From lqian at ucar.edu Tue Aug 1 21:24:26 2023 From: lqian at ucar.edu (Liying Qian) Date: Wed, 2 Aug 2023 11:24:26 +0800 Subject: CEDAR email: PDF Presentation Files and Plenary Session Recordings, etc. Now Available Message-ID: Dear CEDAR Community Members, We're excited to inform you that the PDF presentation files and recordings from 2023 CEDAR Workshop are now accessible to all members. Here's what you can find by browsing the 2023 CEDAR Workshop agenda : 1. PDF Presentation Files: You can now access and download presentation files from the student day and all plenary sessions (and a couple of individual workshops). 2. Plenary Session Recordings: Even if you missed a plenary session, you won't miss out on the knowledge. We are pleased to offer recordings of these sessions. 3. Youtube videos for the CEDAR Distinguished lecture , CEDAR Prize lecture , and the new grand change workshop introduction presentation . Thank you for being an essential part of the CEDAR community. We look forward to seeing you take advantage of these new resources. Warm regards, Liying on behalf of the 2023 CEDAR Workshop Organizers *Liying Qian* Project Scientist High Altitude Observatory (HAO) National Center for Atmospheric Research 303-497-1529 she/her lqian at ucar.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From julie.moses at us.af.mil Wed Aug 2 09:46:04 2023 From: julie.moses at us.af.mil (MOSES, JULIE J CIV USAF AFMC AFOSR/RTB) Date: Wed, 2 Aug 2023 15:46:04 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: DOD HBCU/MI equipment opportunity Message-ID: Dear CEDAR members, The DOD HBCU/MI solicitation for proposals for equipment dedicated to research is open on grants.gov. HBCU/MI funding supports Historically Black Colleges and Universities and also Minority serving institutions including HSIs. The award ceiling is $800k. Proposals are due 15 September 2023. In the past, I have supported equipment purchases at New Mexico Tech, University of the Virgin Islands, and University of Puerto Rico through the HBCU/MI program. The solicitation number is W911NF23S0014 on grants.gov. Cheers, Julie Julie Moses, PhD Program Officer, Space Science Air Force Office of Scientific Research 875 N Randolph St Suite 3000 Arlington, VA 22203 (703)696-9586 (office) From gross at bu.edu Wed Aug 2 17:53:15 2023 From: gross at bu.edu (Gross, Nicholas) Date: Wed, 2 Aug 2023 23:53:15 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: SHIELD Fall Heliophysics Webinar Series In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: The SHIELD Fall Webinar Series includes three leaders in the field of Solar and Space Physics. More details can be found at https://shielddrivecenter.com/shield-webinars/ * Sept. 1st: Sarah Gibson: ?Galloping to the Sun? * Registration Link https://bostonu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_1y_q8R_3SIiWVE4adofTqQ * Sept. 22nd: Cherilynn Morrow: ?Outreach Activities for Your Eclipse Event? * Registration Link https://bostonu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ycpWkRIoSf2PGam5WWxsUQ * Nov. 17th: Lika Guhathakurta: ?We are all Living Stars? * Registration Link https://bostonu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_gSlfyiJKSRS6PHknV9-JYA -- Best Regards, Dr. Nicholas Gross (he/him) Senior Research Scientist, Center for Space Physics, Boston University Dep. Dir. For Broadening Impacts, SHIELD DRIVE Science Center (https://shielddrivecenter.com) Program Chair for Cultivating Ensembles 2022 (https://www.cultivatingensembles.org) https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicholasgross1/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Jesper.Gjerloev at jhuapl.edu Thu Aug 3 14:24:11 2023 From: Jesper.Gjerloev at jhuapl.edu (Gjerloev, Jesper W.) Date: Thu, 3 Aug 2023 20:24:11 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Last call: NASA EZIE Mission Science Workshop Message-ID: Last call: NASA EZIE Mission Science Workshop From: Jesper Gjerloev, Sam Yee, Nelli Mosavi (jesper.gjerloev at jhuapl.edu) The team behind the NASA Electrojet Zeeman Imaging Explorer (EZIE) mission is excited to announce the first science workshop, scheduled to take place on September 18-19, 2023 at Johns Hopkins University, Applied Physics Laboratory, Maryland, USA. This will be a hybrid event with in-person and virtual presentations. There is no registration fee. You are invited to submit a paper to either of the workshops four sessions: Session 1: Structure and dynamics of the substorm current system Session 2: What can ionospheric observations tell us about the underlying processes? Session 3: Using new multi-point measurements Session 4: Outreach and citizen science It presents a wonderful opportunity to showcase your research to NASA scientists and experts from around the world. As EZIE is set to launch in late 2024 or early 2025, this workshop serves as a pre-launch invitation to the science community. If you are interested in presenting your work at the workshop, please submit your title no later than August 15. Further details please visit the EZIE Science Workshop Webpage: (https://ezie.jhuapl.edu/science-workshops/Agenda/index.php?id=1) About EZIE Mission: EZIE is an innovative multi-satellite mission that images the magnetic fingerprint of intense electrical currents flowing in the upper layers of Earth?s atmosphere. EZIE will image the magnetic signature of the ionospheric electrojets using the Zeeman splitting of the O2 thermal emissions originating from around 80km altitude. EZIE will reveal the structure and evolution of electrojets ? a critical component of the vast electrical current system coupling the magnetosphere to the ionosphere and atmosphere . -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Kelly.Boden at lasp.colorado.edu Thu Aug 3 14:59:07 2023 From: Kelly.Boden at lasp.colorado.edu (Kelly Boden) Date: Thu, 3 Aug 2023 20:59:07 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Sun-Climate Symposium Abstract Due Date August 7th! Message-ID: Good Afternoon, Could you please share the below information about the 2023 Sun-Climate Symposium coming up in October to your colleagues? Thanks! Kelly Boden Executive Assistant - Engineering Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics 1234 Innovation Drive Boulder, CO 80303 303-492-5481 [lasp-logo.color_.2lines-subtext.white-bg] Good Afternoon! The abstract due date for the Sun-Climate Symposium is quickly approaching! Please submit your abstracts by August 7th! We hope you will join us in Flagstaff this fall for a fantastic Symposium! Thanks! Kelly Boden Executive Assistant - Engineering Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics 1234 Innovation Drive Boulder, CO 80303 303-492-5481 [lasp-logo.color_.2lines-subtext.white-bg] 2023 Sun Climate Symposium - Call for Abstracts Please mark your calendar today to join us in Flagstaff, Arizona, October 16-20, 2023! Our focus topic for this 4-day symposium is "Solar and Stellar Variability and its Impacts on Earth and Exoplanets". We invite experts from across the solar, Earth atmosphere, climate change, stellar, and planetary communities to submit abstracts for this conference to present their research results about solar variability, links between climate influences and the Earth-climate system, comparative studies of solar and stellar variability, and stellar impacts on exoplanets. Abstracts are due by August 7, 2023. Five sessions are planned with the following topics. 1. Solar and Stellar Activity Cycles 2. Impacts of Stellar Variability on Planetary Atmospheres 3. Evidence of Centennial and Longer-term Variability in Climate Change 4. Evidence of Short-term Variability in Climate Change 5. Trending of Solar Variability and Climate Change for Solar Cycle 25 (present and future) For more information about this conference and for submitting abstracts: https://lasp.colorado.edu/home/meetings/2023-sun-climate-symposium/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 7091 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: From tzu-wei.fang at noaa.gov Thu Aug 3 15:09:36 2023 From: tzu-wei.fang at noaa.gov (Tzu-Wei Fang - NOAA Federal) Date: Thu, 3 Aug 2023 15:09:36 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: JOB OPENING: Federal Physical Scientist at NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center (NOAA/SWPC) Message-ID: The Space Weather Prediction Center seeks to hire a full-time GS-13/14 to lead the Space Weather Prediction Testbed . As the Testbed Program Lead you will: - Be responsible for overseeing the transfer of new and emerging scientific technologies, techniques, and data from the research community into space weather operations with a particular focus on capabilities at Readiness Levels (RL) 5 to 6, the proving ground validation and testbed demonstration phase. Support decisions regarding which capabilities advance in RL. - Organize Space Weather Prediction Testbed exercises wherein researchers, model developers, forecasters, and end-users come together to test emerging concepts and new technologies for improving space weather prediction. - Work with the science community to enhance understanding of space weather and space weather products and services, as well as improve the process of Research-to-Operations (R2O) transitions. Collaborate with NASA on the Space Weather Operations-to-Research (O2R) grants program in support of space weather operations, and participate in decisions as to which capabilities advance to the proving ground validation and demonstration phase. - Work with SWPC?s space weather forecast office and external customers to identify their needs and associated technical requirements. Promote improved use of space weather information to ensure safe, efficient, and appropriate actions by space weather customers during enhanced space weather activity. - Coordinate with the Space Weather Proving Grounds and other NOAA Testbeds. Participate in NOAA Testbed and Proving Ground coordination activities. Refine and continually improve Space Weather Prediction Testbed experiments and exercises at SWPC. Applications are through USAJobs and the vacancy announcement can be found at www.usajobs.gov/job/741106600. The position will be open for applications from August 8 through August 22. All interested are encouraged to apply. If you have questions about this position, please contact: Michele Cash, SWPC Research Section Lead michele.cash at noaa.gov -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From gumbel at misu.su.se Mon Aug 7 04:46:46 2023 From: gumbel at misu.su.se (=?Windows-1252?Q?J=F6rg_Gumbel?=) Date: Mon, 7 Aug 2023 10:46:46 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: JOB OPENINGS: Postdoctoral fellow and Ph.D. student in Atmospheric Physics at Stockholm University In-Reply-To: <6071dbdf99624829953622753b96e534@misu.su.se> References: <244c107b94fa4952bdcf98acf83b4aae@misu.su.se>, <6071dbdf99624829953622753b96e534@misu.su.se> Message-ID: The Department of Meteorology at Stockholm University is seeking a postdoctoral fellow and a Ph.D. student to become part of our MATS satellite team. The Swedish MATS satellite (Mesospheric Airglow/Aerosol Tomography and Spectroscopy) was launched in November 2022 to investigate atmospheric waves with a focus on the Earth?s mesosphere and lower thermosphere. The remote sensing performed by MATS is based on optical imaging of atmospheric emissions and tomographic/spectroscopic analysis of the resulting data. In close collaboration with other members of the MATS team, both the postdoc position and the Ph.D student position concern analysis of the satellite data in order to investigate the properties and impact of waves in different parts of the atmosphere. Elements of basic data processing are also expected since the data are so new. The postdoctoral position concerns full-time employment for a minimum of two years, with the possibility of extension to three years. Please find details and information about the application process at https://www.su.se/english/about-the-university/work-at-su/available-jobs?rmpage=job&rmjob=21489&rmlang=UK The Ph.D. student position concerns full-time employment for a period of four years. Please find details and information about the application process at https://www.su.se/english/about-the-university/work-at-su/available-jobs/phd-student-positions-1.507588?rmpage=job&rmjob=21491&rmlang=UK The application deadline for both positions is August 28, 2023. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mullally at ucar.edu Tue Aug 8 08:00:00 2023 From: mullally at ucar.edu (Dawn Mullally) Date: Tue, 8 Aug 2023 08:00:00 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: REGISTER NOW for the 4th Annual Eddy Symposium! Message-ID: Please share with anyone in your community who might be interested. Thank you! REGISTER NOW! ?for the 4th Annual NASA Eddy Symposium 2023 In-Person Event: Golden Hotel, Golden Colorado October 29 - November 3, 2023 [image: 4thEddySymposiumBanner-w:hypen.jpg] This event continues the legacy of the frontier-thinking, cross-disciplinary gathering that the Eddy Symposia have come to define. The overarching theme of the 4th Eddy Symposium is ?Why Grand Challenges in Solar-Terrestrial Physics Require Open Science and How to Achieve it?? Please join us this fall to engage in leading-edge scientific discussions as we address the application of Open Science through four focused areas: - Open Science Methods: Emerging Open Science Methodologies - The Interconnection of Sun, Climate, and Society - Risk and Resiliency to Space Weather Disruption - (Exo)Planetary Atmosphere: the Impact of Stars and Solar Physics on Habitability & Life Important Deadlines: - Abstract Submission Deadline: Friday, August 25, 2023 - Student Travel Funding Application Deadline: Friday, August 25, 2023 - Early Registration Deadline: Friday, September 15, 2023 - Hotel Reservation cut-off date: Friday, September 15, 2023 - Final Registration Deadline: October 13, 2023, 5:00 pm Mountain Standard Time (MST) Venue: The Golden Hotel , 800 11th Street, Golden, CO 80401, 303-279-0100 Registration Fees: - Regular Attendee: $595.00 Early-Bird Registration; or $695.00 Registration after Friday, September 15th, 2023, 5:00 p.m. MST - Student Registration: $300.00 Early-Bird Registration; or $350.00 Student Registration after Friday, September 15th, 2023, 5:00 p.m. MST - Registration closes: Friday, October 13, 2023, 5:00 p.m. Mountain Standard Time (MST). Learn more about fees and abstract submissions, and how to register here . Student Travel Funding: Approximately 15 students - 3rd & 4th year undergraduates, graduate students, and early postdoctoral students (having received their PhD within the last 12 months) will be selected through a competitive process organized by the UCAR Cooperative Programs for the Advancement of Earth System Science (CPAESS). The Eddy Symposium lasts five days, and each participant receives full travel support, including registration fees, airline tickets, lodging, and per diem. Application Deadline: August 25, 2023 Find out more here. We look forward to seeing you there! 4th Eddy Cross-Disciplinary Steering Committee Dan Marsh (co-chair), Ryan McGranaghan (co-chair), Erika Palmerio, King-Fai Li, Logan Wiedenhoffer, Ankush Bhaskar, Meng Jin, Jim Colliander, Rajesh Gupta, and Lika Guhathakurta (NASA Program Officer) REGISTER NOW! -- *I acknowledge and honor the Cheyenne, Ute, and Arapaho Tribes, and their land upon which UCAR | NCAR stands. Find out w hose land you are on .* *Dawn Mullally, PMP* | CPAESS Communications Manager (she/her) Cooperative Programs for the Advancement of Earth System Science (CPAESS) University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) P.O. Box 3000 | Boulder, Colorado 80307 303.497.8632 <(303)-497-8632> | mullally at ucar.edu | cpaess.uc ar.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 4thEddySymposiumBanner-w:hypen.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 571812 bytes Desc: not available URL: From jlove at usgs.gov Tue Aug 8 13:50:04 2023 From: jlove at usgs.gov (Love, Jeffrey J) Date: Tue, 8 Aug 2023 19:50:04 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: USGS Post-Doctoral Fellowship: Multi-hazard, statistical analysis of extreme geophysical events Message-ID: USGS Post-Doctoral Fellowship: Multi-hazard, statistical analysis of extreme geophysical events Applications are invited for a 2-year Mendenhall post-doctoral fellowship involving statistical analyses of the geographic expression, occurrence frequency, and/or impact of extreme (and rare) geophysical events, such as earthquakes, earthquake ground motion, magnetic storms, induced geoelectric fields, volcanic eruptions, floods, etc. Applicants are encouraged to review the literature on statistical treatments of historical data recording extreme geophysical events. Then, depending on what is found in the literature, the applicant should submit a proposal that introduces one or more statistical extensions to previous work that (1) will improve upon published results, (2) are physically plausible, and, (3) which, because of their generality, can be applied to more than one type of geophysical hazard. For example, an applicant might develop general arguments that can motivate choosing light or heavy distributional tail parameters. Alternatively, an applicant might develop arguments that motivate the choice of certain classes of Bayesian priors. Other topics might include, estimation of upper bounds on extreme-event sizes (if upper bounds are realistic), inversion methods that combine extreme-value distributions and inter-event times, non-Poisson statistics, joint inversion of multiple types of data, analysis methods accommodating non-stationary statistics, such as trends or temporal modulation, etc. Applicants need to submit a research proposal, a budget to support their research, transcripts, etc. by November 1, 2023. The USGS Mendenhall Program: https://www.usgs.gov/centers/mendenhall-research-fellowship-program The exteme-event opportunity: https://www.usgs.gov/centers/mendenhall-research-fellowship-program/22-21-multi-hazard-statistical-analysis-extreme How to apply: https://www.usgs.gov/centers/mendenhall-research-fellowship-program/when-and-how-apply Please contact Jeffrey J. Love for additional information (jlove at usgs.gov). https://jeffreylove.org Jeffrey J. Love jlove at usgs.gov 303-273-8540 https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/jeffrey-j-love https://jeffreylove.org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jlove at usgs.gov Tue Aug 8 13:51:02 2023 From: jlove at usgs.gov (Love, Jeffrey J) Date: Tue, 8 Aug 2023 19:51:02 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: USGS Post-Doctoral Fellowship: Geoelectromagnetic hazard science for modern society Message-ID: USGS Post-Doctoral Fellowship: Geoelectromagnetic hazard science for modern society Applications are invited for a 2-year Mendenhall post-doctoral fellowship involving topics summarized in the of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Geomagnetism Program's research plan (Love et al., 2020). Specific research topics might address one or more of the following subjects: (1) Analysis of ground magnetometer data geomagnetic monitoring data, including USGS observatory data and new variometer data, to characterize the temporal-geographic expression of storm-time geomagnetic disturbance, (2) Collection of new broad-band magnetotelluric survey data in the Eastern United States and the analysis of those data, in combination with ground magnetometer data, to evaluate and map regional magnetic-storm-induced geoelectric hazards, (3) Collection of new broad-band magnetotelluric survey data in the Eastern United States and the analysis of those data, in combination with simple models of late-phase E3 nuclear electromagnetic pulse (EMP) variation, to evaluate regional nuclear-explosion hazards, (4) Development and improvement of magnetotelluric and joint inversion methods, (5) Statistical or event analysis of publicly available geomagnetically induced current data collected by power-grid companies, (6) Risk-related studies of storm-induced geoelectric hazards, impacts to electricity-transmission systems, and regional concentrations of transmission infrastructure and population density, (7) Analysis of historical data recording past great magnetic storms. Other relevant research topics can also be considered. Love, J. J., Kelbert, A., Murphy, B. S., Rigler, E. J. &?Lewis, K. A., 2020.?Geomagnetism Program Research Plan, 2020?2024,?USGS Circular 1469, 19 p. https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/cir1469 Applicants need to submit a research proposal, a budget to support their research, transcripts, etc. by November 1, 2023. The USGS Mendenhall Program: https://www.usgs.gov/centers/mendenhall-research-fellowship-program The research opportunity: https://www.usgs.gov/centers/mendenhall-research-fellowship-program/22-23-geoelectromagnetic-hazard-science-modern How to apply: https://www.usgs.gov/centers/mendenhall-research-fellowship-program/when-and-how-apply Please contact Jeffrey J. Love for additional information (jlove at usgs.gov). https://jeffreylove.org Jeffrey J. Love jlove at usgs.gov 303-273-8540 https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/jeffrey-j-love https://jeffreylove.org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From julie.moses at us.af.mil Wed Aug 9 09:32:17 2023 From: julie.moses at us.af.mil (MOSES, JULIE J CIV USAF AFMC AFOSR/RTB) Date: Wed, 9 Aug 2023 15:32:17 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Lecture on historical space weather events Message-ID: AFRL/AFOSR Chief Scientist cordially invites you to attend the Chief Scientist Distinguished Lectured Series featuring Professor Delores Knipp. We will be hosting a live ZoomGov Webinar on Mon, 11 September (1300-1400 ET) Please click the link or use the meeting log in/passcode to register in advance for the webinar. https://www.zoomgov.com/webinar/register/WN_UrSzsoCQQricAm_OB7Vj5g Webinar ID: 161 900 2433? Passcode: 81573293 Talk Titled: Space Weather: Balancing an Unbalanced Threat Description: Space weather, like terrestrial weather, poses a multi-faceted challenge to DoD operations. However, space weather, driven primarily by actions of the Sun, is subject to more extreme behavior sometimes on very short time scales. The rapid onset and severity of extreme space weather events has produced spectacular effects on DoD, some of which have been revealed in the open literature. I will discuss of few of these events, notably May 1967 and August 1972, as examples of space weather with world-wide ramifications. In addition to extraordinary technology impacts at the ground, these events caused significant challenges with spacecraft tracking in low Earth environment (LEO). Recovery of the ?space catalogue? during these and more recent events took days to weeks. A recent machine-learning effort has shown about three percent of days in a decade are likely subject to severe conditions in LEO with about half percent corresponding to extreme conditions. In the latter part of my presentation, I will focus on the LEO space environment, which currently hosts thousands of LEO spacecraft and tens-of-thousands of pieces of space debris. Prior to the development of mega-constellations, the space catalogue was subject to major disruptions (e.g., October 2003) on at least a decadal cadence. To balance what the Sun blasts our way as solar cycle 25 ramps up , even ?moderate? space weather events in congested space will require rapid assessment capability and an agile coordinated response (that is nascent) in civilian, commercial and DoD sectors. Julie Moses, PhD Program Officer, Space Science Air Force Office of Scientific Research 875 N Randolph St Suite 3000 Arlington, VA 22203 (703)696-9586 (office) From sraizada at nsf.gov Thu Aug 10 20:54:59 2023 From: sraizada at nsf.gov (Raizada, Shikha) Date: Fri, 11 Aug 2023 02:54:59 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: NSF Graduate Research fellowship Program Message-ID: Dear all, The NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) Program Officers will hold a GRFP Workshop for Geosciences to discuss recent updates to the GRFP solicitation. They will provide tips on how to write a great GRFP application and answer questions. WHAT: GRFP Workshop for Geosciences WHEN: Aug. 14th at 2:00 PM EST WHERE: VIRTUAL, please register at: https://nsf.zoomgov.com/webinar/register/WN_WD0ykJ-hQp2M_HTHxk6khA ABOUT GRFP: https://new.nsf.gov/funding/opportunities/nsf-graduate-research-fellowship-program-grfp We encourage faculties, researchers, and students to take advantage of this opportunity and learn about the above program. Best Regards, Dr. Shikha Raizada Program Director Aeronomy, GEO/AGS NSF -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From resendiz at lanl.gov Mon Aug 14 11:49:54 2023 From: resendiz at lanl.gov (Resendiz Lira, Pedro Alberto) Date: Mon, 14 Aug 2023 17:49:54 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Cold Plasma seminar series announcement Message-ID: Hi, I would like to announce our coming Cold Plasma seminar on the CEDAR mailing list. Thanks in advance, -Pedro. ************************************** This is the announcement: ************************************** Dear colleagues, Please join us for our Cold-Plasma Seminar series taking place on August 16th, 2023. The seminar will be held at the Coyote Conference Room located at Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, USA. If attending the seminar in person is not feasible, virtual attendance is also available. The Webex link will be made available prior each seminar on our website at: https://www.lanl.gov/org/ddste/aldsc/theoretical/applied-mathematics-plasma-physics/cold-plasma-seminars.php You can also join the distribution mailing list by contacting Gian Luca Delzanno (delzanno at lanl.gov). The speaker is Michael Henderson from Los Alamos National Laboratory: Speaker: Michael Henderson, LANL, ISR-1. Title: Coupling Between Intense Meso-Scale Auroral Streamer Structures, the Concurrent Generation of Giant Undulations and STEVE Emissions, and Intermixing of Cold and Hot Plasma Populations in the Dusk to Pre-Midnight Plasmapause Region Date: August 16th, 2023 Time: 12 PM - 1 PM Eastern Time, 4-5 PM Universal Time Coordinated, 6-7 PM Central European Time. Recorded Seminar: Yes. Thanks, Pedro Resendiz Los Alamos National Laboratory -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From gross at bu.edu Tue Aug 15 08:54:10 2023 From: gross at bu.edu (Gross, Nicholas) Date: Tue, 15 Aug 2023 14:54:10 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Fall 2023 Webinar Message-ID: Fall 2023 Webinar The SHIELD Webinar series is a forum to highlight the unique backgrounds of individual scientists. Speakers are invited to not only share their science, but also to discuss their science journey and the unique influences that shaped their experience. After a short presentation, the invited speakers will engage in a conversation with the host, SHIELD Director Merav Opher, and respond to questions from the audience. Here are the talks planned for the SHIELD Fall Webinar Series! * Sept. 1st: Sarah Gibson: ?Galloping to the Sun? * Registration Link https://bostonu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_1y_q8R_3SIiWVE4adofTqQ * Sept. 22nd: Cherilynn Morrow: ?Outreach Activities for Your Eclipse Event? * Registration Link https://bostonu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ycpWkRIoSf2PGam5WWxsUQ * Nov. 17th: Lika Guhathakurta: ?We are all Living Stars? * Registration Link https://bostonu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_gSlfyiJKSRS6PHknV9-JYA For more details, visit us at https://shielddrivecenter.com/shield-webinars/ [Title: SHIELD Logo] Find us on the web at: * Email: shieldoutreach at bu.edu * Website: https://sites.bu.edu/shield-drive/ * Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SHIELDDriveScienceCenter * X (Twitter): @SHIELD_drive * Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/shield-nasa-dsc/ * Instagram: shield_dsc -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 6967 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: From VIJAY.HARID at UCDENVER.EDU Tue Aug 15 10:24:51 2023 From: VIJAY.HARID at UCDENVER.EDU (Harid, Vijay) Date: Tue, 15 Aug 2023 16:24:51 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: =?windows-1252?q?Meeting_Announcement=3A_=93Machine?= =?windows-1252?q?_learning_techniques_for_near_Earth_space_science_=28GH?= =?windows-1252?q?=29=94_at_the_upcoming_URSI-NRSM_2024_conference?= Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, We would like to invite the community to submit an abstract to the special session (GH) ?Machine learning techniques for near Earth space science? at the upcoming URSI-NRSM conference, which will be held in Boulder, CO January 9-13, 2024. This session seeks contributions from the following topics: ML techniques applied for space weather prediction, studies of the magnetosphere, radiation belts, ionosphere and upper atmosphere. We welcome contributions with applications to (but not limited to) event detection/extraction, noise reduction, classification, inverse problems, dimensionality reduction, feature engineering/extraction, reinforcement learning, physics-informed machine learning and ML learned partial differential equations. A combination between ML techniques and physics-based models is also especially welcome. The deadline for abstract submissions is September 13, 2023. More information is available at https://www.nrsmboulder.org We look forward to seeing you in Boulder! Best Regards, Session Co-Chairs: Vijay Harid and Xiangning Chu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From chau at iap-kborn.org Wed Aug 16 04:19:23 2023 From: chau at iap-kborn.org (Jorge L. Chau) Date: Wed, 16 Aug 2023 12:19:23 +0200 Subject: CEDAR email: Save the Date: 16th International Workshop on Technical and Scientific Aspects of iMST Radar and Lidar (MST16/iMST3) In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear CEDAR colleagues, "Join us in K?hlungsborn, Germany from September 9th to 13th, 2024" We are thrilled to announce the MST16/iMST3 workshop, building upon the legacy of successful workshops on "Technical and Scientific Aspects of Mesosphere-Stratosphere-Troposphere (MST) Radars." Since 1984, these gatherings have been at the forefront of cutting-edge atmospheric and ionospheric research and technological development. In the spirit of evolution, MST16/iMST3 takes the exciting leap to incorporate iMST lidar observations and welcomes complementary studies combining radar, lidar, in-situ and other ground- and satellite-based techniques. Venue: Leibniz Institute of Atmospheric Physics (IAP) in K?hlungsborn, Germany. Dates: Workshop: September 9th - 13th, 2024 Pre-Workshop School: September 6th - 8th, 2024 (Lidar and Radar Technical and Scientific Basics) Charming "German Riviera" Location: K?hlungsborn, a picturesque coastal town, offers a serene atmosphere for networking and learning. Easily accessible from Hamburg or Berlin airports. Topics to be Covered: The workshop will delve into a wide range of critical subjects, including but not necessarily limited to: - Tropospheric and Stratospheric Processes - Planetary Waves and Tides in the Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere - Atmospheric and Ionospheric Gravity Waves, Turbulence and Layering Structures - Ionospheric Plasma Irregularities - Atmospheric and Ionospheric Vertical Coupling Studies - Synergistic Use of Instruments (Radars, Lidars, In-situ,?) - New Technical and signal/data Processing Advances including Machine learning - Recent advances and future plans Call to Action: To support the organization and tailor the event to your needs, please complete the short questionnaire via this link https://forms.gle/BNe4H9H8kTCizE1u7 Stay Tuned: More details on the scientific program, logistical arrangements, and financial support opportunities will be released soon. Be sure to mark your calendars and spread the word among colleagues and peers! The International Steering Committee (ISC) and the Local Organizing Committee (LOC) eagerly anticipate reuniting the global iMST community after a long pause due to COVID-19. MST16/iMST3 promises to be a memorable and enriching experience, advancing the boundaries of scientific knowledge of IMST observations and profiling. Looking forward to your valuable presence at MST16/iMST3! For inquiries, please contact mst16 at iap-kborn.de or any of the ISC or LOC members. International Steering Committee (ISC) Ralph Latteck (IAP, Germany) (Chair) Erhan Kudeki (University of Illinois, USA) (co-Chair) David Hooper (STFC Rutherford Appleton Lab, UK) Hubert Luce (Kyoto University, Japan) Tian Yufang (Chinese Academy of Sciences, China) Michael Gerding (IAP, Germany) Iain Reid (ATRAD, Australia) Wayne Hocking (Mardoc, Canada) Local Organizing Committee (LOC) Ralph Latteck (Chair) Jorge Chau (co-Chair) Gerd Baumgarten Toralf Renkwitz Jose Suclupe Heike Thomas TBD From alex.fletcher at nrl.navy.mil Mon Aug 21 19:48:33 2023 From: alex.fletcher at nrl.navy.mil (Fletcher, Alexander C CIV USN NRL (6757) Washington DC (USA)) Date: Tue, 22 Aug 2023 01:48:33 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Meteors, orbital debris, and dusty plasmas (GH) at URSI NRSM 2024 Message-ID: <1B4F3016-B2D8-4C63-9F96-5EEEAC4F2C21@nrl.navy.mil> Dear colleagues, We invite you to submit an abstract to the Meteors, orbital debris, and dusty plasmas (GH) session at URSI National Radio Science Meeting 2024. The meeting will be in Boulder, CO from January 9-13, 2024. The deadline is September 13 (https://www.nrsmboulder.org). The student competition now requires only a two page summary paper instead of a long paper, and there is support available to help students attend (https://www.nrsmboulder.org/student). So, please bring your students! We hope to see you in Boulder! Best regards, Alex Fletcher and Sigrid Elschot -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sdch10 at vt.edu Wed Aug 23 22:08:44 2023 From: sdch10 at vt.edu (Shantanab Debchoudhury) Date: Wed, 23 Aug 2023 23:08:44 -0500 Subject: CEDAR email: AMS Annual Meeting 2024, Call for abstracts: Connections between space weather and terrestrial weather Message-ID: Dear CEDAR Community, We would like to invite you to submit an abstract to the session ?*Connections between space weather and terrestrial weather*" at the 21st Space Weather Conference of the *2024 Annual AMS* *(American Meteorological Society) meeting*. The conference will take place from *28 January to 1 February 2024* in Baltimore, Maryland. Please note that the *abstract submission deadline has been extended to August 31, 2023.* We strongly encourage submissions from Space Weather studies based on investigations of coupling processes in the atmosphere-ionosphere system, in particular using datasets obtained by GOLD, ICON, TIMED and COSMIC-2, as well as theory and first-principles models. Relevant topics include but are not limited to planetary waves and tides, acoustic and gravity waves, multi-layer observation and/or model-based studies of the different lower atmospheric contributions to the dynamics and variability of the near-earth space environment. More information on abstract submission can be found on https://annual.ametsoc.org/index.cfm/2024/program-events/conferences-and-symposia/21st-conference-on-space-weather/ . Please do not hesitate to contact us if you have any questions. We look forward to receiving your contributions! Conveners Shantanab Debchoudhury Larisa Goncharenko Guiping Liu Bea Gallardo-Lacourt -- Shantanab Debchoudhury, PhD Research Scientist Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Center for Space and Atmospheric Research -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From allison-n-jaynes at uiowa.edu Thu Aug 24 11:00:00 2023 From: allison-n-jaynes at uiowa.edu (Jaynes, Allison N) Date: Thu, 24 Aug 2023 17:00:00 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Craig A. Kletzing Message-ID: We are devastated to announce the death of Craig Kletzing on August 10, 2023 at his home in Iowa City, Iowa. Craig Kletzing started his path to career scientist at the University of California, Berkeley, where he received his Bachelor of Arts degree in physics in 1981 and worked as an undergraduate researcher in space plasma physics. In 1983 he earned his master?s degree in physics and in 1989 he received his PhD degree in physics, both from the University of California, San Diego. His PhD thesis, entitled "Auroral electron time dispersion", examined precipitating electrons in the Earth's ionosphere using data from a sounding rocket mission. After receiving his PhD, he briefly worked as a research assistant professor at the University of Alabama at Huntsville before moving that same year to an assistant research-track professor position at the University of New Hampshire in 1989. He was promoted to Associate Research Professor in 1995. During his time at UNH, he also held a Visiting Scientist appointment at the Max-Planck-Institut fuer extraterrestrische Physik from 1993-1994. In 1996, he moved to the University of Iowa and started as a tenure-track associate professor in the Department of Physics & Astronomy. He was promoted to full professor in 2005. From 2011-2019, he held the title of F. Wendell Miller Distinguished Professor. In 2019, he was named the Donald A. and Marie B. Gurnett Chair, an honor he held until his death. Craig?s research was focused on space plasma, the physics of auroras, and the dynamics of the Van Allen radiation belts surrounding Earth. While at the University of Iowa, he was Principal Investigator for a suite of instruments on NASA's Van Allen Probes mission and he was Co-Investigator and led hardware contributions on NASA?s Magnetospheric Multiscale satellite mission. Craig also led multiple NASA sounding rocket missions. In all, he was involved in over 30 space missions throughout his career. His instrument specialty was measuring magnetic and electric fields and waves in space above active aurora and within the radiation belts. In 2019, Craig led a successful proposal for TRACERS, a NASA Small Explorer Mission. TRACERS will be launched in 2024 and will study how the solar wind and Earth?s magnetic fields interact in the cusp region, dynamically driven by magnetic reconnection. In 2022, he delivered the 39th Annual Presidential Lecture at the University of Iowa. In 2016, Craig was invited as a Distinguished Lecturer in the American Physical Society Division of Plasma Physics and in 2022, Craig was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society. Craig thoroughly enjoyed public outreach, exemplified by his many media interviews including on the high-profile Science Friday show on National Public Radio. He was a highly respected teacher and loved his time in the classroom. His enthusiasm for pedagogy translated to creating an engaging and welcoming learning environment. He cared deeply about sharing his love of physics with all students, and often preferred teaching large undergraduate College Physics courses for non-majors, capturing the students? interest with lively demonstrations and the fascination he had for physics overall. Music was a constant passion in Craig?s life. Together with his wife, Jeanette Welch, he played in many Iowa City bands throughout his life including Hold My Llama, Bipolar, Brace for Blast, House of Escher, Truffle Pig and, most recently, Fork in the Road. A celebration of Craig?s career is being planned for summer 2024 in Iowa City. A tribute wall can be contributed to at the following site: https://www.lensingfuneral.com/obituaries/Craig-A-Kletzing. Craig, your enthusiasm and generosity will be missed by so many. https://now.uiowa.edu/news/2023/08/renowned-iowa-physics-professor-researcher-craig-kletzing-dies -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From piyush.mehta at mail.wvu.edu Fri Aug 25 10:23:06 2023 From: piyush.mehta at mail.wvu.edu (Piyush Mehta) Date: Fri, 25 Aug 2023 16:23:06 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Please post this to the community: Postdoctoral Fellow at WVU Message-ID: STATLER COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AND MINERAL RESOURCES The Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering in the Benjamin M. Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources at West Virginia University invites applications for a position of Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the general area of Magnetospheric Physics and Modeling, Space Weather, Machine Learning, and uncertainty quantification. The specific subjects of interest include (1) Ring-Current and/or Radiation Belt Modeling, (2) Reduced Order Modeling, (3) Dynamical Systems, and (4) Time-Series Forecasting. Qualifications Eligible candidates must hold an earned doctoral degree in Physics, Aerospace Engineering, or a related field from an accredited university at the time of appointment. A strong background and interest in Magnetosphere Physics and Modeling, Space Weather and/or Machine Learning is required. Proficiency in Python and familiarity with Machine Learning frameworks (like Keras or PyTorch) and libraries (like scikit-learn) is highly desirable. Responsibilities will include but are not limited to the following primary tasks: (1) undertaking research in the relevant areas towards achieving the research project milestones and schedule in collaboration with team members across organizations, to also include early-career researchers, research associates, postdocs, graduate research assistants, and undergraduates; (2) identifying and assisting with the acquisition of funding from public, private, and governmental sources; (3) searching scientific literature to select and modify methods and procedures most appropriate for related research goals; (4) writing and presenting research/study status reports for projects and managing regular status updates with the customer in coordination with the program managers; (5) preparing the results of research for publication in relevant conferences and journals; (6) where appropriate, involving and mentoring graduate students in research related activities. The position is available for immediate start and will be renewed annually dependent on performance and funding. To apply for this position, visit www.jobs.wvu.edu. Applicants must submit a cover letter, curriculum vitae, a two-page research summary, two representative publications, and contact information for at least three professional references. Only candidates who submit complete documentation will be considered in the review process. For further information, please contact Dr. Piyush Mehta, Assistant Professor, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. You may also visit the MAE website at: http://www.mae.statler.wvu.edu. At West Virginia University, we leverage our talents and resources to create a better future for our state and the world. As West Virginia's land-grant university, WVU has three campuses that touch each corner of the state. The WVU System includes 518 buildings on 15,880 acres, Extension Service offices in all 55 counties, ten experimental farms and four forests. >From the groundbreaking R1 research of our flagship campus in Morgantown to the career-oriented programs of WVU Potomac State in Keyser to the technology-intensive programs at WVU Tech in Beckley ? the contributions of WVU employees directly impact the 1.8 million people of West Virginia every day, no matter their role or position. Service, curiosity, respect, accountability, and appreciation are the core values that unite Mountaineers, inspiring one another to work tirelessly and support others as they seek to reach new heights. After all, when you're a Mountaineer, impossible is just another mountain to climb. Creating an inclusive, engaged, and dynamic learning environment is core to WVU?s academic mission. We welcome candidates who can contribute a range of ideas, approaches and experiences. To learn more about West Virginia University, visit go.wvu.edu. View current career opportunities at careers.wvu.edu. West Virginia University is proud to be an Equal Opportunity employer and is the recipient of an NSF ADVANCE award for gender equity. The University values diversity among its faculty, staff, and students, and invites applications from all qualified applicants regardless of race, ethnicity, color, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, age, nationality, genetics, disability, or Veteran status. Please apply here: https://wvu.taleo.net/careersection/faculty/jobdetail.ftl?job=22715&tz=GMT-04%3A00&tzname=America%2FNew_York Piyush M. Mehta, PhD Director: Center for Innovation in Space Exploration and Research (CISER) Assistant Professor of Space Systems | Wayne and Kathy Richards Faculty Fellow, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26506-6106 Phone: 304-293-3423 (o) 612-481-7542 (c) Webpage: https://piyushmehta.faculty.wvu.edu/home -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From gross at bu.edu Fri Aug 25 12:36:11 2023 From: gross at bu.edu (Gross, Nicholas) Date: Fri, 25 Aug 2023 18:36:11 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: =?windows-1252?q?SHIELD_Webinar=3A_Sarah_Gibson=3B_?= =?windows-1252?q?=93Galloping_to_the_Sun=94=2C_Sept=2E_1st=2E?= In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: The first SHIELD Webinar for the Fall will be given by Sarah Gibson on Sept. 1st at 2pm ET. Details can be found here: https://shielddrivecenter.com/shield-webinars/ [cid:image001.png at 01D9D755.FC554920] Sept. 1st: Sarah Gibson: ?Galloping to the Sun? Dr. Sarah Gibson is a Senior Scientist of the High Altitude Observatory (HAO) at the National Center for Atmospheric Research. Dr. Gibson received her Bachelor?s Degree in Physics from Stanford University, and her Masters and Doctoral Degrees in Astrophysics from the University of Colorado. At HAO, she has served as Solar Section Head, Deputy Director, and Interim HAO Director. She is a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union and was the recipient of the American Astronomical Society ? Solar Physics Division Karen Harvey Prize in 2005. Dr. Gibson is the Project Scientist on the PUNCH Mission to observe the Sun. Dr. Gibson is also committed to education and public outreach. Registration Link: https://bostonu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_1y_q8R_3SIiWVE4adofTqQ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 1438494 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: From gperry at njit.edu Sat Aug 26 14:32:45 2023 From: gperry at njit.edu (Gareth Perry) Date: Sat, 26 Aug 2023 16:32:45 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: =?utf-8?q?Job_Openings=3A_Final_Call=E2=80=945_Post?= =?utf-8?q?doctoral_Associate_positions_at_NJIT?= Message-ID: <840ED79B-40B9-4850-ABD3-94F6A830C51D@njit.edu> This is the final call for applications for the positions described below. A review of the submitted applications will begin on September 5, 2023. The Center for Solar-Terrestrial Research (CSTR) at the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) invites applications for up to five Postdoctoral Associate positions in solar-terrestrial physics. Applicants should have experience in magnetosphere, ionosphere, and/or aeronomy applied research. Experience in field-work or instrumentation is considered an asset. The successful candidate(s) will work with spacecraft data and data collected by ground-based instruments such as radars, magnetometers, auroral imagers, and/or GNSS receivers, to investigate the near-Earth solar-terrestrial plasma environment. The successful applicant will also be expected to perform the typical duties of a Postdoctoral Associate, including the conception, composition, and publication of original research, attending professional conferences and workshops (which includes domestic and international travel), field instrument deployment/maintenance as needed, submitting proposals, and supporting other CSTR projects. By their start date, successful candidate(s) should have obtained a Ph.D. in space physics, plasma physics, geophysics, upper atmospheric science/meteorology, or related fields. The appointment start date is flexible but earlier dates are preferred. The position is for two years; however, an appointment extending beyond the first year is subject to an employee evaluation. Benefits are competitive and salary will be commensurate with experience. The successful candidate will work primarily with Profs. Lindsay Goodwin, Hyomin Kim, and/or Gareth Perry. Applicants need to submit a curriculum vitae?including a list of publications, a brief statement of research interests, and the contact information of three professional references. All applications must be submitted via https://hr.njit.edu/careers (click ?Join NJIT?). Please note that five positions are posted: req5255, req5296, req5297, req5298, and req5299. Applicants need only to apply to one of those requisitions. Review of applications will commence after September 5, 2023. Questions should be directed to Prof. Gareth Perry (gperry at njit.edu ). CSTR is an international leader in ground- and space-based solar and terrestrial physics, with interest in understanding the effects of the Sun on the geospace environment. CSTR operates the Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO) and Owens Valley Solar Array (OVSA) in California, the Jeffer Observatory at Jenny Jump State Forest in New Jersey, and also manages a large number of instruments at South Pole, McMurdo, Palmer Stations in the Antarctic, optical instrumentation across South America, and various systems across the globe. Such instrumentation and data resources enable scientific studies spanning from the Sun?s surface, into the Sun?s extended atmosphere, and onwards into the Earth?s atmosphere. For more information visit http://centers.njit.edu/cstr/. Located in University Heights, Newark, New Jersey, NJIT is an R1 Research University (Carnegie Classification), the #1 public university in New Jersey (The New York Times College Ranking Tool), and a Minority-Serving Institution (MSI). To build a diverse workforce, NJIT encourages applications from individuals with disabilities, minorities, veterans, and women. NJIT is an EEO employer. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From thuang at nsf.gov Mon Aug 28 08:14:23 2023 From: thuang at nsf.gov (Huang, Tai-Yin) Date: Mon, 28 Aug 2023 14:14:23 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: NSF 23-141, DCL: Innovations in Open Science (IOS) Planning Workshops Message-ID: The Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences (AGS) in the Directorate for Geosciences (GEO) is calling for conference proposals through a Dear Colleague Letter (DCL) focused on identifying critical needs for innovations in open science for data infrastructure that can serve a research community at a national-needs level, and have the potential to significantly advance research in atmospheric and geospace sciences, ensuring their research outputs, broadly defined, in compliance with the FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reproducible) principles. The conference proposals provide the AGS community an opportunity to come together to discuss needs, best practices, and resources necessary to build a data infrastructure through which open and equitable research can be achieved. Please see the recent publication, NSF 23-141, Dear Colleague Letter: Innovations in Open Science (IOS) Planning Workshops (nsf23141) | NSF - National Science Foundation, for more information. PIs are encouraged to reach out to one of the Points of Contact in the DCL for questions. [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 tzu-wei.fang at noaa.gov Mon Aug 28 21:06:08 2023 From: tzu-wei.fang at noaa.gov (Tzu-Wei Fang - NOAA Federal) Date: Mon, 28 Aug 2023 21:06:08 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: SPACE WEATHER FORECASTER VACANCIES NOW POSTED ON USAJOBS Message-ID: The Space Weather Prediction Center is pleased to announce an opportunity for the position of Space Weather Forecaster has been posted on the USAJobs website. This position is located in Boulder, CO and we are planning to hire *at least two individuals* for it. We are accepting applications from Tuesday, August 29, 2023, until Midnight EDT on Tuesday, September 12, 2023. The job is a career ladder position that covers the GS-09/11/12/13 levels. Please use the following web links to apply for this vacancy: GS-09 Status Candidates (usually current federal employees) - https://www.usajobs.gov/GetJob/ViewDetails/745893000(link is external) GS-09 Delegated Examining (Open to all US citizens) - https://www.usajobs.gov/GetJob/ViewDetails/745889800(link is external) GS-11/12/13 Direct Hire Authority (Open to all US citizens) - https://www.usajobs.gov/GetJob/ViewDetails/745892300 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sarkhel at ph.iitr.ac.in Thu Aug 31 00:11:32 2023 From: sarkhel at ph.iitr.ac.in (Sumanta Sarkhel) Date: Thu, 31 Aug 2023 11:41:32 +0530 (IST) Subject: CEDAR email: Submissions Open: Advances In Mesosphere And Thermosphere Dynamics, Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences [Deadline: 30 September 2023] Message-ID: <833472934.221729624.1693462292612.JavaMail.zimbra@ph.iitr.ac.in> Dear Researcher, Submission is now open for the special issue, Advances In Mesosphere And Thermosphere Dynamics, to be published in Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences. The brief description on the research topic is given below: The coupled Mesosphere-Thermosphere system is affected by both lower atmospheric as well as magnetospheric forcings. Various atmospheric waves, excited in the troposphere, can reach this region in their course of propagation, and control and modify the dynamics of the ambience. Large-scale middle atmospheric disturbances, e. g. sudden stratospheric warming, have a mighty impact on the overlying mesosphere-thermosphere system through dynamical coupling. The geomagnetic disturbances driven by strong solar activities can impact significantly through precipitation of energetic charge particles in the ionosphere causing heating and associated alteration in the circulation pattern therein. Owing to complexities of physical processes and lack of investigation, various observed features are not completely understood and require extensive multi-platform and multi-instrument observations as well as modeling studies. Clear understanding of this coupled region is essential to delineate a broader perspective of the Sun -Earth interactions. You can read more about the collection [ https://www.frontiersin.org/research-topics/53262/advances-in-mesosphere-and-thermosphere-dynamics#overview | here ] . Why publish on this Research Topic? Alongside a top group of authors, the accepted work will be published in Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences, a leading journal in the field with a Journal Impact Factor of 3.0 and a CiteScore of 3.4. The deadline for the manuscript submission is 30 September 2023 . As a Gold open access journal, publishing fees are applied to accepted articles. Please contact [ mailto:spacesciences.submissions at frontiersin.org | spacesciences.submissions at frontiersin.org ] to discuss fees, institutional waivers, and discounts. The team at Frontiers will be in touch over the next few days to explain more about contributing to the collection. If you have any other questions in the meantime, please let us know. We believe your insight will be a great addition to this topic, and we look forward to hearing more about your latest research. Best Regards, Editors: Dr. Amitava Guharay, Physical Research Laboratory, India ( [ mailto:guharay at prl.res.in | guharay at prl.res.in ] ) Dr. Sumanta Sarkhel, Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, India ( [ mailto:sarkhel at ph.iitr.ac.in | sarkhel at ph.iitr.ac.in ] ) Dr. Igo Paulino, Federal University of Campina Grande, Brazil ( [ mailto:igo.paulino at df.ufcg.edu.br | igo.paulino at df.ufcg.edu.br ] ) -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sumanta Sarkhel, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Department of Physics, (Joint Faculty in Centre for Space Science and Technology), Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, Roorkee - 247667, Uttarakhand, India ? : +91-1332-284817 Visit My Profile: https://www.iitr.ac.in/~PH/Sumanta_Sarkhel Visit Our Webpage: https://allsky.iitr.ac.in My Google Scholar Citation Page: https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=UotPqsMAAAAJ My ResearchGate Profile: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Sumanta_Sarkhel/ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Jon.Vandegriff at jhuapl.edu Thu Aug 31 15:02:53 2023 From: Jon.Vandegriff at jhuapl.edu (Vandegriff, Jon) Date: Thu, 31 Aug 2023 21:02:53 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: DASH meeting - travel stipends available Message-ID: <67F900AC-74C1-4F68-BFD2-197EAF06A7F3@contoso.com> DASH conference - new update on student and early career stipends! We are happy to announce that National Science Foundation funding is supporting a limited number of travel stipends for student and early career attendees of the DASH conference and IHDEA meeting. To apply, please register for the meeting and then also fill out this stipend application. Registration and Abstracts: https://secwww.jhuapl.edu/EventLink/Event/295 Stipend application: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScqBHG7U3iEaI2rQ9SwOM62XjHHJnQSjqubP3CRXy1B8DtZ7g/viewform?usp=sf_link IHDEA Meeting Registration: https://secwww.jhuapl.edu/EventLink/Event/318 Note: DASH registration is free (with optional prepay for lunches) and you do not need to submit an abstract to register or apply for the stipend. IHDEA is also free to register. The Data, Analysis and Software for Heliophysics (DASH) conference is intended to bring together a community of software and data science practitioners so we can learn about each other?s work and connect on technical issues of common interest. Poster submissions are welcome on any relevant topic, and oral presentation requests can be submitted for the specific session topics listed at the meeting site. From Jon Vandegriff on behalf of the DASH organizing committee: Julie Barnum, Sandy Antunes, Brian Thomas, Jack Ireland, R. T. 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