From jcholmes at lanl.gov Mon Aug 1 08:36:01 2022 From: jcholmes at lanl.gov (Holmes, Justin Craig) Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2022 14:36:01 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Online Cold Plasma Seminar Series Message-ID: Dear colleagues, Please join us for the Online Cold-Plasma Seminar series on August 3rd, 2022. Details can be found at: https://www.lanl.gov/org/ddste/aldsc/theoretical/applied-mathematics-plasma-physics/cold-plasma-seminars.php where the zoom link will be posted prior to each seminar (also below). You can also join the distribution mailing list by contacting Gian Luca Delzanno (delzanno at lanl.gov). The speaker is Cecilia Norgren from the University of Bergen. Speaker: Cecilia Norgren, University of Bergen, Norway Title: On the presence and thermalization of cold plasma in the reconnection exhaust Date: August 3rd, 2022 Time: 11 AM-12 PM Eastern Daylight time, 3-4 PM Universal Time Coordinated, 5-6 PM Central European Summer time Thanks, Justin Holmes Los Alamos National Laboratory Topic: Norgren Cold Plasma Seminar Time: Aug 3, 2022 09:00 AM America/Boise Join Zoom Meeting https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81630873273?pwd=Y0dzajZHa2RmM3UwMExVMVdwb2xDdz09 Meeting ID: 816 3087 3273 Passcode: 415804 One tap mobile +14086380968,,81630873273#,,,,*415804# US (San Jose) +16694449171,,81630873273#,,,,*415804# US Dial by your location +1 408 638 0968 US (San Jose) +1 669 444 9171 US +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose) +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma) +1 346 248 7799 US (Houston) +1 564 217 2000 US +1 646 876 9923 US (New York) +1 646 931 3860 US +1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC) +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago) +1 386 347 5053 US Meeting ID: 816 3087 3273 Passcode: 415804 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From rob.redmon at noaa.gov Mon Aug 1 09:00:00 2022 From: rob.redmon at noaa.gov (Rob Redmon - NOAA Federal) Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2022 08:00:00 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: AMS Session: Open Env. Datasets for AI Applications: Benchmarking Needs, Frameworks, Lessons Learned Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, We?d like to encourage you to submit an abstract to the next *AMS annual meeting (January 8-12, 2023)* sharing your experiences and inspiring critical conversations on community needs, frameworks and standards development, and lessons learned for developing benchmark datasets. Abstracts are due via the submission portal by *August 24th.* We look forward to discussing this important topic with you online or in person in beautiful Colorado! Best wishes, Rob Redmon *Session Topic Title:* Open Environmental Datasets for AI Applications: Benchmarking Needs, Frameworks, Lessons Learned *Session Topic ID:* 61571 *Conference: *22nd Conference on Artificial Intelligence for Environmental Science *AMS abstract portal:* https://annual.ametsoc.org/index.cfm/2023/program-events/conferences-and-symposia/22nd-conference-on-artificial-intelligence-for-environmental-science/ *Session Description:* Benchmark datasets, such as ImageNet, are instrumental for innovation in artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML). The infusion of AI, and ML, and other advanced data science (DS) techniques is expanding exponentially to contribute to solving Earth system and space science problems. Thus, developing benchmark datasets, standards, and frameworks for evaluation, use and publishing, and sharing lessons learned in a coordinated manner is needed to ensure AI/ML/DS applications continually increase our ability to predict complex physical processes with high levels of trust and explainability. Benchmark datasets that are highly AI/ML/DS-ready will empower research in Earth and space science and the transition of research to decision making services by lowering the cost of curiosity to getting started with baseline models and interactive notebooks. Use cases and community driven benchmarking frameworks using open science principles will also foster collaborative development by providing common evaluation metrics, ontologies for labeling features, and mechanisms for capturing user feedback for trustworthy AI applications. Benchmarking will ensure efficient research and development on topics of societal importance including tackling climate change, improving weather forecasts, protecting satellite observing systems and other technologies, safeguarding ecosystems, and improving social inequities. This session invites presentations sharing experiences and inspiring critical conversations on community needs, frameworks and standards development, and lessons learned for developing benchmark datasets. We invite experiences exploring domain agnostic benchmark standards and framework development, as well as domain specific topics, such as climate and weather science, environmental justice, fire weather, ocean conservation, hydrology, space weather, and any other relevant topics. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From maute at ucar.edu Wed Aug 3 14:48:51 2022 From: maute at ucar.edu (Astrid Maute) Date: Wed, 3 Aug 2022 14:48:51 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: 2022 CEDAR workshop - recordings available Message-ID: Dear CEDAR community, we are happy to announce that the recordings of the 2022 CEDAR workshop are now available. You can access them via the 2022 agenda or CEDAR Science YouTube channel . FYI, the Tuesday 's and Wednesday 's CEDAR posters can still be viewed. Best regards, The meeting organizers at CPAESS -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From linda.parker at spaceweathersolutions.com Thu Aug 4 13:55:52 2022 From: linda.parker at spaceweathersolutions.com (Linda Parker) Date: Thu, 4 Aug 2022 19:55:52 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: =?windows-1252?q?SSWRF_II_Workshop_=97_October_3=96?= =?windows-1252?q?7=2C_2022_in_Laurel=2C_MD_+_Online_--_Registration_=26_A?= =?windows-1252?q?bstracts_Open?= In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, Registration and abstract submission are now open for the second SmallSats for Space Weather Research and Forecasting (SSWRF II) workshop, to be held 3?7 October 2022! SSWRF II brings together academia, government, and industry partners to discuss recent and upcoming advances in space weather-related research from small satellites, including CubeSats. The workshop is sponsored by NSF grant 1712718. The workshop will be a hybrid format, with an in-person component at the Applied Physics Laboratory at Johns Hopkins University in Laurel, MD, and online access provided via Zoom. There is no registration fee, but registration is required. Please note that submission of an abstract still requires separate registration. Abstracts due: 29 Aug 2022 Registration due: 25 Sep 2022 (no on-site registration) Hotel booking due: 11 Sep 2022 We have also reserved funds to provide financial support for dependent care or other needs, to help participants more fully engage with the workshop. Awards will generally be in the form of a flat fee. Applications are welcome from all in need, whether for in-person or online attendance. Support application due: 29 Aug 2022 (award decisions sent Sep 2) Additional details and links to the forms can be found on the workshop website, https://sswrf.boulder.swri.edu, along with session topic descriptions, travel information, and other information. The website will continue to be updated over the coming weeks. We look forward to seeing you at SSWRF II, October 3?7, 2022 in Laurel, MD and online! On behalf of the SSWRF II lead organizers: Amir Caspi (chair) James P. Mason (LOC chair) Ian Cohen Therese Moretto J?rgensen Teresa Nieves-Chinchilla Linda Neergaard Parker Bob Robinson Vadim Uritsky Sponsored by NSF grant 1712718 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From lindsay.v.goodwin at njit.edu Fri Aug 5 13:22:57 2022 From: lindsay.v.goodwin at njit.edu (Goodwin, Lindsay V) Date: Fri, 5 Aug 2022 15:22:57 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: List of Decadal Survey White Papers Message-ID: Hello CEDAR Community, As we rapidly approach the deadline to submit white papers to the Decadal Survey , it is critical that our community endeavors to submit white papers that reflect the broad interests of CEDAR. In this regard, one issue that has arisen is that there is confusion about who all is writing white papers and what all these white papers are about. Currently, there are several lists of white papers that community members have developed, but no one list completely captures every white paper being written. This makes it challenging to understand where there are gaps. To fix this, the CSSC and myself would like to encourage everyone who is writing a white paper, or who has a list of white papers being written, to document or link it in some manner to this spreadsheet established by Larry Kepko shortly after the Helio2050 conference . Although this list is not complete, I am pushing for us to unify behind this list because it is one of the more heavily circulated lists (and has reached communities outside of CEDAR). Please let me know if there are any questions or concerns, and I will do my best to work with you. Cheers, Lindsay Goodwin -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From salem at ssl.berkeley.edu Mon Aug 8 15:57:23 2022 From: salem at ssl.berkeley.edu (Chadi Salem) Date: Mon, 8 Aug 2022 14:57:23 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: advertisement for postdoc positions at SSL/UC Berkeley Message-ID: Hello,, I am emailing you a postdoc ad to advertise in the CEDAR newsletter. This is for postdoc positions at the Space Sciences Laboratory of UC Berkeley. I attached it in text format below and as a Word file as well. Please let me know if you have any questions. Cheers, Chadi. ----------------------- Title: Postdoctoral Associate - Space Sciences Laboratory - UC Berkeley The Space Sciences Laboratory (SSL) at the University of California, Berkeley, seeks applicants for Postdoctoral Associate positions to support NASA Heliophysics and/or Planetary missions via planetary and heliophysics research and/or hardware development. The specific projects that are hiring include ICON, MAVEN, PADRE, Parker Solar Probe (PSP), HERMES, LuSEE, THEMIS, MMS, Van Allen Probes, Wind and others. Responsibilities may include but are not limited to data analysis, space plasma or planetary atmosphere research, simulations/software development, and spaceflight hardware systems development, including instruments, power and communications. For more information about the position, including required qualifications, application materials, and deadlines, and to apply, please go to https://aprecruit.berkeley.edu/JPF03423 . The positions will remain open until filled. For questions, please email Dr. Chadi Salem at salem at ssl.berkeley.edu . All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age, or protected veteran status. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr. Chadi SALEM Associate Director for Solar & Heliospheric Physics Space Sciences Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley 7 Gauss Way, Berkeley, CA 94720-7450, USA Phone: 1-510-643-2249 Fax : 1-510-643-8302 Email :?salem at ssl.berkeley.edu -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Please visit the youtube channel of the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs where the recording of the previous seminars are available. The playlist which will also include future sessions can be accessed through the following link: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLaOqa4cng0GF3cKuj6Yz5kqG1BQ-Akkhr With kind regards, Graciela Molina on behalf of the ISWI Seminar Committee *********************************************** *Title:* Solar FLares and Space Weather *Speaker:* Dr Lucia Kleint *Abstract:* Eruptions on the Sun, called solar flares, are extremely powerful. Their violent nature and influence on Earth were realized in 1859 when English astronomer R. Carrington suddenly saw an unexpected brightening on the Sun. Lasting only a few minutes on the Sun, the event was followed by intense space weather with auroras seen as far south as Hawaii, and by failures of telegraph systems, whose operators suffered from electric shocks. Research in flare physics has determined that the energy stored in the solar magnetic field is powering the eruptions. Particles accelerated during magnetic reconnection events precipitate into interplanetary space, but also towards the solar surface where they cause many observable phenomena, such as heating, mass motions, and emission in the whole electromagnetic spectrum. Large solar eruptions are the main causes of severe space weather events, which can affect satellites and communication. In this presentation, I will give a closer look on the origins of space weather and the current research on solar flares. [image: ISWI Seminar Series (3).png] ------------------------------------------- *Dra. Mar?a Graciela Molina* Professor FACET -UNT Researcher CONICET Associated researcher INGV Av. Independencia 1800, Tucum?n - Argentina Tel: +54-381-4364093 (ext.7765) gmolina at herrera.unt.edu.ar / *m.graciela.molina at gmail.com* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: ISWI Seminar Series (3).png Type: image/png Size: 1608909 bytes Desc: not available URL: From resendiz at lanl.gov Mon Aug 15 09:29:13 2022 From: resendiz at lanl.gov (Resendiz Lira, Pedro Alberto) Date: Mon, 15 Aug 2022 15:29:13 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Online Cold Plasma Seminar Series Message-ID: <4DFAB94B-BB38-47ED-B108-21EBDB387289@lanl.gov> Hi, I would like to announce our coming Cold Plasma seminar on the Cedar mailing list please. Thanks in advance, -Pedro. This is the announcement: Dear colleagues, Please join us for the Online Cold-Plasma Seminar series on August 17th, 2022. Details can be found at: https://www.lanl.gov/org/ddste/aldsc/theoretical/applied-mathematics-plasma-physics/cold-plasma-seminars.php where the zoom link will be posted prior to each seminar. You can also join the distribution mailing list by contacting Gian Luca Delzanno (delzanno at lanl.gov). The speaker is Dan Welling from University of Texas at Arlington: Speaker: Dan Welling, University of Texas at Arlington. Title: Global Consequeces of Cold Plasma in the Magnosphere-Ionosphere System. Date: August 17th, 2022 Time: 11 AM-12 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 4-5 PM Universal Time Coordinated, 5-6 PM Central European Summer Time. Thanks, Pedro Resendiz Los Alamos National Laboratory -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Alex.Chartier at jhuapl.edu Mon Aug 15 11:44:25 2022 From: Alex.Chartier at jhuapl.edu (Chartier, Alex T.) Date: Mon, 15 Aug 2022 17:44:25 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: New SuperDARN open-source data and web visualization tools Message-ID: <6C249268-2DC7-47B6-8172-CFABC512965A@jhuapl.edu> Dear CEDAR Community, The APL SuperDARN page has been updated with new data visualization and download tools: superdarn.jhuapl.edu The files now available for download provide geolocated line-of-sight velocity data in netCDF format. The availability is shown here: superdarn.jhuapl.edu/inventory The netCDF files are stored on Zenodo, but can be downloaded via our page here: superdarn.jhuapl.edu/download All these files are based on the publicly released set of rawACF data: https://www.frdr-dfdr.ca/repo/collection/superdarn As always, users should consult with the relevant SuperDARN radar PI(s) prior to submission of work intended for publication. Alex Chartier Wallops SuperDARN P.I. Space Exploration Sector: Geospace and Earth Sciences Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory Laurel, MD 20723 Office Phone: 240-592-5861 superdarn.jhuapl.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Alex.Chartier at jhuapl.edu Mon Aug 15 13:33:15 2022 From: Alex.Chartier at jhuapl.edu (Chartier, Alex T.) Date: Mon, 15 Aug 2022 19:33:15 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: New SuperDARN open-source data and web visualization tools Message-ID: Updated link to page: https://superdarn.jhuapl.edu On Mon, Aug 15, 2022 at 12:50 PM Chartier, Alex T. via Cedar_email > wrote: Dear CEDAR Community, The APL SuperDARN page has been updated with new data visualization and download tools: superdarn.jhuapl.edu The files now available for download provide geolocated line-of-sight velocity data in netCDF format. The availability is shown here: superdarn.jhuapl.edu/inventory The netCDF files are stored on Zenodo, but can be downloaded via our page here: superdarn.jhuapl.edu/download All these files are based on the publicly released set of rawACF data: https://www.frdr-dfdr.ca/repo/collection/superdarn As always, users should consult with the relevant SuperDARN radar PI(s) prior to submission of work intended for publication. Alex Chartier Wallops SuperDARN P.I. Space Exploration Sector: Geospace and Earth Sciences Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory Laurel, MD 20723 Office Phone: 240-592-5861 superdarn.jhuapl.edu _______________________________________________ Cedar_email mailing list Cedar_email at mailman.ucar.edu https://mailman.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/cedar_email -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From nicola.j.fox at nasa.gov Tue Aug 16 12:56:29 2022 From: nicola.j.fox at nasa.gov (Fox, Nicola J. (HQ-DJ000)) Date: Tue, 16 Aug 2022 18:56:29 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Reminder: Decadal White Papers Deadline Message-ID: <06E25D08-C9B1-4D27-9261-9A06E990DAD6@nasa.gov> Helio friends ? As we enter the last few weeks of summer I want to call your attention to the rapidly approaching deadline to submit a white paper to help shape the next decade of solar and space physics. The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine are calling for white papers to inform the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2024-2033. White papers may focus on one or more science goals; potential space-based, ground-based, and combined investigations; or issues of broad concern to the community. The due date for white papers is August 24, 2022. The next Decadal will present a prioritized strategy of basic and applied research to advance scientific understanding in the full scope of heliophysics science. The Decadal Survey will also assess the health and vitality of the profession. View the statement of task here. The heliophysics discipline looks incredibly different than it did 10 years ago. In the past decade, your vision and ideas have driven growth in new areas which historically may not be captured in the traditional definition of heliophysics. We?ve seen incredible expansion and a renewed national interest in space weather activities, space situational awareness, applications of the revolutionary new capabilities in artificial intelligence and machine learning, open science, and technology development. Together we?ve leveraged new modalities for science such as CubeSats, SmallSats, and Rideshare and expanded and leveraged partnerships with the commercial sector. These are just a few areas in which we?ve pushed beyond the traditional boundaries of heliophysics. And so, I encourage you to dream big and help continue pushing the envelope of what our discipline can achieve. I am reminded of the Heliophysics 2050 Workshop in 2021 where you all came together to envision the future of our field. The expansion of this community has brought new perspectives and a diversity of backgrounds and thought, which will continue to make us stronger. The workshop was built to enable cross- and interdisciplinary connections, and it did just that, providing enormous momentum going into the 2024 Decadal Survey. My hope for the next Decadal Survey is to identify cutting-edge, interdisciplinary science problems that push the boundaries of what was previously thought possible in solar and space physics. Collaborating with the community at the Heliophysics 2050 Workshop was a crucial step toward realizing our innovative goals for the next Decadal Survey. With your input, I hope this new Decadal will help guide our pursuit and enabling of groundbreaking investigations of the Sun, its interactions with the Earth, the Solar System, and interplanetary space, and connect heliophysics? cross-cutting applications to other areas of emerging science. We can continue to collaborate with domestic and international partners to create innovative space missions and investigations that enable scientific discoveries and invest in breakthrough technologies that lead to the development of tools and capabilities benefiting society and exploration. I regularly remind people that everything the Sun touches is our discipline; we can do science anywhere! From ?touching the sun? to supporting some of the first scientific investigations as part of Artemis on our return to the Moon and on to Mars, Heliophysics is everywhere. The result would be a globally interconnected heliophysics community that inspires discovery, advances scientific and technological achievements, and safeguards human life. One final theme from Helio 2050 I want to revisit is the idea of unity. A unified Heliophysics Community is crucial as we move forward into the future. This theme was present in the science sessions as well as the community discussions. It was inspiring to hear so many diverse voices joining in the shared goal of defining the future of Heliophysics. Together, we can do big, bold things, and this is the Decadal to do it. Our community is poised for exciting things and I hope you ensure your voice is heard. There really has never been a better time to be a Heliophysicist. #HelioRocks! -Nicky -- Dr. Nicola J. Fox Director, Heliophysics Division Mary W. Jackson NASA HQ Building Hidden Figures Way 300 E St SW, Washington, DC 20546 Office: 202-358-4616 Cell: 240-475-2353 Email: nicola.j.fox at nasa.gov Pronouns: she/her/hers [signature_2691770135] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2464 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: From maute at ucar.edu Tue Aug 16 16:21:45 2022 From: maute at ucar.edu (Astrid Maute) Date: Tue, 16 Aug 2022 16:21:45 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences Postdoctoral Research Fellowships (AGS-PRF) Message-ID: Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences Postdoctoral Research Fellowships (AGS-PRF ) The Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences (AGS) awards Postdoctoral Research Fellowships (PRF) to highly qualified early career investigators to carry out an independent research program. The research plan of each Fellowship must address scientific questions within the scope of AGS disciplines. The program supports researchers for a period of up to 2 years with Fellowships that can be taken to the institution of their choice. The program is intended to recognize beginning investigators of significant potential and provide them with experience in research that will broaden perspectives, facilitate interdisciplinary interactions and help establish them in leadership positions within the Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences community. Fellowships are awards to individuals, not institutions, and are administered by the Fellows. *Full proposal accepted anytime* Proposals are accepted at any time. However, different programs may have preferred target windows so please contact the relevant program director early in the planning process for submission. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From maute at ucar.edu Wed Aug 17 09:46:35 2022 From: maute at ucar.edu (Astrid Maute) Date: Wed, 17 Aug 2022 09:46:35 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: ISWAT Working Meeting Announcement - Coimbra, Portugal - September 26-30, 2022 Message-ID: Good Morning All- The 3rd Working Meeting of the COSPAR International Space Weather Action Teams (ISWAT, https://iswat-cospar.org/ ) will be held 26 -30 September 2022 at the University of Coimbra, Portugal.The working meeting will bring together the ISWAT community to finalize preparation of the community-driven Space Weather Roadmap, to review status of on-going ISWAT projects and to plan new actions and collaborations based on our Roadmap guidelines. More information about ISWAT initiative, the community-driven Space Weather Roadmap preparation efforts, and the upcoming ISWAT Working Meeting can be found at https://docs.google.com/document/d/1FsYT65ZcNmFWSNh2HPjBooR1KjwbsH1yVI6A8DILyww/edit *COSPAR ISWAT 2022 Working Meeting Announcement* *September 26 ? 30, 2022* The 3rd Working Meeting of the COSPAR International Space Weather Action Teams (ISWAT, https://iswat-cospar.org/ ) will be held 26 -30 September 2022 at the *University of Coimbra, Portugal.* The working meeting will bring together the ISWAT community to finalize preparation of the community-driven Space Weather Roadmap, to review status of on-going ISWAT projects and to plan new actions and collaborations based on our Roadmap guidelines. More information about ISWAT initiative and community-driven Space Weather Roadmap preparation efforts can be found at the end of this announcement. The 26 ? 30 September ISWAT working meeting will: - Discuss Roadmap review papers (Tier 2) in-preparation for submission to *Advances in Space Research* Roadmap Special Issue 2: Achievements and Future Goals (*ASR-SI-2)* with focus on summary of the current state, recommendations and opportunities to move forward. Set targets for Action Teams to address. - Agree on further steps in Roadmap preparation. Discuss approach to linking through papers from Tier 1 (submitted to *Advances in Space Research* Roadmap Special Issue 1: Research and Applications) to the top-level papers. - Go beyond the Roadmap, establish new teams, plan new actions and collaborations to address new targets and priorities. - Expand on-going community-wide research projects and jump-start new campaigns; - Review approaches to source-to-impact pathways and advance predictions. - Discuss approaches to global coordination in space weather and interfacing with user groups. To register go to: https://www.iswat-cospar.org/wm2022_registration 200 EUR (early fee, before 15th August 2022) Parallel sessions are organized by Team Leads and Cluster Moderators. Some clusters may choose to plan parallel sessions focused on finalizing Roadmap paper preparation. Other parallel sessions will go beyond the Roadmap and will focus on new activities. ISWAT Working Meeting is an ideal time to establish new teams and collaborations, and to initiate new projects. Plenary Sessions will include scene setting presentations by authors of Roadmap ASR-SI-2 papers, discussions, and progress reports and action plans from Parallel Sessions. *ISWAT is a community-driven initiative. Success of ISWAT working meetings and the ISWAT initiative depends on active involvement of team leads, cluster moderators, and participants in meeting preparation and all follow-on activitie*s. Everyone is welcome to join ISWAT, to attend the meeting - and to come to the meeting with a view to joining one or more registered Teams (if you haven?t already done so), or to establish a new team. *More information on ISWAT initiative and Community-Driven Space Weather Roadmap preparation efforts* Information about the ISWAT initiative is available at: https://iswat-cospar.org . The building blocks of the ISWAT initiative are Action Teams focused on a variety of key problems and topics in space weather research and forecasting. Action Teams are organized into ISWAT Clusters by domains, phenomena, or overarching activity and can be grouped into source-to-impact Pathways. *Go to "**Join ISWAT* *" tab at the ISWAT website **https://iswat-cospar.org* * to register a new Team and/or to join existing Teams,* During the past 2.5 years, since the ISWAT Inaugural Working Meeting in February 2020, ISWAT activities have focused on the preparation of the community-driven Space Weather Roadmap ( https://www.iswat-cospar.org/roadmkap_update-pathway ). The outcome of these efforts will be encapsulated in two Special Issues of *Advances in Space Research*: ASR Special Issue 1: Research and Applications ( *ASR-SI-1)*; and ASR Special Issue 2: Achievements and Future Goals ( *ASR-SI-2).* Everyone is invited to participate in this peer-reviewed endeavor by submitting papers to both Roadmap Special Issues. The ISWAT initiative has formed the backbone for the Roadmap with a set of science papers focused on outcomes of Action teams work submitted to *ASR-SI-1 and *a set of review papers mirroring the ISWAT Cluster structure in preparation for submission to *ASR-SI-2. * To facilitate coordination between review paper authors and encourage community inputs, we introduced transparency in the writing process. Each paper intended for submission to ASR-SI-2 has a block on the ASR-SI-2 Preparation Page (https://iswat-cospar.org/roadmap_preparation_si2 ) with a Tentative Title, Working Abstract, First Author and Point of Contact, Co-authors, and links to the Paper Outline and References. We anticipate that links to Summary sections, that include recommendations on reaching long-term goals and opportunities for moving forward within the next 5 year, will be made available two weeks before the meeting. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Robyn.Millan at dartmouth.edu Wed Aug 17 10:04:23 2022 From: Robyn.Millan at dartmouth.edu (Robyn Millan) Date: Wed, 17 Aug 2022 12:04:23 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: Decadal Survey Reminder: white paper deadline Aug. 24 Message-ID: The Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2023-2033 is accepting white papers through Wednesday, August 24, 2022 (extended from the original date of August 18th). White paper details are available at https://nas.edu/ssphdecadal under Resources. Reading the white paper specifications and looking through the submission form before finalizing your paper is highly recommended. Additionally, we will be working with the American Astronomical Society to publish white papers in the Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society (BAAS, baas.aas.org). If you do not wish to have your white paper published in the BAAS, you may opt-out before submitting it. Your white paper will still be available via the SSPH website. For more information on how early-career community members can get involved, materials and recordings from two early-career webinars held in 2021 are available at https://www.nationalacademies.org/our-work/decadal-survey-for-solar-and-space-physics-early-career-webinars Robyn Millan, Stephen Fuselier, Art Charo, Abigail Sheffer SSPHDecadal at nas.edu -- Robyn M. Millan Margaret Anne and Edward Leede '49 Professor of Physics Department of Physics and Astronomy Dartmouth College 603-646-3969 Robyn.Millan at dartmouth.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From gmolina at herrera.unt.edu.ar Tue Aug 16 23:07:03 2022 From: gmolina at herrera.unt.edu.ar (Maria Graciela Molina) Date: Wed, 17 Aug 2022 02:07:03 -0300 Subject: CEDAR email: International Workshop on Machine Learning for Space Weather: Fundamentals, Tools and Future Prospects Message-ID: Dear colleagues, We are pleased to announce that the application for the "International Workshop on Machine Learning for Space Weather: Fundamentals, Tools and Future Prospects" is now open. This is an ICTP activity to be held in Argentina from 07-11 November 2022. Please check the Webpage https://indico.ictp.it/event/9840/ for further details and on how to apply. Please feel free to forward this information to colleagues and students interested in applying. Best regards Yenca and Graciela ------------------------------------------- *Dra. Mar?a Graciela Molina* Professor FACET -UNT Researcher CONICET Associated researcher INGV Av. Independencia 1800, Tucum?n - Argentina Tel: +54-381-4364093 (ext.7765) gmolina at herrera.unt.edu.ar / *m.graciela.molina at gmail.com* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Poster_3750 (2).pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 342483 bytes Desc: not available URL: From Sarah.Vines at jhuapl.edu Wed Aug 17 13:22:01 2022 From: Sarah.Vines at jhuapl.edu (Vines, Sarah K.) Date: Wed, 17 Aug 2022 19:22:01 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: AMPERE-NEXT: Data Release and New Website Message-ID: We are pleased to announce the release of Active Magnetosphere and Planetary Electrodynamics Response Experiment (AMPERE)* data and derived products obtained from magnetometer and supporting data acquired by the Iridium Communications NEXT** satellite constellation in low Earth orbit. AMPERE-NEXT data and reprocessed AMPERE data are now accessible via https://ampere.jhuapl.edu. AMPERE-NEXT data is available from 2019 March 1 through the present, and is updated monthly. AMPERE products from the original Iridium constellation (Block-1) have also been reprocessed with improved baseline corrections and now include 8 months of data not previously available. AMPERE Block-1 data is now provided as a continuous dataset from 2010 January 1 through 2017 September 18. The AMPERE website has also been updated, improving user navigation and increasing ease of use (please note the change to ?https?). A new web API service is now available for downloading magnetic perturbation time series data, derived continuous fits, and radial Birkeland current densities. Please visit https://ampere.jhuapl.edu for more information on AMPERE and AMPERE-NEXT, including information on forthcoming updates and releases of AMPERE-NEXT data, derived products, and tools. * AMPERE is an NSF Geospace Facility. ** Iridium NEXT is a registered tradename of Iridium Communications LLS. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hazel.bain at noaa.gov Thu Aug 18 10:39:37 2022 From: hazel.bain at noaa.gov (Hazel Bain - NOAA Affiliate) Date: Thu, 18 Aug 2022 10:39:37 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: job announcement for CEDAR mailing list Message-ID: Geospace Research Scientist at CIRES CU Boulder/NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center The Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado, Boulder is seeking a Research Associate with experience in the development, use, or maintenance of large-scale numerical models for a position at the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC). The successful applicant will be responsible for model validation efforts and product development for the operational Geospace Model, a global Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) model of Earth?s magnetosphere, which uses components of the University of Michigan?s Space Weather Modeling Framework (SWMF) to predict conditions in Earth?s near-space environment and on Earth?s surface. The successful candidate will undertake extensive efforts to validate Geospace model results, as well as exploring other complementary models, to develop actionable products to assist space weather forecasters and customers in their decision making process. The successful applicant will work closely with the space weather testbed to transition proven capabilities into real-time operations. For more information on the job and how to apply, please follow this link: https://jobs.colorado.edu/jobs/JobDetail/?jobId=41947 This position will remain posted until filled. Applications received by September 23rd, 2022 will receive full consideration. Contact: Hazel Bain (hazel.bain at noaa.gov) -- Dr. Hazel Bain, Research Scientist she/her/hers CIRES, University of Colorado, Boulder NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center 325 Broadway Boulder, CO 80305 USA Phone: 303-497-5936 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From maute at ucar.edu Thu Aug 18 17:11:46 2022 From: maute at ucar.edu (Astrid Maute) Date: Thu, 18 Aug 2022 17:11:46 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: Hampton University tenure-track faculty positions open Message-ID: *Employment Opportunities* Position: Assistant or Associate Professor Department: Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences Date Posted: 08/16/2022 Closing Date: Open Until filled *Description* The Hampton University (HU) Department of Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences (APS) invites nominations and applications for two tenure-track faculty positions at the rank of Assistant or Associate Professor beginning January 2023. Founded in 1868, Hampton University is a leading historically black university (HBCU) located on the Virginia Peninsula in the City of Hampton. It is a privately endowed, co-educational, nonsectarian institution. HU established the Center for Atmospheric Science (CAS) in 1996, which led to creation of the Department of Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences in 2007. APS offers M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in the fields of Atmospheric Science and Planetary Science. This program has established a reputation of excellence in education, outreach and research, with particular emphasis on satellite applications for atmospheric studies. *Duties and Responsibilities* The successful candidates will continue and advance the groundbreaking work of CAS and APS. This work includes building a portfolio of externally funded, high-profile research in the field of atmospheric science and recruiting, supporting, and advising masters and doctoral students. The successful candidates will also teach courses at the graduate and undergraduate levels. Objectives of the APS department include continuation of research excellence at HU in atmospheric science, expanded capacity for research, and growth in enrollment in the graduate program. *Qualifications* 1. Atmospheric research, with demonstrated achievements as a satellite science team member or in the use of satellite data to advance atmospheric science. Possible areas of specialization include atmospheric composition, chemistry and dynamics studies, using remote sensing and/or modeling. Capability to develop new satellite instruments, missions, and/or measurement campaigns is preferred. 2. Forecasting and modeling for dynamic meteorology, particularly focused on cutting edge research in forecasting severe weather and coastal phenomena, as well as wind energy applications. The successful candidate will serve as deputy director of the HU Severe Weather Research Center (SWRC), and will lead the SWRC upon the retirement of its current director. Salary will be commensurate with experience, qualifications, and accomplishments in the field. *How to Apply* Review of applications will begin immediately and will continue until the positions are filled. Applicants should submit a Hampton University Application for Employment for faculty, a letter outlining the candidate's commitment to teaching, professional and scholarly work; a curriculum vitae, and three letters of recommendation on company letterhead. Applications may be submitted electronically to teresa.jones at hamptonu.edu (with ?APS faculty search? in the subject line), or mailed to: Department of Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences Search Committee Attn: Ms. Teresa Jones Center for Atmospheric Sciences 154 William R. Harvey Way Hampton University Hampton VA 23668 *Hampton University is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jia Yue (he/him/his) Research Scientist at CCMC Research Associate Professor Space Weather Lab, Code 674 Department of Physics NASA GSFC, Greenbelt, MD Catholic University of America, DC https://science.gsfc.nasa.gov/sed/bio/jia.yue Office: 301-286-1070 Cell: 970-213-5715 -- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Robyn.Millan at dartmouth.edu Fri Aug 19 15:04:09 2022 From: Robyn.Millan at dartmouth.edu (Robyn Millan) Date: Fri, 19 Aug 2022 17:04:09 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: Decadal Survey White Papers: Deadline Extension Message-ID: The Decadal Survey on Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) is extending the white paper due date to midnight, Eastern time, September 7 (extended from the original due date of August 18th), to give the community additional time and to provide the following clarifications. No further extensions to the white paper due date can be accommodated. - White papers are limited to seven pages, not including references or the cover page*. *There is no limit on the number of references. - Under the Federal Advisory Committee Act, all materials submitted to the committee must be made publicly available. White papers will be publicly available on the Decadal Survey website shortly after submission even if the author chooses not to publish it in the Bulletin of the AAS. White papers should not include any ITAR, proprietary, or otherwise restricted information. - For more information on how early-career community members can get involved, materials and recordings from two early-career webinars held in 2021 are available at https://www.nationalacademies.org/our-work/decadal-survey-for-solar-and-space-physics-early-career-webinars White paper authors are strongly encouraged to read the white paper specifications and FAQ and preview the submission form, which are available at https://nas.edu/ssphdecadal under Resources. -- Robyn M. Millan Margaret Anne and Edward Leede '49 Professor of Physics Department of Physics and Astronomy Dartmouth College 603-646-3969 Robyn.Millan at dartmouth.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From bea.gallardolacourt at nasa.gov Fri Aug 19 15:56:54 2022 From: bea.gallardolacourt at nasa.gov (Bea Gallardo-Lacourt (GSFC-675.0)[CATHOLIC UNIV OF AMERICA]) Date: Fri, 19 Aug 2022 21:56:54 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: In-person Registration: Second STEVE Community Workshop - October 6-8, 2022 Message-ID: <61AB5327-0BD5-4783-BC74-E63878DE81B6@nasa.gov> In-person Registration: Second STEVE Community Workshop - October 6-8, 2022 On behalf of the organizing committee, I would like to invite you to participate in the Second STEVE Community Workshop: Advancing Understanding of A New Atmospheric Phenomenon. The workshop will be hosted at MIT Haystack Observatory on Thursday October 6 to Saturday October 8, 2022, and is sponsored by a National Science Foundation grant. The Second STEVE workshop will be hybrid. The in-person component will be held at MIT Haystack Observatory in Westford, Massachusetts, USA. We invite in-person attendees to register using the following link: LINK TO REGISTRATION: https://forms.gle/1dFohe8ij3aWWqLu7 Please complete the registration no later than Thursday, September 1st, 2022 at midnight PDT. Note that capacity is limited for in person attendance at the MIT Haystack facilities. The virtual component will be open to the whole community via Zoom and will be simulcast on YouTube. No registration is needed to attend the workshop virtually. Funding possibilities are available upon request and availability. We plan to prioritize funding for students, citizen scientists, and early career attendees. If you have any questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact me or any member of the organizing committee. Organizing Committee: Phil Erickson, MIT Haystack Observatory Gareth Perry, New Jersey Institute of Technology Carlos Martinis, Boston University Bharat Kunduri, Virginia Tech Bea Gallardo-Lacourt, NASA/CUA -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From tmof at bas.ac.uk Tue Aug 23 06:37:57 2022 From: tmof at bas.ac.uk (Tracy Moffat-Griffin - BAS) Date: Tue, 23 Aug 2022 12:37:57 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Antarctic/Arctic atmospheric gravity wave workshop Message-ID: Dear colleagues, please find below the information about our ANGWIN (ANtarctic/arctic Gravity Wave Instrument Network) workshop this October: 5th International ANGWIN Workshop 5th-7th October, 2022 Korea Polar Research Institute (KOPRI) 26 Songdomirae-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon, 21990, Korea Website: https://www.kopri.re.kr/eng/html/comm/0401.html?mode=V&no=c8aa8787e57d90f93643b754e9039799&GotoPage=1 Key Dates: August 30 2022 - Student support. Limited funds are available for student support. Requests to access these funds should be sent to Tracy Moffat-Griffin at tmof at bas.ac.uk September 7 2022 ? Abstracts are due. Details for abstract submission are available via the website. Registration: Registration is free. Details are available via the website. Other information: Travel, health and other information about the workshop is available via the website. Dr Tracy Moffat-Griffin Science Leader, Atmosphere, Ice and Climate British Antarctic Survey High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ET Email: tmof at bas.ac.uk|Tel: +44 (0)1223 221566 |https://www.bas.ac.uk/profile/tmof/ NERC is part of UK Research and Innovation www.ukri.org This email and any attachments are intended solely for the use of the named recipients. If you are not the intended recipient you must not use, disclose, copy or distribute this email or any of its attachments and should notify the sender immediately and delete this email from your system. UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) has taken every reasonable precaution to minimise risk of this email or any attachments containing viruses or malware but the recipient should carry out its own virus and malware checks before opening the attachments. UKRI does not accept any liability for any losses or damages which the recipient may sustain due to presence of any viruses. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From James.W.LaBelle at dartmouth.edu Tue Aug 23 08:32:55 2022 From: James.W.LaBelle at dartmouth.edu (James W. LaBelle) Date: Tue, 23 Aug 2022 14:32:55 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: URSI special session In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: ________________________________ Dear Colleagues, I would like to draw your attention to the URSI National Radio Science Meeting held in Boulder CO over January 10-13, 2023. In particular we invite you to contribute to the Commission H session "Heliospheric observations of waves in plasmas". This session aims to explore the physics and impacts of plasma waves at various locations in the heliosphere (e.g. solar wind, terrestrial magnetosphere, planetary magnetospheres), making use of observations, theory, and/or simulations. In addition to magnetospheric waves, plasma waves in the inner heliosphere (e.g. Solar Probe, Solar Orbiter) are of particular interest given the wealth of new observations in this region. The submission portal is now open, with an abstract deadline of September 16th, 2022. Please see the meeting website for abstract submission instructions: https://nam12.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fnrsmboulder.squarespace.com%2Fsubmission&data=05%7C01%7CJames.W.LaBelle%40dartmouth.edu%7C974b95a1e4224ad053d608da85117923%7C995b093648d640e5a31ebf689ec9446f%7C0%7C0%7C637968607349259472%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&sdata=9etXGzGaN5hqyJhMzRNYv6M7HliJValTnEcfLtwk8RE%3D&reserved=0 While URSI encourages in-person attendance for all presenters, a hybrid meeting is planned to allow authors to present remotely Hope to see you in Boulder, Jim LaBelle, David Malaspina (session conveners) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hyunju.k.connor at nasa.gov Tue Aug 23 10:38:23 2022 From: hyunju.k.connor at nasa.gov (Connor, Hyunju K. (GSFC-6730)) Date: Tue, 23 Aug 2022 16:38:23 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: TRACERS mission: a special mini-GEM session on Sunday before AGU Message-ID: <132E7F6B-4978-4702-B325-94D8F317FB7C@nasa.gov> Dear CEDAR colleagues, We?d like to invite you to a special mini-GEM session on the TRACERS mission held in the afternoon of Dec 11, Sunday before the AGU fall meeting. In this session, we will introduce TRACERS mission concept, spacecraft, and operation plans. We will also seek input from GEM and CEDAR scientists on potential research topics if the TRACERS data collection area is expanded from the northern cusp to a global ionosphere, especially near the equator and the auroral region. Meeting details (location, time, agenda, etc) will be announced later. 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 smcurry at berkeley.edu Wed Aug 24 10:39:18 2022 From: smcurry at berkeley.edu (Dr. Shannon Curry) Date: Wed, 24 Aug 2022 09:39:18 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: job advertisement request In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hello, I would like to advertise the job opportunity below. Please let me know if I can provide anything else. Cheers, Shannon Dr. Shannon Curry Principal Investigator of MAVEN Deputy Associate Director for Planetary Science & Astrobiology Space Sciences Laboratory University of California Berkeley ------------------------------------------ Title: Postdoc Opportunity at UC Berkeley on MAVEN Mission Job: The Space Sciences Laboratory (SSL) at the University of California, Berkeley, seeks applicants for Postdoctoral Associate positions to support the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution mission (MAVEN). The mission?s goal is to explore the planet?s upper atmosphere, ionosphere, and interactions with the Sun and solar wind to better understand atmospheric escape and climate evolution. SSL leads the MAVEN Particle and Fields science and instrument teams (STATIC, SWIA, SWEA, MAG and SEP investigations) that make measurements of magnetic fields, electrons, protons, and planetary ions. We seek qualified applicants to contribute to one or more of the following areas: - Plasma data analysis including magnetic field and charged particle data obtained in Mars? ionosphere and space environment - MAVEN data analysis with respect to understanding the effects of space weather, including but not limited to coronal mass ejections (CMEs), flares, solar energetic particles (SEPs), corotating interaction regions (CIRs) - MAVEN data analysis with respect to Martian global dust storms - MAVEN data analysis with respect to atmospheric escape and magnetic topology - MHD, hybrid or kinetic simulations of the Mars-solar wind interaction, exospheric, or photochemical atmospheric dynamics. - Instrument development for future missions - Present annually at the Space Science Seminar or other colloquia. For more information about the position, including required qualifications, application materials, and deadlines, go to https://aprecruit.berkeley.edu/JPF03423. The positions will remain open until filled. For questions, please email Dave Mitchell at davem at berkeley.edu. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age, or protected veteran status. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From arfogg at cp.dias.ie Thu Aug 25 09:03:04 2022 From: arfogg at cp.dias.ie (Alexandra Ruth Fogg) Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2022 16:03:04 +0100 Subject: CEDAR email: PRE meeting registration Message-ID: <478dd3c6-c24b-3bbe-2b17-d20d4f2b0d21@cp.dias.ie> Dear CEDAR community, The SOC and LOC of the PRE (Planetary, Solar and Heliospheric Radio Emissions) conference, to be held in Dublin on 26-28 September 2022, would like to remind you that registration is still open! You can join the PRE mailing list here: https://lists.cp.dias.ie/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pre Don?t hesitate to let us know if you would be interested in an excursion to the I-LOFAR radio telescope (https://lofar.ie/) on the day after the main conference (Thursday September 29th) in your registration form. We are looking forward to welcoming you in Dublin next September! Apologies for any repeat postings. Alexandra Ruth Fogg (on behalf of the SOC and LOC) SOC: Caitriona Jackman, Georg Fischer, Laurent Lamy, Hamish Reid, and Pietro Zucca LOC: Eoin Carley, Eileen Flood, Alexandra Fogg, Peter Gallagher, Caitriona Jackman, Corentin Louis, Sophie Murray, Elizabeth O?Dwyer, James Waters -- Dr. Alexandra Ruth Fogg (she/her) Postdoctoral Researcher School of Cosmic Physics - Astronomy & Astrophysics Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1139-5920 -- -- This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. If you have received this email in error please notify the system manager. This message contains confidential information and is intended only for the individual named. If you are not the named addressee you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this e-mail. Please notify the sender immediately by e-mail if you have received this e-mail by mistake and delete this e-mail from your system. If you are not the intended recipient you are notified that disclosing, copying, distributing or taking any action in reliance on the contents of this information is strictly prohibited. From zhualiu at nsf.gov Thu Aug 25 09:22:42 2022 From: zhualiu at nsf.gov (Liu, Zhuangren) Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2022 15:22:42 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: NSF Geospace Virtual Office Hour Message-ID: The NSF Geospace Section (GS) will host a second virtual office hour this year on Thursday September 8th, 1:00pm-2:00pm EDT to give a brief update on current GS activities and answer any GS-related questions from the U.S. research community. Geospace Program Directors will be available to answer program-specific questions, such as about the GEM and SHINE solicitations that have upcoming target dates. Registration is required in advance of this meeting: https://nsf.zoomgov.com/meeting/register/vJIsc-Gqpj4sGNU6AgdGLYYd94AdZ3zeRRI After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the Zoom meeting. If you cannot attend this VOH, you can always reach out to Program Directors anytime via email. Alan [signature_1955572749] Alan Liu, PhD Section Head, Geospace Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences National Science Foundation (703) 292-7051 | zhualiu 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: 114260 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: From Adam.Michael at jhuapl.edu Fri Aug 26 12:53:15 2022 From: Adam.Michael at jhuapl.edu (Michael, Adam T.) Date: Fri, 26 Aug 2022 18:53:15 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: GeoDAWG Seminar Series Message-ID: <09A3EE68-4E85-4B88-A963-8A73FFAE9E0B@jhuapl.edu> Dear Colleagues, We are pleased to invite you to attend the monthly seminar series of the IAGA ?Geospace Data Assimilation Working Group? (GeoDAWG). GeoDAWG?s purpose is to provide a forum to aid in the discussion of data assimilative modeling methods across the geospace sciences. More information can be found on our website: https://sites.google.com/view/geodawg/home Seminars are held virtually at 11 am Eastern Time on the first Tuesday of every month. The next seminar will be held on September 6 by Enrico Camporeale titled ?Solving Inverse Problems in Geospace with Physics-Informed Neural Networks.? A link to join the seminar via Zoom can be found on the GeoDawg website: https://sites.google.com/view/geodawg/seminars, along with the current GeoDAWG seminar schedule, which is updated regularly. You can request to join our mailing list, https://sites.google.com/view/geodawg/mailing-list, if you would like to receive our regular newsletter where we share research highlights and information relevant to the community. Speaker suggestions or questions can be also submitted online: https://sites.google.com/view/geodawg/contact-us, or you can email us directly at iaga.geodawg at gmail.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Marcin.Pilinski at lasp.colorado.edu Tue Aug 30 11:02:35 2022 From: Marcin.Pilinski at lasp.colorado.edu (Marcin Pilinski) Date: Tue, 30 Aug 2022 17:02:35 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Job Opening, Research opportunities in Space Plasmas at LASP, University of Colorado Boulder Message-ID: ============================================================================== JOB OPENING: Research opportunities in Space Plasmas at LASP, University of Colorado Boulder Research Scientist Position - Space Plasma Group (U. Colorado / LASP) ============================================================================== The Space Plasma Group at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP), University of Colorado, Boulder (CU) invites applications for Research Scientists in Space Physics at a ranking of Research Scientist I or II (RS-I, RS-2). The research project is focused on research utilizing in-situ spacecraft data with a focus on plasma physics in the unmagnetized environment of Mars. This is a position within the Langmuir Probe and Waves (LPW) team and will make use of electron density and temperature data from the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN) mission. Responsibilities will also include the publication of scientific results based on MAVEN LPW data and the dissemination of those results at scientific conferences. For more details please see: https://jobs.colorado.edu/jobs/JobDetail/?jobId=42383 Contact Marcin Pilinski for questions regarding this posting at marcin.pilinski at lasp.colorado.edu Marcin Pilinski Research Associate Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics University of Colorado -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From federico.gasperini at orionspace.com Tue Aug 30 10:01:05 2022 From: federico.gasperini at orionspace.com (Federico Gasperini) Date: Tue, 30 Aug 2022 16:01:05 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Job Opening: Research Scientist at Orion Space Solutions Message-ID: Atmospheric & Space Technology Research Associates LLC (formerly ?ASTRA?, now ?Orion Space Solutions?) is currently seeking an experienced and enthusiastic research scientist to join our team, to support and possibly lead multiple ongoing ionosphere-thermosphere projects. The candidate should: 1) possesses knowledge of ionosphere-thermosphere coupling processes, and modeling; 2) be comfortable using and contributing to scientific software models, and; 3) have demonstrated experience writing technical reports and publishing findings in peer-reviewed scientific journals. This Opportunity Due to our growing success, we are seeking an experienced, enthusiastic, and dynamic Research Scientist (Post Doc) to join our team at our headquarters in Louisville, Colorado to support multiple ongoing projects with focus on Space Weather (ionospheric-thermospheric coupling and responses to terrestrial and solar inputs) and emphasis on the analysis of existent satellite- and ground-based data sets and the development of new observational techniques. The selected candidate will have the opportunity to lead the development of research proposals for new activities, execute funded projects, and share their accomplishments through conference participation and appropriate peer-reviewed literature. The selected candidate will have the opportunity to participate as Principal or Co-Investigators for future investigations in terrestrial and planetary Space Weather, with responsibility for leading and directing the work of multidisciplinary teams of scientists. Your Impact Ionosphere-Thermosphere Science (80%) ? Use data and models to study the thermosphere, its coupling to the ionosphere and to solar and lower atmospheric inputs. ? Communicate findings in technical writing through reports and peer-reviewed journal publications. ? Modify and write software using modern software coding standards and tools. ? Collaborate with teams of 2-10 people. ? Possible projects: thermospheric dynamics, ionospheric electrodynamics, ionosphere-thermosphere modelling, Mars? ionosphere-thermosphere science, data assimilation, data science. Business Development (20%) ? Assist in Business Development activities such as writing proposals, presenting at scientific conferences and workshops, and collaborating with scientific colleagues and industry partners outside of Orion. Qualifications Required ? Education: PhD in Ionospheric Physics, Thermospheric Physics, Atmospheric or Space Sciences, Aerospace Engineering, or related technical field. ? Experience with scientific programming languages (e.g., IDL, Python) and developing high-quality and insightful visualization of scientific datasets. ? Familiarity with ground-based and space-based thermospheric and/or ionospheric data and data-base utilization. ? Familiarity with scientific data analysis and model-data comparison. ? Familiarity with both compiled and run-time programming languages. ? Strong communication skills demonstrated through peer-reviewed articles and oral presentations to audiences with widely varying degrees of sophistication and expertise, and through technical documents. ? Security clearance or ability to obtain one as needed. Preferred ? Experience: 2+ years beyond PhD, including demonstrated experience writing proposals to government sponsors and agencies. ? Other: experience in the use of common thermospheric and ionospheric data types (in situ and remotely sensed neutral and electron densities, GNSS TEC, and GNSS-RO), common climatological, physics-based, and assimilation software tools, cloud computing, running models on supercomputers. Compensation & Benefits ? Paid time off (PTO) and paid holidays. ? Health/dental/vision insurance packages. ? 401(k) benefits. ? A focus on staff development. ? An opportunity to join a successful, fast-growth organization ? and put your thumb print on our future development. ? Compensation: $70,000 - $130,000 Annual (based on experience, skills, and equity within the department). Application Deadline Applications are open and continue until the position is filled. Interested candidates should address their application to Dr. Federico Gasperini. The application should include a cover letter indicating motivation, a CV with publication record, and a list of up to three professional references. The application material should be sent at: https://orionspace.bamboohr.com/jobs/view.php?id=104 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From maute at ucar.edu Wed Aug 31 07:01:53 2022 From: maute at ucar.edu (Astrid Maute) Date: Wed, 31 Aug 2022 07:01:53 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: Geomagnetically Induced Currents and Power Systems Innovation Lab Message-ID: National Science Foundation, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, is hosting a Geomagnetically Induced Currents and Power Systems Innovation Lab to generate creative strategies and new research collaborations aimed at improving understanding of GICs and their impact on human infrastructure. This Innovation Lab will bring together experts from a wide variety of fields to envision new projects related to GICs and power grids and to develop new research collaborations. The 5-day in-person Ideas Lab will take place September 19-23, 2022 at the Table Mountain Inn in Golden, Colorado. Travel funding will be supported through the Innovation Lab. Researchers and operational industry leaders are invited to apply. The Lab encourages expertise in the geomagnetic and geoelectric field, magnetospheric and ionospheric sciences, ground conductivity, power systems, and power grid operations. *To learn more and apply, please visit: **https://apply.hub.ki/gic space weather * -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From thuang at nsf.gov Wed Aug 31 09:02:04 2022 From: thuang at nsf.gov (Huang, Tai-Yin) Date: Wed, 31 Aug 2022 15:02:04 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Corrected Dates for Geomagnetically Induced Currents and Power Systems Innovation Lab Message-ID: Sending on behalf of Dr. Lisa Winter with updated dates Geomagnetically Induced Currents and Power Systems Innovation Lab From: Lisa Winter, Jesse Woodroffe, Michele Cash (lwinter at nsf.gov) The National Science Foundation (NSF), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are hosting a Geomagnetically Induced Currents (GIC) and Power Systems Innovation Lab to generate creative strategies and new research collaborations aimed at improving understanding of GICs and their impact on human infrastructure. This Innovation Lab will bring together experts from a wide variety of fields to envision new projects related to GICs and power grids and to develop new research collaborations. The 5-day in-person Innovation Lab will take place November 14-18, 2022 at the Table Mountain Inn in Golden, Colorado. Travel funding will be supported through the Innovation Lab and researchers and operational industry leaders are invited to apply. The Lab encourages expertise in the geomagnetic and geoelectric field, magnetospheric and ionospheric sciences, ground conductivity, power systems, and power grid operations. All career stages are encouraged to apply, including early career scientists and professionals. The deadline to apply is September 9, 2022. To learn more and apply, please visit: https://apply.hub.ki/gicspaceweather/ [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 DESHPANK at erau.edu Wed Aug 31 19:07:49 2022 From: DESHPANK at erau.edu (Deshpande, Kshitija B.) Date: Thu, 1 Sep 2022 01:07:49 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: URSI-NRSM 2023 Session: Machine learning techniques for near-earth space sciences (GH), abstracts welcome Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, We would like to invite the community to submit an abstract to the special session SS.17 (GH) ?Machine learning techniques for near-earth space sciences? at the upcoming URSI-NRSM conference, which will be held in Boulder, CO January 10-14, 2023. 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 16, 2022. More information is available at https://nrsmboulder.squarespace.com/ While USNC-URSI encourages in-person attendance for all presenters, a fully-hybrid meeting is being planned to allow for authors to present remotely, and for all attendees to participate fully in the conference. We look forward to seeing you in Boulder! Best Regards, Sessions Co-Chairs: Vijay Harid, Xiangning Chu, and Kshitija Deshpande -- Kshitija Deshpande, PhD Associate Professor of Engineering Physics Department of Physical Sciences Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Phone: (386)226-7515 Office: COAS 319.01 https://faculty.erau.edu/Kshitija.Deshpande http://pages.erau.edu/~dbgnss/website_main.php -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: