to propose their own research topic (which could be aligned with their PhD) as part of the application, in which case an effort will be made to pair the student with a LANL mentor interested in that topic. The details of the application process can be found at: https://www.lanl.gov/projects/national-security-education-center/space-earth-center/space-weather-school/apply.php The deadline for application is January 31st 2023. Please do not hesitate to contact the school for any clarifications. Sincerely, Gian Luca Delzanno Mike Henderson LANL Space Weather Summer School co-directors From keith.groves at bc.edu Thu Dec 22 15:12:51 2022 From: keith.groves at bc.edu (Keith Groves) Date: Thu, 22 Dec 2022 15:12:51 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: IES2023 Call for Papers due 10 February 2023 Message-ID: Dear IES Friends and Colleagues: IES2023 is scheduled for May 9-11, 2023 in Alexandria, Virginia, an historic town near Washington DC and a fun and familiar venue to many. You are cordially invited to submit a paper to the organizers of IES2023. The current deadline for receipt of abstracts is Feb 10, 2023. Submission instructions and more information can be found on the web site bc.edu/IES2023. We recognize that the time is short, but the increasing solar flux combined with the rapid expansion of GNSS constellations and space-based RF applications means there has never been a more relevant time to meet as a community to review progress, understand current issues and identify new opportunities for research and investigation. And this year, through feedback and discussions with peers, the IES meeting is a perfect opportunity to refine and enhance work that you plan to share with a broader community at the URSI GASS in August 2023. We sincerely hope to see you at IES2023 and look forward to continuing the unparalleled success of this ionospheric community event. If you have questions or need information not found on the website, please contact us directly at IES at bc.edu. Best regards and happy holidays, Keith Groves Institute for Scientific Research Boston College -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From daniel.billett at usask.ca Fri Dec 23 08:19:49 2022 From: daniel.billett at usask.ca (Billett, Daniel) Date: Fri, 23 Dec 2022 15:19:49 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: DASP Workshop 2023 - Registration and abstract submission now open Message-ID: Hi all, The registration system and website for the 2023 DASP Workshop, to be held at the CSA February 20-24, is now live. https://sites.google.com/view/2023-dasp-workshop/ Both abstract submission and registration close on January 20th. This is a firm deadline, as we will need to make arrangements with CSA security for participants to access the facility. A complete, final program will be sent to participants and uploaded to the website on January 27th. For those interested in participating in the student workshop, please just indicate your intent to participate in the appropriate field on the workshop registration form. Looking forward to seeing you all in February. Cheers, 2023 DASP Workshop Organizers -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From rob.redmon at noaa.gov Tue Dec 27 08:00:00 2022 From: rob.redmon at noaa.gov (Rob Redmon - NOAA Federal) Date: Tue, 27 Dec 2022 08:00:00 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: Heliophysics Scientist/Data Steward opening at NOAA/NCEI (multiple locations) Message-ID: Hello Colleagues and Friends, I am beyond excited to announce the availability of a federal position in my previous group at NOAA and one I continue to enjoy working very closely with. Please help us spread this announcement to your groups and to any qualified person who may be interested. Happy New Year! Rob ***** The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) has an opening for a permanent Physical Scientist federal hire in the Solar & Terrestrial Physics (STP) group. The STP group consists of 40+ world-class scientists and technical experts in Boulder, CO supporting a broad Sun to Earth product portfolio. The successful applicant to this Heliophysics Data Steward position will have a lead role in all of NCEI?s space weather data stewardship services with a focus on heliospheric data sets from NOAA?s satellite assets in the solar wind such as DSCOVR, SWFO-L1, and future missions. These data stewardship services include real-time and historical data oversight, scientific algorithm development, calibration & validation activities, long term preservation and access, and interfacing with primary operational and scientific data users. The duties and example experience of the STP Heliophysics Steward: - The steward will have oversight of the entire heliospheric data library at NCEI. The steward will also lead the development of long term strategy and direction for the heliophysics services within NCEI including collaborating with internal and external stakeholders. Demonstrated success as a heliophysics project lead is a plus. - The steward will work independently and with a group of scientific experts and code developers to design and implement space weather product pipelines, to perform instrument calibration and validation activities, and conduct data analysis projects. Research experience in heliophysics or space weather data analysis or product development will be beneficial. - The steward will be a public face for these data, interfacing with national and international partners and stakeholders in NOAA, across the federal government, the scientific community, and the general public. Strong communications skills as demonstrated by publications, reports, presentations, and outreach activities are encouraged. Applications are accepted through USAJOBS; applicants should research best practices for USAJOBS if you are not familiar with it as the process can be very different from academic or research applications. Applications will be accepted for two weeks from Dec 27 until Jan 10. This is a permanent federal civil servant non-supervisory 1301-ZP-4 position (equivalent to GS 13/14). The duty station for this position is in Boulder CO (where the STP group is based), Silver Spring MD, Asheville NC, or Stennis MS. If you have any questions please contact Laurel Rachmeler at Laurel.Rachmeler at noaa.gov. USAJOBS announcement link: https://www.usajobs.gov/job/692920400 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dscipion at gmail.com Wed Dec 28 09:44:01 2022 From: dscipion at gmail.com (Danny Scipion) Date: Wed, 28 Dec 2022 11:44:01 -0500 Subject: CEDAR email: Jicamarca Radio Observatory: JIREP Undergraduate/Graduate student summer applications 2023 Message-ID: <0E15415B-6688-4C19-B076-DD758C927D9F@gmail.com> Dear CEDAR community: JIREP is an international internship program organized by Geophysical Institute of Peru (IGP) at the Jicamarca Radio Observatory in Lima, Peru. Given its location, capabilities, and instrumentation, the Jicamarca Radio Observatory (IGP/JRO) is a unique research facility and the perfect place to start your career in the world of science! Our program is offered to junior/senior undergraduate, and/or first and second year graduate students. The program will cover travel expenses (to and from Lima) as well as a reasonable stipend. Since the Observatory is located outside the city of Lima, transportation also will be provided. This is the opportunity to gain valuable international work experience and get to know Peru, a multicultural country, full of traditions, with an award-winning gastronomy and vast nature reserves. Please consider the following dates to apply to the program. * Application deadline: February 17th, 2023 * Decision: March 13th, 2023 * Start date: Anytime between May and June, 2023 * Duration: 10 weeks (as maximum) More information about our program is available on our website: https://www.igp.gob.pe/observatorios/radio-observatorio-jicamarca/?page_id=9834 If you have any questions, do not hesitate to contact us at irep_igp at igp.gob.pe We hope to see you at the Jicamarca and Peru in 2023! Dave and Danny David Hysell david.hysell at cornell.edu , Danny Scipion dscipion at igp.gob.pe , Anette De La Cruz adelacruz at igp.gob.pe -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: