From Sarah.Vines at jhuapl.edu Wed Jun 1 10:31:18 2022 From: Sarah.Vines at jhuapl.edu (Vines, Sarah K.) Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2022 16:31:18 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: =?utf-8?q?JOB_OPENING=3A_Post-Doctoral_Fellow_?= =?utf-8?q?=E2=80=93_Magnetosphere-Ionosphere_Coupling_=28JHU_Applied_Phys?= =?utf-8?q?ics_Laboratory=29?= Message-ID: <4690B63B-BEAF-434D-BB79-B7BEB1A23C6F@contoso.com> The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) is seeking a Post-Doctoral Researcher to conduct basic scientific research on high-latitude electrodynamics and solar wind-magnetosphere-ionosphere interactions through the use and continued development of the NSF Active Magnetosphere and Planetary Electrodynamics Response Experiment (AMPERE) project (https://ampere.jhuapl.edu). This Post-Doctoral Fellow position in the APL Geospace & Earth Science Group will focus primarily on scientific research of magnetosphere-ionosphere physics using the AMPERE dataset, comprised of magnetic field measurements from the Iridium Communications Network constellation in low-Earth orbit, in concert with complementary data from other assets and physics-based models/simulations. Opportunities are also afforded in supporting AMPERE data processing and adaptation to generate novel data products, as well as participation in related magnetometry efforts. More details on this position and the application link are posted at https://careers.jhuapl.edu/jobs/48660. APL is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, creed, color, religion, sex, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, national origin, age, physical or mental disability, genetic information, veteran status, occupation, marital or familial status, political opinion, personal appearance, or any other characteristic protected by applicable law. APL is committed to promoting an innovative environment that embraces diversity, encourages creativity, and supports inclusion of new ideas. In doing so, we are committed to providing reasonable accommodation to individuals of all abilities, including those with disabilities. If you require a reasonable accommodation to participate in any part of the hiring process, please contact Accommodations at jhuapl.edu. Only by ensuring that everyone?s voice is heard are we empowered to be bold, do great things, and make the world a better place. Point-of-Contact: Sarah Vines (sarah.vines at jhuapl.edu) SARAH K. VINES, PH.D. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory Space Exploration Sector email: sarah.vines at jhuapl.edu phone: (919) 449 - 7357 office: 200 ? W268 11100 Johns Hopkins Road Laurel, MD 20723 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Alex.Chartier at jhuapl.edu Thu Jun 2 06:41:00 2022 From: Alex.Chartier at jhuapl.edu (Chartier, Alex T.) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2022 12:41:00 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: GC: Poynting Flux call for presentations Message-ID: <1DE6CE78-75A3-4A29-8FCD-D04A57B5562A@jhuapl.edu> Dear CEDAR Community, We invite you to participate in the CEDAR Grand Challenge on Understanding the Electromagnetic Energy Input to Earth?s Atmosphere, aka Poynting Flux. https://cedarscience.org/workshop/2022-workshop-gc-poynting-flux 10am-12pm & 1:30-3:30pm CST (GMT -5) Tuesday, June 21, 2022 The session will include in-person and virtual presentations as well as white paper preparation. Please reply to this email address if you would like to give a presentation. Alex, Tomoko, Gareth, Wenbin, Seebany and Bill 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 QIAOZ1 at my.erau.edu Thu Jun 2 14:46:57 2022 From: QIAOZ1 at my.erau.edu (Qiao, Zishun) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2022 20:46:57 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: CEDAR Student Rep Nomination and Leadership Opportunities Message-ID: Hi CEDAR students! With CEDAR less than a month away, we have started preparing for this year?s student representative election. The Student Representatives are elected to represent the students as voting members of the CEDAR Science Steering Committee (CSSC) who help determine the direction and various aspect of CEDAR workshop. Student reps are responsible for organizing student-related activities at CEDAR, including Student Day. This is a two year term with a large time investment, not only around the time of the CEDAR summer workshop but throughout the year. Our student representative elected this year will serve through 2024. Timeline: As in past years, we will be accepting nominations for the position of student representative until the end of CEDAR workshop on June 24th. Decisions will be made by the CSSC committee at the next CSSC meeting which will be held in July. Please email Meghan or me to submit a nomination for yourself or someone else. Student Rep Requirement: To become a student representative candidate, the student must be a graduate student for the next two years, and have attended one CEDAR summer workshop (both virtual and in-person workshop count). Since the responsibilities of CEDAR student rep are to vote in CSSC meetings and organize the student events in summer workshops, the candidates must confirm their ability to attend the CSSC meetings and in-person workshops for the next two years. Students who are interested of running for student rep are encouraged to patriciate in CEDAR 2022 student volunteers team and take the roles of student newsletter writers or student co-conveners. Meghan and I would also like to remind everyone about the student leadership opportunities we have at CEDAR 2022! If you would like to be a part of any of these leadership initiatives please feel free to email Meghan or me. These opportunities are open to both domestic and international students: * Student Day and Student Newsletter: The general theme of this year?s student day is ?Reconnect & Act!? and we?re going to include three lightning rounds (L1. Back to Basics Lectures, L2. Hands-On Tutorials, L3. Tips on Scientific Communication) as well as several general talks and DEI happy hour. We welcome student photographers, sli.do moderators and student newsletter volunteers to lead our student day. In 2020 we published the first volume of cedar student newsletter with the help of 11 student volunteers and last year we made the second volume with 9 student volunteers. Come join our team! * Student co-convener: We want to ask if anyone would like to contribute to any specific CEADR workshops as a student co-convener. This would involve working with workshop conveners and potentially providing a summary of the session to the student newsletter. Please don't hesitate to contact us with any questions about the leadership opportunities, and let us know of any nominations! PS: If this is your first time participating CEDAR, don?t forget to join CEDAR slack channel and subscribe to CEDAR mail list. We look forward to seeing everyone at Austin! Your Student Reps, Zishun Qiao (2022-2023, qiaoz1 at my.erau.edu) Meghan Lemay (2021-2022, mmlemay at bu.edu) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From lpg at mit.edu Thu Jun 2 15:42:22 2022 From: lpg at mit.edu (Larisa Goncharenko) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2022 21:42:22 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Reminder - CEDAR community statement on DYNAMIC mission Message-ID: Dear colleagues, This is a reminder to sign the CEDAR Community Statement on the NASA DYNAMIC mission that is available at https://docs.google.com/document/d/1J4zc0c4u0PCNJxPv1GFRKrgqDJN6mIQx/edit? At this point we have ~70 signatories and will be sending this statement to the NASA headquarters soon. Join us to show that space physics researchers firmly stand behind the DYNAMIC mission! Many thanks, Larisa Goncharenko ????????? Larisa Goncharenko CEDAR Science Steering Committee Chair Research Scientist MIT Haystack Observatory lpg at mit.edu 617-715-5622 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From gperry at njit.edu Thu Jun 2 18:15:03 2022 From: gperry at njit.edu (Gareth Perry) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2022 20:15:03 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: CEDAR-GEM Joint Workshop on Polar-Cap science Message-ID: Dear colleagues, We cordially invite you to participate in the CEDAR-GEM Joint Workshop on Polar-Cap science (https://cedarscience.org/workshop/2022-workshop-polar-cap-science ). A consensus has emerged from several different decadal survey white paper workshops organized by members of the CEDAR and GEM communities that many questions regarding the coupled magnetosphere-ionosphere-thermosphere system in the polar-caps remain unsolved. Achieving science closure on these questions will require concerted cross-disciplinary efforts in observation (ground- and space-based) and modeling. Upcoming spacecraft missions such as TRACERS, GDC, and DYNAMIC will have a focus on the high-latitude and polar-cap regions and exemplify the strong investment that has been placed in studying the compelling nature of the polar-cap regions. We are soliciting presentations on any topic to CEDAR-GEM science related to the polar-cap regions. We strongly encourage student participation. Student presentations will be prioritized. The joint session will facilitate collaboration with the GEM community and the GEM Interhemispheric Approaches to Understand M-I Coupling Focus Group. Hawaii (hosting GEM) and Texas (hosting CEDAR) will be linked via video conferencing such that both CEDAR and GEM attendees will be able to present their research. Be well, Gareth Perry Lindsay Goodwin Alex Chartier Xinzhao Chu Hyomin Kim Binjie Liu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From arfogg at cp.dias.ie Fri Jun 3 02:09:08 2022 From: arfogg at cp.dias.ie (Alexandra Ruth Fogg) Date: Fri, 3 Jun 2022 09:09:08 +0100 Subject: CEDAR email: PRE meeting abstract extension Message-ID: <0f94bd74-945e-90af-b821-80eba87f9311@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 inform you that the deadline for abstract submission has been extended to June 8th. We warmly invite you to submit your abstract(s) here: https://pre2022.dias.ie/ 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), by filling in our short survey on the home page (https://pre2022.dias.ie/). 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) *Please note my current working days are Thursdays and Fridays only.* 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. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From reinhard.h.friedel at nasa.gov Mon Jun 6 09:58:45 2022 From: reinhard.h.friedel at nasa.gov (Friedel, Reinhard (HQ-DJ000)[LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY]) Date: Mon, 6 Jun 2022 15:58:45 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: An item for your CEDAR newsletter Message-ID: Dear Sir, I would like to have the following ROSES ?advert? posted in the CEDAR newsletter ? I am the Program Officer for at NASA HQ for both the HDEE and new HTM program element. Please let me know if you need an anything else? Go well Reiner Reinhard (Reiner) Friedel Program Scientist (IPA), Heliophysics Division Mary W. Jackson NASA HQ Building 300 Hidden Figures Way SW, Washington, DC 20546-001 202.281.6360 (cell) Working remotely from Los Alamos, New Mexico -- New opportunities in NASA ROSES Heliophysics Data (B.12 HDEE) and Python Software (B.20 HTM) Programs There have been some significant changes within ROSES 2022 regarding the old HDEE (Heliophysics Data Environment Enhancements) and the new HTM (Heliophysics Tools and Methods) program elements. Common Updates: * Both HDEE and HTM are now accepting proposals at any time. Incoming proposals will be reviewed at an approximate quarterly cadence, with the first of these scheduled for end of May 2022, and the next one for end of August 2022. * One year proposals remain the norm, with a second year possible with strong justification. * Awards can range from $50K - $100K with the median award at $75K. HDEE Updates: * HDEE returns to its classical task of supporting Heliophysics Data Upgrades. * The Value Added Enhancement option is no longer offered in HDEE but is now covered through its own program element (HTM). * Two types of Data Upgrade proposals are solicited in 2022: * Open Data Upgrade Projects covering all past Heliophysics mission, extended to cover all HP research relevant satellite instrument datasets (not just NASA missions). Currently non-public datasets are eligible if the end-product of the project becomes an openly accessible dataset. * Special Data Upgrade Projects targeting HP research relevant CubeSat data. Covers all HP research relevant CubeSat datasets (not just NASA missions). Includes data from past CubeSat missions and operating CubeSat missions. HTM (New Program): * Replaces the Value Added Enhancement option in HDEE but remains otherwise essentially unchanged. * Specifically solicits proposals to advance the goal of a robust, vital, and cohesive Python environment for Heliophysics, as part of the current Python in Heliophysics Community (PyHC) effort, see PyHC web site. Please refer to ROSES B.12 HDEE and ROSES B.20 HTM for further details. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dsozturk at alaska.edu Mon Jun 6 11:47:07 2022 From: dsozturk at alaska.edu (Dogacan Ozturk) Date: Mon, 6 Jun 2022 09:47:07 -0800 Subject: CEDAR email: Invitation to participate in CEDAR session on Data Science and Open Science Message-ID: Dear colleagues, We are happy to organize once again the session on Data Science and Open Science at the upcoming CEDAR workshop in Austin. The session will be on Monday, June 20 from 13:30-15:30 CDT (UTC-5). The session will focus on building on a many-year foundation of CEDAR Data Science advances, and center Open Science in discussions. This year, we also plan to target a draft document to become a proposal for a 2023 Grand Challenge around data science transforming CEDAR science. We solicit presentations on the following topics - Efforts that bring together CEDAR science with Data Science methods - Efforts to create Open Science for CEDAR - Examples from related disciplines that could be applicable to CEDAR Data Science or Open Science initiatives - Efforts that address the entire data lifecycle (Collection, Management, Analysis, Communication) We look forward to your presentations and an active workshop session with opportunity for dialog and discussions. Thank you, Ryan McGranaghan, Asti Bhatt, Dogacan Ozturk, Bharat Kunduri -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From clezio.denardin at inpe.br Mon Jun 6 11:59:22 2022 From: clezio.denardin at inpe.br (Clezio Marcos De Nardin) Date: Mon, 6 Jun 2022 14:59:22 -0300 Subject: CEDAR email: [COLAGE 2nd Announcement] - Abstract Submission In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <002a01d879cf$26c4ea20$744ebe60$@inpe.br> Second Announcement ? Deadline for Abstract submission is 1st July 2022!! XIII COLAGE - Conferencia Latinoamericana de Geof?sica Espacial S?o Jos? dos Campos (SP), Brazil 27th November to 2nd December 2022 The Asociaci?n Latinoamericana de Geof?sica Espacial (ALAGE) is an autonomous scientific society that attempts to motivate the development of research in Space Geophysics, taking advantage of the human resources and the cultural unity, as well as the similar economic conditions of Latin America. ALAGE seeks to complement the activities of the existing regional geophysical organisms. One of the main activities of ALAGE is the periodical organization of meetings that are attended by most of the scientists working in the ALAGE areas of interest. These meetings are called Conferencia Latinoamericana de Geof?sica Espacial (COLAGE). Previous COLAGE workshops have been held in diverse locations: Brazil (1988), Mexico (1991), Cuba, (1993), Argentina (1996), Costa Rica, (1998) Chile (2001), Brazil (2004), Mexico (2007), Costa Rica (2011), Peru (2014), Argentina (2018), and Chile (2021, online). The XIII COLAGE will be held at the Fernando de Mendon?a Auditorium, in the Integration and Testing Laboratory (LIT), of the National Institute for Space Research (INPE), in S?o Jos? dos Campos (SP), Brazil, from 27th November to 2nd December 2022. Contributed and invited talks will be organized in the following scientific sessions: Space Weather Ionosphere and Upper Atmosphere Solar Physics, Heliosphere, Cosmic Rays Solar Wind, Magnetosphere and Geomagnetism Space Plasma Physics and Nonlinear Processes in Space Geophysics COLAGE International Space Science School (ISSS) Historically, ALAGE also promotes schools associated with COLAGEs. The International Space Science School (ISSS) will take place from 24th to 26th November 2022, at the same venue as the XIII COLAGE. The aim of the school is to promote knowledge and training for undergraduate, master's, and doctoral candidates, from all over the world, in the area of Space Sciences, covering topics such as the Sun and the Solar Activity, Interplanetary Medium, and the Solar Wind, Magnetosphere, Ionosphere, Upper Atmosphere, Planetary Sciences, and Space Weather. For further details on the XIII COLAGE, please access (NB: in English and Portuguese): https://www.gov.br/inpe/en/events/colage/2022/ COLAGE e-mail address: colage.2022 at inpe.br ISSS school: isss at inpe.br We also ask you please to redistribute to your colleagues. Sincerely, Dr. Clezio Marcos De Nardin On behalf of the Local Organizing Committee -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: XIIICOLAGE_Second_Announcement.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 522936 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Example_of_Abstarct.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 95270 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: ABSTRACT_TEMPLATE_20220603(2) (1).pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 1015512 bytes Desc: not available URL: From linda.parker at spaceweathersolutions.com Tue Jun 7 08:15:35 2022 From: linda.parker at spaceweathersolutions.com (Linda Parker) Date: Tue, 7 Jun 2022 14:15:35 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: ASEC2021 JSR Virtual Collection In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, The AIAA Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets Call for Papers for the Virtual Collection for the Applied Space Environments Conference (ASEC) 2021 is open to the larger scientific and engineering community. ASEC is a forum for the space environment engineering and applied space science community to discuss the discipline?s ability to support current space programs and to identify gaps in knowledge and technology needs required to meet future crewed and robotic exploration goals. Papers for the Virtual Collection are being accepted for applicable environments and effects including (but not limited to): impacts of space weather and space climatology on space system design and operations, ionizing radiation and radiation environments and its effects on materials, neutral atmosphere density in planetary environments and satellite drag, solar UV/EUV and x-ray photons, micrometeoroid and orbital debris environments and hypervelocity impact effects on hardware, microgravity, and other environments that impact design and operation of crewed and robotic space systems in the space environment. Due date for paper submission is July 15, 2022. Please see the Virtual Collection link for more information and submission instructions. Kind regards, Insoo Jun, JPL Joseph Minow, NASA Linda Neergaard Parker, Space Weather Solutions -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Simon.Wing at jhuapl.edu Wed Jun 8 04:31:42 2022 From: Simon.Wing at jhuapl.edu (Wing, Simon) Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2022 10:31:42 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: The 6th IAGA Summer School 2023 Message-ID: The 6th IAGA Summer School will be held in Niemegk, Germany, just the week before the IUGG General Assembly 28th. IUGG General Assembly will be held 11-20 July 2023 at the Messe Berlin ? City Cube, Berlin, Germany. About 20 early career scientists will be sponsored for accommodation and cost of living (but not the travel cost to Germany). We are seeking nominations of excellent early career scientists from Division 3. Geographic and gender diversity will be additional selection criteria. The IAGA School aims at providing excellent early career scientists (mainly PhD students and postdocs) with a good basic understanding of a wide range of the scientific topics covered by IAGA (see https://iaga-aiga.org/iagaschool/ for more details). Please send your applications to Simon Wing (Div III chair). The deadline for applications is September 30, 2022. Div III chair: Simon Wing (simon.wing at jhuapl.edu) Div III co-chair: George Balasis (gbalasis at noa.gr) Simon Wing 240-228-8075 simon.wing at jhuapl.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From J.M.C.Plane at leeds.ac.uk Thu Jun 9 01:48:59 2022 From: J.M.C.Plane at leeds.ac.uk (John Plane) Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 07:48:59 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Research Fellow in Modelling of the Upper Atmosphere - University of Leeds Message-ID: Applications are invited for the position of Research Fellow in Modelling of the Upper Atmosphere in the Atmospheric and Planetary Chemistry group within the School of Chemistry. You will contribute to two closely related projects, working with Professors John Plane and Daniel Marsh. The first project is WAVECHASM (Wave-Induced Transport of Chemically Active Species in the Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere), funded by the NERC in the UK and the NSF in the US. It aims to bridge the gap between high-resolution regional models and global climate models in representing transport of constituents by gravity waves. It will contribute to a much deeper understanding of the key small-scale wave-induced constituent transport processes (advection, turbulent mixing, dynamical transport and chemical transport), their global characteristics and their impact on atmospheric chemistry. This role will be based at the University of Leeds (UK) but the successful candidate must be willing to spend periods of time at the University of Colorado (Boulder, USA) working with project partners. The second project is DRivers and Impacts of Ionospheric Variability with EISCAT-3D (DRIIVE), a NERC highlight topic project. DRIIVE will investigate how ionospheric varibility at small-scales affects thermospheric density and how that leads to changes in atmospheric drag on satellites and space debris. It will focus on improving our ability to represent atmospheric joule heating in state-of-the-art upper atmosphere models to enable better short-term (~24 hour) forecasting of satellite and debris orbit predictions as well as inform the long-term (100-year) predictions of the space environment population. You will have a PhD (or have submitted your thesis before taking up the role) in meteorology, atmospheric physics, atmospheric chemistry, applied mathematics, geophysics or a closely allied discipline, together with a strong background in computer programming, code development and using large numerical codes and/or datasets. Experience of working directly on research problems related to the earth's mesosphere and lower thermosphere would be beneficial. The job advertisement and further particulars can be viewed at https://jobs.leeds.ac.uk/EPSCH1062. The closing date for applications is 5 July 2022. ********************************************** John Plane and Daniel Marsh School of Chemistry and School of Physics and Astronomy University of Leeds Woodhouse Lane Leeds LS2 9JT U.K. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ak1262 at unh.edu Thu Jun 9 12:13:51 2022 From: ak1262 at unh.edu (Amy Keesee) Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 18:13:51 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: PI Launchpad 2023 Message-ID: <77708620-1C57-4B4D-8C16-C75FFF0CDE8D@unh.edu> Are you interested in developing your first flight mission proposal but have no idea where to start? NASA Science Mission Directorate (SMD), the Heising-Simons Foundation, and the University of Arizona have teamed up to make this process more transparent and accessible. In the Fall of 2019, the University of Arizona hosted the first PI Launchpad. This workshop occurred over 3 days, covering a range of topics relevant to mission development. A virtual workshop was held in 2021. There are plans to host another in-person workshop over 4 days in Ann Arbor, MI towards the end of July 2023. Details about past workshops are available at https://science.nasa.gov/researchers/pi-launchpad. This announcement is to provide an opportunity for interested people to save the date and start thinking about the application process. Amy Keesee (amy.keesee at unh.edu) participated in the 2021 workshop and is willing to answer questions about her experience. Questions about the program in general should be directed to Erika Hamden (hamden at arizona.edu). Amy M Keesee, PhD Associate Professor University of New Hampshire Department of Physics and Space Science Center amy.keesee at unh.edu Office: (603)862-4316 Cell: (304)282-3527 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From tim.fuller-rowell at noaa.gov Thu Jun 9 15:28:09 2022 From: tim.fuller-rowell at noaa.gov (Tim Fuller-Rowell - NOAA Affiliate) Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 15:28:09 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: NEW Job Posting with CIRES at SWPC Message-ID: Could I please post the following new job description on the CEDAR mailing list. Many thanks, Tim Fuller-Rowell Position Description Space Weather / Ionosphere Data Scientist at CIRES CU Boulder / NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center The Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CU CIRES) invites applications for a full-time Associate Scientist position at NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC). The successful applicant will work to evaluate the influence of commercial radio occultation data on the quality of SWPC ionospheric models, products, and services. The goal of this effort is: a) to compare the data products obtained from commercial vendor-provided radio occultation satellites with ground-based and space-based environmental measurements, b) to compare with output from SWPC?s numerical models, c) to test the ingest of the vendor-provided products in SWPC?s models, and d) to participate in the development of new ionosphere products. For more information on the job and how to apply, please follow this link: https://jobs.colorado.edu/jobs/JobDetail/?jobId=39768 Applications will be reviewed as they are received. Posting will remain active until the position is filled. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Katelynn.Greer at lasp.colorado.edu Thu Jun 9 15:33:39 2022 From: Katelynn.Greer at lasp.colorado.edu (Katelynn Greer) Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 21:33:39 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: CEDAR Grand Challenge Workshop: Solicitation for Presentations Message-ID: We welcome all participants to the CEDAR Workshop: Coordinated Ground and Space-based Observations of the Ionosphere-Thermosphere System scheduled for Monday June 20th from 10:00am-12:00pm & 1:30pm -3:30 pm. https://cedarscience.org/workshop/2022-workshop-grand-challenge-concert This is the last year of this Grand Challenge workshop (2022). This year will comprise: 1) Reports from the second set of coordinated observations; 2) Strategies proposed as we move forwards, beyond the lifetime of the Grand Challenge. Overall lessons learned will be discussed: what worked, what did not, what new science was enabled. Here we seek short presentations (12minutes, plus 3 minutes questions/discussion) on any topic that may be of interest to the grand challenge, including reports from coordinated instrument studies, lessons learned, and ideas for the future. Dr. Katelynn Greer (she/her) katelynn.greer at lasp.colorado.edu (970) 310-4628 Research Associate Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics "In all science, error precedes the truth, and it is better it should go first than last." -Hugh Walpole -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mikeruo at vt.edu Thu Jun 9 21:28:58 2022 From: mikeruo at vt.edu (Mike Ruohoniemi) Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 23:28:58 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: Request to post an announcement about available PhD Fellowships at Virginia Tech Message-ID: Dear Moderators, Please post the announcement listed below for PhD fellowship positions at Virginia Tech. It would be better if the announcement were distributed before the CEDAR Workshop begins (June 19). We are planning to have people at the Workshop to talk with students about this opportunity. >> *PhD Fellowships in Geospace Data Analytics at Virginia Tech* The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Virginia Tech has funding available for students to enroll in its PhD program and pursue research in the emerging area of geospace data analytics. Successful applicants will work with faculty in the Center for Space Science and Engineering Research (Space at VT) to conduct fundamental research on space weather specification and forecasting using globally distributed ground- and space-based datasets and numerical simulations. Outstanding candidates with advanced computer programming skills and academic backgrounds in physics or engineering are encouraged to respond. Potential applicants should make the Fellowship sponsors aware of their interest by emailing a resume and statement of purpose to Prof. Joseph Baker (jo.baker at vt.edu). Review of applications begins immediately and will continue until the positions are filled. << Best Regards, Prof. J. Michael Ruohoniemi Prof. Joseph Baker Virginia Tech 1145 Perry St. Blacksburg, VA USA E: mikeruo at vt.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From russell at stoneris.com Fri Jun 10 13:47:31 2022 From: russell at stoneris.com (Russell Stoneback) Date: Fri, 10 Jun 2022 14:47:31 -0500 Subject: CEDAR email: Invitation for CEDAR session on Science as Art Message-ID: Dear CEDAR, I am organizing a session on Science as Art: Making the Invisible Wonders of Space Science Accessible where we explore artistic ways to view the universe around us. As scientists, we may already feel a connection to physical behaviors outside normal every day human experience. The view of the universe enabled by our math, physics, and study could, if presented in an artistic manner, help a broader range of humanity connect with science. I am soliciting presentations, or displays, of any artistic expression related to science, math, hardware, software, or physical phenomena. Sincerely, Russell Stoneback From lpg at mit.edu Fri Jun 10 14:55:20 2022 From: lpg at mit.edu (Larisa Goncharenko) Date: Fri, 10 Jun 2022 20:55:20 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: GDC endorsement letter Message-ID: Dear colleagues, As many of you are probably aware, the Geospace Dynamic Constellation (GDC) mission is a strategic mission recommended by the National Research Council Heliophysics Decadal Survey (2013) as the next major NASA?s Living With a Star (LWS) initiative. In keeping with its role as a strategic NASA LWS mission, GDC has a broad set of science objectives that are also of major importance for the CEDAR community. As the launch of GDC is expected several years into the future, it requires continuous support to assure that it remains a top-priority mission for the research community. The CEDAR Science Steering Committee, together with members of community, has prepared a statement expressing our continuous support and enthusiasm for GDC mission. We plan to send this document to NASA headquarters but also encourage you to use it for discussions with other potential stakeholders, including your congressional representatives. Please show your support for GDC by signing the CEDAR Community Statement at: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1khh1kVnITd6f-Ffg_2dBXPqrS-sgJ8R2/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=115603362713017192779&rtpof=true&sd=true Thank you in advance for your support and concern regarding the long-term future of CEDAR science. On behalf of the CEDAR Science Steering Committee, Larisa Goncharenko, CSSC Chair Research Scientist MIT Haystack Observatory lpg at mit.edu 617-715-5622 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From resendiz at lanl.gov Mon Jun 13 07:50:18 2022 From: resendiz at lanl.gov (Resendiz Lira, Pedro Alberto) Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2022 13:50:18 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Online Cold Plasma Seminar Series Message-ID: <70E0DC5D-7604-40EC-B94D-CB6F58D754BF@lanl.gov> Hello, My name is Pedro Resendiz and I would like to announce our coming Cold Plasma seminar. Thanks, -Pedro Resendiz. Here is the announcement: ************************************************************************************ Dear colleagues, Please join us for the Online Cold-Plasma Seminar series on June 15th, 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 Jorg-Micha Jahn from Southwest Research Institute: Speaker: Jorg-Micha Jahn, Southwest Research Institute. Title: When life gives you lemons: How to squeeze Van Allen Probes in situ particle observations beyond what you might have thought possible to learn about cold ions and global plasmasphere dynamics. Date: June 15th, 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 triplett at berkeley.edu Mon Jun 13 09:52:23 2022 From: triplett at berkeley.edu (Colin Triplett) Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2022 09:52:23 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: Invitation to CEDAR session on Tonga Eruption Message-ID: <43DDF989-6E04-4234-A8BD-C60F3668DDAF@berkeley.edu> Dear Colleagues, We invite you to participate in the session Dynamics of atmospheric regions as viewed through the recent Eruption at Tonga on 21st June 2022 at 13:30-15:30 CDT in Topaz 2. We will have six 15 minute (12 minute presentation 3 minute discussion/questions) talk from members of recently or soon-to-be published works on the Tonga Eruption?s effects on CEDAR Science. These talks will be given by Saurav Aryal (UC-LASP), Shun-Rong Zhang (MIT), Brian Harding (UCB-SSL), Corwin Wright (U Bath), Jia Yue (Hampton U), and Min-Yang Chou (CUA). We would also like to direct your attention to another session before this one. Upper Atmospheric Response to Geological and Atmospheric Hazards (21st 10:00-12:00) will also have some talks on the Tonga Eruption as well as a more general look at CEDAR Science and Hazards. We look forward to seeing you at CEDAR! Colin Triplett, Katelynn Greer, Joanne Wu, and Quan Gan -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From robert.f.pfaff at nasa.gov Mon Jun 13 14:17:19 2022 From: robert.f.pfaff at nasa.gov (Pfaff, Robert F. (GSFC-6750)) Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2022 20:17:19 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Second announcement of NASA Sounding Rocket Symposium -- August 17-19 at Wallops Flight Facility, VA Message-ID: <898A0A33-4464-416F-920A-2AFF74C5EDDA@contoso.com> Inaugural NASA Sounding Rocket Symposium ? Registration Open! The website is now live for registration and abstract submission for the inaugural NASA Sounding Rocket Symposium to be held August 17-19, 2022 at the Wallops Flight Facility, Wallops Island, Virginia. This 2.5-day event will be held in person, with virtual participation accommodated during the oral sessions. This is an opportunity for both new and experienced scientists and engineers interested and involved in sounding rockets across all disciplines ? Astrophysics, Solar, and Geospace ? to come together and share ideas and experiences focused on this unique research platform. The symposium will be preceded (August 16) by a meeting of the NASA Sounding Rocket Working Group at Wallops, to which community members are welcome to attend. Please visit https://sites.wff.nasa.gov/code810/Symposium/Sounding-Rocket-Symposium.html for important dates and information, to register for this event, and to submit your abstract. Note that registration is required for attendance even for virtual participation. Foreign National Registration Deadline**: July 1, 2022 Abstract Submission Deadline: July 15, 2022 US Citizen Registration Deadline (in-person): August 1, 2022 Virtual-only Registration Deadline: August 15, 2022 ** Foreign nationals are required to provide additional information. See Registration page for more information. Contacts: Sabrina Savage, MSFC, Symposium Organizer (sabrina.savage at nasa.gov); Rob Pfaff, GSFC, SR Project Scientist (robert.f.pfaff at nasa.gov). -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sebastijan.mrak at gmail.com Tue Jun 14 11:36:06 2022 From: sebastijan.mrak at gmail.com (sebastijan.mrak at gmail.com) Date: Tue, 14 Jun 2022 11:36:06 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: Call for papers for the 16th ISEA: Space Weather effects at low- and mid-latitudes Message-ID: <01b401d88015$3a1e9160$ae5bb420$@gmail.com> Dear CEDAR community, We are cordially inviting you to participate in the "Space Weather effect at low- and mid-latitudes" session at the 16th International Symposium on Equatorial Aeronomy between September 12-16 in Kyoto, Japan. This is a hybrid symposium, where the presentation can be given virtually. The deadline for abstract submission is June 30, 2022. Please see the symposium details on the website: https://www.rish.kyoto-u.ac.jp/isea16/index.html Full session description: Space weather at low and mid latitudes covers a wide range of phenomena that include atmospheric and ionospheric density structures and gradients affecting LEO satellite operations and measurements, trans-ionospheric radio propagation, radio links relying on the ionospheric propagation, and ground-based infrastructure susceptible to geomagnetically induced currents. This session provides an opportunity for presentations of recent efforts and advances in theory, numerical simulations, instrumentation development and observations, and forecasting techniques associated with space weather at low and mid latitudes. We solicit presentations related but is not limited to (1) the generation and impacts of small-scale plasma irregularities which can lead to trans-ionospheric radio wave scintillation, (2) the formation and impacts of atmospheric neutral density perturbations which can impair the accuracy of satellite orbit predictions (3) ionospheric currents that can induce ground-electric currents, and (4) propagation of VLF and HF signals in the presence of ionospheric density perturbations. We also welcome contributions related to a better understanding and specification of the variability of drivers of space weather (e.g., neutral densities, neutrals winds, ionospheric electric fields) during geomagnetically quiet and disturbed conditions. We are looking forward to seeing your abstracts. Sebastijan Mrak, Akimasa Yoshikawa, Fabiano Rodrigues From Kristina.A.Lynch at dartmouth.edu Wed Jun 15 09:06:52 2022 From: Kristina.A.Lynch at dartmouth.edu (Kristina A. Lynch) Date: Wed, 15 Jun 2022 15:06:52 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: updated agenda for Cedar session on Auroral System Science Enabled by Heterogeneous Distributed Data and Model Fusion In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: A detailed agenda is now posted, and listed below, for this Cedar session workshop: Auroral System Science Enabled by Heterogeneous Distributed Data and Model Fusion https://cedarscience.org/workshop/2022-workshop-auroral-system-science (Friday 24 June, 10-12) We plan two sessions of shared presentations followed by mediated discussion. The topics in the session description can be ordered along many topic axes. For the first hour, we will have a 30-minute shared presentation focussing on flows and currents, followed by a panel discussion. For the second hour, we will have a 30-minute shared presentation focussing on density and energy, again followed by panel discussion. There will be a short break between the two sessions. We encourage those working on the topics in the session description to submit posters on their work. Please let us know if your poster has bearing on this session, and join our session Friday morning for the panel discussions. We look forward to interesting conversations with an intent to seed new collaborations and projects in this area. Agenda: For the first hour (10-11 am), we will have a 30-minute shared presentation focussing on flows and currents, followed by a panel discussion: Presentations: Spencer Hatch, UIB - Local mapping of polar ionospheric electrodynamics (Lompe) Alex Mule, Dartmouth - Swarm-ThemisGBO conjunction database and auroral arc featurization Toshi Nishimura, BU, given by Larry Lyons, UCLA - Observation of multi-scale convection and aurora Meghan Burleigh, NRL - Using the right model for the science: a nested OSSE approach Jules van Irsel, Dartmouth - 2 threads for 3D auroral modelling: how to drive it and how to look at it Panel discussion topic prompts: (leads K Lynch, Dartmouth / M Zettergren, ERAU) ?what are ?matching? patterns of J/E/sigma ?the eternal question of uncertainty in model estimates ?auroral feature recognition ? For the second hour (11-12 noon), we will have a 30-minute shared presentation focussing on density and energy, again followed by panel discussion. Don Hampton, UAG/GI - Mapped aggregate auroral imagery and GBO arrays Romina Nikoukar, APL - Next-generation of beacons for ionosphere studies Seebany Datta-Barua, IIT - Automating cloud detection and instrument conjunctions Kike Rojas Villalba, Cornell - Farley Buneman and multiscale modelling Yue Deng, UTA - multiscale modeling / Joule heating Panel discussion topic prompts: (leads M Zettergren, ERAU / K Lynch, Dartmouth) ?poynting bookkeeping; ?GBO development; ? Regards Kristina Lynch, Dartmouth Matt Zettergren, ERAU Meghan Burleigh, NRL Jules van Irsel, Dartmouth -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Jeffrey.Thayer at colorado.edu Wed Jun 15 13:42:40 2022 From: Jeffrey.Thayer at colorado.edu (Jeffrey P Thayer) Date: Wed, 15 Jun 2022 19:42:40 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: GDC Community Slack Message-ID: Dear CEDAR Community, A new slack workspace has been created to share and exchange information regarding the NASA GDC mission. Follow the link below https://join.slack.com/t/gdc-community/shared_invite/zt-1afbt5m7r-FmPZPjoLFrMNkPOQKFXBIw and feel free to: 1. Ask questions through the # gdc-mission-questions channel 2. Review materials and links about the GDC mission as they become available through the # gdc-mission-general-read-only channel (this is a read-only channel to keep the information transfer clean) 3. Participate in the CEDAR/GEM GDC workshop (Monday 15:30-18:00) through the # cedar-gem-2022-gdc-workshop. Here we will have the agenda posted, talks posted, and discussion captured. 4. There is a channel called # slack-tips with reference to a few tutorials to help you get more acquainted with operating in slack. 5. Feel free to create your own channel to spark a dedicated discussion related to GDC. Reach out if you have questions. GDC IDS Team: Jeff Thayer, Rebecca Bishop, and Yue Deng Jeff Thayer, Ph.D. Negler Professor of Aerospace Engineering Sciences Faculty Director of the Space Weather Technology, Research, and Education Center (SWx TREC) Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences<../../../../Documents/1_TEACHING> University of Colorado at Boulder 3775 Discovery Drive UCB 429, N407 Boulder, Colorado 80309-0429 Tel: 303-492-1764 email: jeffrey.thayer at colorado.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From wabristow at alaska.edu Wed Jun 15 14:18:17 2022 From: wabristow at alaska.edu (Bill Bristow) Date: Wed, 15 Jun 2022 16:18:17 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: CEDAR 2022 Session on Cross-Scale Electrodynamics Observations Message-ID: <9ebeaee9-95c9-b97f-8760-b9befb8e8ba4@alaska.edu> Please join us for the workshop: Cross-Scale Electrodynamics Observational Requirements The agenda still has room for additional submissions but we would of course like to have sufficient time for open discussion. Thursday June 23, 2022 Agenda: 10:00-10:10 ??? Bill Bristow ??? ??? ??? ??? ?? Introduction 10:10-10:25 ??? Eric Donovan (Zoom)??? The need for better resolution in convection measurements 10:25-10:40 ??? Sheng Cheng ??? ??? ??? ??? Observational requirements for modeling multi-scale disturbances during geomagnetically active times 10:40-10:55 ??? Josh Semeter ??? ??? ??? ??? Maximizing the science return from optical imaging 10:55-11:10 ??? Don Hampton ??? ??? ??? ?? Resolving detailed auroral electron characteristics from ground-based optics: successes and limitations. 11:10-11:25 ??? Michael Madelaire??? ???? The Elecrojet Zeeman Imaging Explorer (EZIE) mission 11:25-12:00??? TBD??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? Additional Submissions and Discussion Conveners: Bill Bristow, Simon Shepherd, Mike Ruohoniemi, Larry Lyons, Yue Deng, Cheng Sheng Description: This workshop will focus on the science and observational requirements related to the crossscale coupling of Magnetosphere-Ionosphere-Thermosphere (M-I-T) processes. Our goal will be to bring together M-I-T researchers who use observations in their work with instrument developers to discuss the observations and technical capabilities that are needed to push the science forward. Modelers and data analysts are encouraged to discuss how observations are used currently and what additional observations would enhance their science. Instrument developers can present ideas for new instrumentation or advancements for existing systems. Justification: The electrodynamics of the M-I-T region exhibit coupling on scales that range from kilometers to many thousands of kilometers. At the lower end of this range, auroral arcs have widths on the order of a kilometer or less and connect to the substorm onsets, which have the scale on the order of the width of the magnetotail. The related ionospheric effects couple to the neutral atmosphere through heating that occurs on the scale of the arcs over regions as large as the auroral oval, generating waves that carry and deposit energy over distances of thousands of kilometers. Variability over a wide range of spatial and temporal dimensions is known to greatly impact energy flow through the M-I-T regions and Joule heating. The existing observational infrastructure can address some fraction of the spectrum of scales with varying degrees of coverage in time and space. Future investment in infrastructure should be focused on areas that have the most potential for advancing geospace science. By connecting the people who use observations with those who generate them, we can guide those investments. Related CEDAR Thrusts: This workshop directly addresses Strategic Thrust #4 - Develop Observational and Instrumentation Strategies for Geospace System Studies, and ties to Thrusts #1, #2, and #3. Keywords: Cross-scale coupling, system science, electrodynamics, instrumentation, modeling -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From w.j.miloch at fys.uio.no Thu Jun 16 00:02:49 2022 From: w.j.miloch at fys.uio.no (Wojciech Jacek Miloch) Date: Thu, 16 Jun 2022 06:02:49 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: PhD position available at the University of Oslo, Norway In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, A PhD position is available at the University of Oslo. Please inform potential candidates! PhD Research Fellowship in Plasma and Space Physics - numerical simulations Job description A position as PhD Research Fellow in Plasma and Space Physics, with the focus on numerical simulations of plasma phenomena in the polar ionosphere, is available at the Department of Physics. The fellowship will be for a period of 3 years. Within the scope of the project for this position, the successful PhD candidate will work with large scale numerical simulations with numerical particle-in-cell codes to study the evolution of plasma instabilities and onset of turbulence at kinetic levels, accounting also for auroral particle precipitation and weakly collisional plasmas. The candidate will also relate this work to results from in-situ sounding rocket experiments in the ionosphere. Another task will also be to address rocket payload-plasma interactions in order to understand the measurement conditions. Strong collaboration with other participants in the project is required. The successful candidate will be the member of the 4DSpace Strategic Research Initiative, as well as the Section for Plasma and Space Physics at the Department of Physics. The main focus of these groups is to advance our understanding of processes in the high-latitudeionosphere, including plasma irregularities, turbulence and space weather effects in the polar regions. The position is funded through the ERC Consolidator Grant entitled: ?4DSpace: integrated study for space weather at high latitudes?. Deadline: 23 June 2022. More information and how to apply: https://www.jobbnorge.no/en/available-jobs/job/226761/phd-research-fellowship-in-plasma-and-space-physics-numerical-simulations Best regards, Wojciech Miloch ==================== ==================== Wojciech J. Miloch Professor Head of Section for Plasma and Space Physics Leader of 4DSpace Strategic Research Initiative http://www.mn.uio.no/4dspace e-mail: w.j.miloch at fys.uio.no Department of Physics University of Oslo P.O. Box 1048 Blindern N-0316 Oslo, Norway ==================== -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From david.e.mckenzie at nasa.gov Thu Jun 16 10:33:17 2022 From: david.e.mckenzie at nasa.gov (McKenzie, David E (MSFC-ST13)) Date: Thu, 16 Jun 2022 16:33:17 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: vacancy announcement at NASA MSFC Message-ID: Upcoming Space Weather Civil Servant Positions at NASA?s Marshall Space Flight Center The Heliophysics and Planetary Science Branch at NASA?s Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) in Huntsville, Alabama, plans to offer two civil service positions to conduct research and develop applications in the discipline of Space Weather. Outstanding candidates have the potential to be selected for federal employment, joining more than 30 other federal employees, academic staff, and contractors supporting solar physics and space weather science efforts within the Branch, which is part of the Science and Technology Office at MSFC. MSFC has significant strengths in suborbital missions for heliophysics, advanced propulsion development (including solar sails), in-house development of scientific camera systems, and numerous calibration and testing facilities, including the Low Energy Electron and Ion Facility, utilized for the development, test, and calibration of charged particle instruments. Two Research Astrophysicist positions will be offered for researchers and technical authorities in Heliophysics, and specifically in space weather (ionospheric/thermospheric/magnetospheric responses to influences related to solar activity), with emphasis on the analysis of current data sets and the development of new measurement and observational techniques in related research areas. The selected candidates will participate as Principal or Co-Investigators for future investigations in Space Weather, with responsibility for leading and directing the work of multidisciplinary teams of scientists. The candidates will have opportunities 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. Grade level is expected to be GS-14 or GS-15, dependent on the qualifications of the candidate. The formal announcement of the opportunity and related requirements will be open June 21 to July 05 at this USAJobs link: https://www.usajobs.gov/job/660002100. Applications are only accepted through the USAJobs portal. Candidates are encouraged to create a USAJobs profile well in advance to populate their resume, and may also subscribe to USAJobs email alerts. Informal inquiries can be directed to Dr. David McKenzie, david.e.mckenzie at nasa.gov, 256-961-7896. -- David E. McKenzie, PhD Heliophysics and Planetary Science Branch, ST13 NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL 35812 Ph: +1-256-961-7896 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From lindsaygoodw at gmail.com Thu Jun 16 11:02:12 2022 From: lindsaygoodw at gmail.com (Lindsay Goodwin) Date: Thu, 16 Jun 2022 13:02:12 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: Invitation to Attend CEDAR SmallSat Session Message-ID: Hello All, We invite you to participate in the CEDAR SmallSat session at the 2022 CEDAR Workshop. The session will begin with a short series of talks, but will be primarily discussion-oriented. Together, we will work to discuss and develop a consensus on a variety of topics, such as: - "What are the challenges with getting data into the same formats as data repositories?" - "What format should the data be in for a given SmallSat instrument?" - "How could different missions communicate better?" - "Are there recommendations for data archiving and finding paths to get that data reprocessed in the future?" - "How can we create a relevant resource for those who are interested in using SmallSat data but are SmallSat novices?" To prepare for these discussions, Dr. Bishop developed a list of some current and upcoming IT SmallSat and hosted payloads. Reach out if you have any questions or comments about the session, or additions to this list. We look forward to seeing you in-person at CEDAR! Cheers, Lindsay Goodwin, Rebecca Bishop, Bruce Fritz, Federico Gasperini, Jeffery Klenzing, Kristina Lynch, and Charles Swenson Mission On-Orbit Estimate Mission Purpose 3U3 >=2022 Measures precipitating electrons and UV emissions in auroral Cusp regions AERO >=2022 Nature and source of auroral radio emissions APEX >=2022 Understand the influence of the magnetosphere on upper atmosphere through energetic particle precipitation CANVAS >=2022 VLF wave energy form lightning and ground-based transmitters CIRCE 2022-TBD 2 s/c measure ionosphere and particle radiation DALI 2022 Measure dayglow to determine composition Dione >=2022 Responses of IT to magnetosphere energy GPX-2 2022-2023 Upward TEC data LAICE TBD Atmospheric gravity waves LLITED 2022-2023 ETWA and EIA coupling petitSat 2022 - 2023 Link between MSTIDs and plasma density enhancements SPORT 2022-2023 Conditions leading to low-latitude scintillation SWARM-EX 2023 ? 2024 ETWA and EIA coupling -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From andres.spicher at uit.no Fri Jun 17 01:58:46 2022 From: andres.spicher at uit.no (Andres Spicher) Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2022 07:58:46 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: PhD position in Space Physics at UiT The Arctic University of Norway Message-ID: Dear CEDAR Community, The Department of Physics and Technology announces a vacant PhD position in Space Physics at UiT The Arctic University of Norway in Troms?. The PhD candidate will conduct research related to magnetosphere-ionosphere-thermosphere coupling and resulting irregularities. More information about the position and application can be found here: https://www.jobbnorge.no/en/available-jobs/job/227796/phd-fellow-in-space-physics Many thanks, Andres Spicher -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From chau at iap-kborn.org Fri Jun 17 07:09:06 2022 From: chau at iap-kborn.org (Jorge L. Chau) Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2022 15:09:06 +0200 Subject: CEDAR email: Ph.D. positions on Experimental Atmospheric Physics In-Reply-To: <608474F1-1E06-4DC1-A797-02986EA614F4@iap-kborn.org> References: <2EA50F1D-2078-42F1-9819-4CC1443CAB1F@iap-kborn.org> <608474F1-1E06-4DC1-A797-02986EA614F4@iap-kborn.org> Message-ID: <149CF2C7-C2C4-4048-9F88-075BB11C596B@iap-kborn.org> Dear Colleagues, This is to let you know that the Leibniz Institute of Atmospheric Physics (IAP) located in northern Germany, has opened Ph.D. positions on Experimental Atmospheric Physics at the Radar Remote Sensing Department. The three main topics are: - Intermittency and extreme events in the MLT (Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere). - Combined studies of radio, radar and optical meteors, including radio meteor afterglows. - Spatial and temporal studies of planetary waves and tides in the MLT region. More details on the positions can be found at: https://www.iap-kborn.de/fileadmin/user_upload/Current_issue/Job_Vacancies/Radar/Stellenaussschreibung_2022_04_bis_06PhD_Endfassung_CSt_Ak.pdf See you many of you at CEDAR. Koki Chau From khadka at njit.edu Fri Jun 17 07:44:13 2022 From: khadka at njit.edu (Khadka, Sovit) Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2022 09:44:13 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: Invitation: 2022 CEDAR Workshop on Upper Atmospheric Response to Natural Hazards Message-ID: Dear CEDAR community, You are all cordially invited to participate in our session - Upper Atmospheric Response to Geological and Atmospheric Hazards - at the 2022 CEDAR Workshop in Austin, TX. This session is scheduled for Tuesday, June 21, 2022, from 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM CST. Workshop Description: Synoptic atmospheric hazards, such as hurricanes and strong frontal activity, and defined geological hazards, such as seismic and volcanic activities, can trigger acoustic and gravity waves that propagate upwards and are able to be detected in the upper atmosphere. Observation and modelling of these events can give new insights into our understanding of the dynamics, chemistry, and fundamental coupling processes between the troposphere and the middle and upper atmosphere. In system theory, such lower atmospheric events can be thought of as a defined input, x(t), into a complex system, h(t), where the CEDAR community can observe y(t) and gain insight on the fundamental transfer function(s) representing the underlying physical processes controlling the upper atmospheric response. This workshop welcomes short interactive presentations on the upper atmospheric response to various natural phenomena occurring in the oceans, on land, and in the lower atmosphere. Such phenomena include, but are not limited to, earthquakes, surface and submarine volcanic eruptions, tsunamis, typhoons, cyclones, hurricanes, tornados, thunderstorms, etc., which are studied from different observational and modeling approaches. The workshop seeks to bring together research communities from different disciplines and backgrounds so as to fundamentally develop a deeper understanding of the geophysical processes involved. It is anticipated that the impact of this activity can lead to new projects related to natural hazard-induced upper atmospheric dynamics, including research-based tools that may lead to early warning systems against such natural disasters. Agenda: - Pavel Inchin: Natural Hazard-generated Waves - Claire Gasque: Tonga Eruptions - David Themens: Tonga Eruptions - Aa Ercha: Tonga Eruptions - Jia Yue: La Soufriere Eruptions - Justin J. Tyska: Calbuco Eruptions - Xing Meng: Illapel Earthquake - Min-Yang Chou: Tohoku Tsunami - Christopher Heale: Thunderstorm Systems - Cesar Valladares: Atlantic Hurricane - Olusegun Jonah: Beirut Explosion Event - Roberto Sabatini: Explosions Impact on MTI - Kenneth Obenberger: TNT Equivalent Explosions The detailed workshop info is here: https://cedarscience.org/workshop/2022-workshop-upper-atmospheric-response-natural-hazards Looking forward to seeing you at the CEDAR! Sincerely, Sovit Khadka (CSTR/ NJIT) Xing Meng (JPL/ CalTech) Pavel Inchin (CSAR/ ERAU) Irfan Azeem (NESDIS/ NOAA) Cesar Valladares (UT Dallas) Andrew Gerrard (CSTR/ NJIT) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Rebecca.L.Bishop at aero.org Fri Jun 17 08:44:50 2022 From: Rebecca.L.Bishop at aero.org (Rebecca L Bishop) Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2022 14:44:50 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: CEDAR Workshop: Community Science and GDC Mission Message-ID: <816A645C-AE33-4698-A27D-A3CDD76506CD@aero.org> Dear CEDAR 2022 participants, We welcome all participants to the joint CEDAR/GEM Workshop: Community Science Enabled by the upcoming GDC mission scheduled for Monday June 20thfrom 3:30 pm - 6 pm CT https://cedarscience.org/workshop/2022-workshop-community-science-and-gdc-mission This workshop is joint with GEM who will be hosting their workshop in Hawaii. The GEM session, held in the Alohilani II room, will be broadcast via WebEx in the CEDAR workshop Onyx Ballroom starting at 3:30pm CT on Monday, June 20th. From 3:30 pm ? 4 pm CT, the GEM session will discuss two GEM-centric mission: TRACERS and EZIE. CEDAR participants are welcome to join that broadcast. At 4pm CT, the CEDAR workshop will start and be broadcast to the GEM community via WebEx. We hope to have joint discussions between the two communities, as the GDC mission is important to both. At the end of the email is the connection information and final agenda. See you there! Jeff Thayer, Rebecca Bishop, Yue Deng, Katelynn Greer, Shunrong Zhang, Doga Ozturk, Hyunju Connor, Emma Mirizio Connection Information: WebEx More ways to join: Join from the meeting link https://nasaenterprise.webex.com/nasaenterprise/j.php?MTID=m6420a0d727342599ab455cd323876c00 Join by meeting number Meeting number (access code): 2764 751 4042 Meeting password: enFeP3fj?23 Join by phone Use VoIP only Join from a video system or application Dial 27647514042 at nasaenterprise.webex.com You can also dial 207.182.190.20 and enter your meeting number. Comments & Chats Post in the GDC-Community Slack workspace channel # cedar-gem-2022-gdc-workshop. The GDC-Community workspace can be found at: https://join.slack.com/t/gdc-community/shared_invite/zt-1afbt5m7r-FmPZPjoLFrMNkPOQKFXBIw Final Agenda: CEDAR (CDT/HST) Timeline 15:30/10:30 GEM Discussion (GEM: Alohilani II room) 30 min - EZIE, TRACERS 16:00/11:00 CEDAR / GEM Joint Workshop (CEDAR: Onyx Ballroom) 10 min CEDAR Session-Introduction: Yue Deng 20 min - GDC overview: Doug Rowland 15 min - GDC related Q&A ? moderator: Shun-rong Zhang 10 min GEM Speaker 1: Emma Spanswick ?Leveraging GDC overflights over Canada? 10 min GEM Speaker 2: TBD 10 min CEDAR Speaker 1: Astrid Maute 10 min CEDAR Speaker 2: Phil Erickson 17:30/12:30 CEDAR Continues/GEM Session Ends 25 min - Open Discussion: Future GEM/CEDAR GDC Synergy ? moderator: Katie Greer 5 min ? Closing Summary: Bishop 18:00/13:00 CEDAR Session Ends -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From qingyu at ucar.edu Fri Jun 17 12:48:51 2022 From: qingyu at ucar.edu (Qingyu Zhu) Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2022 12:48:51 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: Invitation to the CEDAR Grand Challenge session "Interhemispheric asymmetries (IHAs) in the I-T system: generated by the high-latitude forcing" Message-ID: Dear colleagues, We invite you to participate in the CEDAR Grand Challenge session "Interhemispheric asymmetries (IHAs) in the I-T system: generated by the high-latitude forcing". More details (including potential remote options) can be found here: https://cedarscience.org/workshop/2022-workshop-interhemispheric-asymmetries-high-latitude-forcing See you soon, Qingyu Zhu On behalf of GC convenors (Yue Deng, Qingyu Zhu, Yun-ju Chen, Astrid Maute, Rich Collins, Aaron Ridley, Daniel Welling and Hyomin Kim) *Agenda (Onyx Ballroom, 10 am - 12 pm CDT, Wed, 06/22/2022):* Time Speaker Title 10:02~10:12 Gang Lu Interhemispheric Asymmetries in the IT System: A multifaceted process 10:12~10:22 Marc Hairston Preliminary results of penetration electric field asymmetry on the duskside during the 2015 St Patrick?s Day storm 10:22~10:32 Sheng Tian (by Sneha Yadav) Simultaneous observation of auroral streamers in conjugate hemispheres and the associated in-situ observations 10:32~10:42 Aaron Ridley The Magnetospheric Auroral Asymmetry eXplorer 10:42~10:52 Naomi Maruyama Impact of the hemispheric asymmetry of Superthermal Electrons on the coupled Magnetosphere-Ionosphere-Thermosphere (M-I-T) system 10:52~11:02 Qingyu Zhu Interhemispheric asymmetries in the ionospheric response during the 2013 St Patrick?s Day geomagnetic storm 11:02~11:12 Yu Hong Inter-hemispheric Asymmetry of Ion Convection and its Impacts on the Ionosphere-Thermosphere System During the 08-10 October 2012 Geomagnetic Storm 11:12~11:22 Delores Knipp Inter-hemispheric asymmetries in Poynting flux: A perspective from different space-based platforms 11:22~11:32 Yongliang Zhang Sources for Hemispheric Asymmetry in Storm-time O/N2 Depletion 11:32~12:00 All attendees Discussion Qingyu Zhu, PhD qingyu at ucar.edu ASP Postdoctoral Fellow National Center for Atmospheric Research https://staff.ucar.edu/users/qingyu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cheng.sheng at uta.edu Fri Jun 17 14:00:22 2022 From: cheng.sheng at uta.edu (Sheng, Cheng) Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2022 20:00:22 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Invitation to the 2022 CEDAR Workshop: Cross-scale Electrodynamics in M-I-T processes: data analysis and modeling Message-ID: Dear CEDAR Community, Please join us in-person or virtually for the workshop, "Cross-scale Electrodynamics in M-I-T processes: data analysis and modeling", on Thursday, June 23rd @1:30 to 3:30pm CDT. We'll have eight 10-minute talks discussing the multi-scale coupling processes in the IT system. The agenda is below and more information including the link to join the session virtually can be found at this CEDAR workshop page. Agenda Time Speaker Title 13:30-13:35 Yue Deng Introduction 13:35-13:45 Sneha Yadav Association of Equatorward Extending Streamers with Ground Magnetic Perturbations and Geosynchronous Injections 13:45-13:55 Christine Gabrielse (given by Larry Lyons) Precipitating Energy Flux, Average Energy, and Hall Auroral Conductance from THEMIS All-Sky-Imagers during Two Substorms: Mesoscale Contributions 13:55-14:05 Wenbin Wang Global reversal of ionospheric vertical drift in response to a sudden commencement 14:05-14:15 Kike (Enrique) Rojas Villalba Fluid simulation of Farley-Buneman instabilities: Model description and possible applications to large scale coupling 14:15-14:25 Cheng Sheng Data-model comparisons of F-region neutral winds during the March 27th, 2014 substorm event 14:25-14:35 Xian Lu Study of cross-scale interaction during the 2015 St. Patricks? Day Storm using the data-assimilated TIEGCM 14:35-14:45 Hyosub Kil (Teams) Bubble and TID signatures in low and mid latitudes 14:45-14:55 Ryan McGranaghan (Teams) Some thoughts on the state of cross-scale MIT coupling and key questions 14:55-15:30 Discussion See you soon in Austin, TX! Cheers, Cheng Sheng Yue Deng Toshi Nishimura Astrid Maute Larry Lyons William Bristow -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From vania at lanl.gov Fri Jun 17 14:24:10 2022 From: vania at lanl.gov (Vania Jordanova) Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2022 14:24:10 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: LANL Space Science & Application Group Leader Search Message-ID: <7204ce82-e77c-f9db-d071-8871524773f2@lanl.gov> Dear colleagues, Located in northern New Mexico, Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) is a multi-disciplinary research institution engaged in strategic science on behalf of national security. The Space Science and Applications Group (ISR-1) at LANL seeks a highly motivated, dynamic scientific leader with expertise in space research and exploration. As the Group Leader, you will facilitate the success of individuals and teams in ISR-1, as well as collaborations across Los Alamos and the broader space science and applications community. You will help develop a vision for the future of this dynamic group and will be responsible for developing and implementing a strategy for achieving that vision; fostering a culture of continuous learning; developing and sustaining an expert workforce that is recognized as a unique national resource; mentoring, coaching, and building effective teams within and beyond the Group. As the Group Leader, you will also facilitate success by identifying, managing, and mitigating technical and organizational risk; collaborating closely with Program Managers and Project Leaders to ensure delivery of space systems and information products on time and within budget, and providing a safe and secure working environment. ISR-1 core expertise includes designing and operating sensors that measure x-rays, gamma-rays, neutrons, plasma, and energetic ions, electrons, and neutral atoms in space that are used to study the natural space environment of the Earth and Sun and to detect and characterize potential nuclear detonations on a global scale. Our researchers analyze, interpret, and perform studies using data from these instruments, and develop and refine space environment models (e.g., DREAM and SHIELDS) to now-cast space weather. Our scientists lead or have led experiments on many NASA missions such as IBEX, ACE, TWINS, Mars Odyssey, Van Allen Probes, Cassini, IMAGE, and Lunar Prospector. Upcoming scientific missions with Los Alamos leadership include the MAMBO medium energy gamma-ray cubesat, two experiments on NASA?s IMAP mission to understand the Sun?s interaction with the interstellar medium, and NASA?s BeamPIE rocket experiment, the first accelerator flown to space in over 30 years. For more information about this position please visit https://lanl.jobs/search/searchjobs and search for ?Req. Number IRC107576?, or contact Herb Funsten (505-667-2965, hfunsten at lanl.gov) or Geoff Reeves (505-500-6962, reeves at lanl.gov). Los Alamos National Laboratory is an equal opportunity employer that supports a diverse and inclusive workforce and is managed by Triad National Security, LLC for the US Department of Energy?s National Nuclear Security Administration. Review of applicants will start immediately and continue until the position is filled. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr. Vania K. Jordanova Tel: +1 505 667 9908 Space Science and Applications, MS B241 Fax: +1 505 665 7395 Los Alamos National Laboratory, PO Box 1663 E-mail: vania at lanl.gov Los Alamos, NM, 87545, USA https://www.lanl.gov/search-capabilities/profiles/vania-jordanova.shtml CORRESPONDENCE/ Technical Data or Software Publicly Available ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- From lpg at mit.edu Fri Jun 17 15:58:32 2022 From: lpg at mit.edu (Larisa Goncharenko) Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2022 21:58:32 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: reminder - GDC endorsement letter Message-ID: Dear colleagues, This is a reminder that the CEDAR community has prepared a community statement in support of NASA GDC mission: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1khh1kVnITd6f-Ffg_2dBXPqrS-sgJ8R2/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=115603362713017192779&rtpof=true&sd=true Please consider expressing your support for GDC mission by signing this letter. Feel free to forward this message to other colleagues. On behalf of the CEDAR Science Steering Committee, Larisa Goncharenko, CEDAR Science Steering Committee Chair Research Scientist MIT Haystack Observatory lpg at mit.edu 617-715-5622 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From maute at ucar.edu Sat Jun 18 08:01:17 2022 From: maute at ucar.edu (Astrid Maute) Date: Sat, 18 Jun 2022 08:01:17 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: CEDAR Town Hall: Decadal Survey and the future of CEDAR instrumentation, Wednesday noon Message-ID: Dear CEDAR workshop participants, On Wednesday 6/22, we will host a town hall discussion at the CEDAR meeting on "The Decadal Survey and the future of CEDAR instrumentation". The Decadal is a pivotal opportunity for our community to converge on major infrastructure and facility priorities. The goal of the town hall is to frame this challenge, discuss pathways and resources for transitioning ideas to white papers, and to hear your thoughts. NSF leadership will be on hand to provide their perspectives. The session will be in the Onyx Ballroom starting at 12 noon. Unfortunately, we could not provide lunch in the ballroom. We will thus start promptly at 12, and attendees can stay as long as their stomachs permit. Conveners: Josh Semeter Asti Bhatt Brian Harding, Larissa Goncharenko. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Patrick.Dandenault at jhuapl.edu Sat Jun 18 09:27:34 2022 From: Patrick.Dandenault at jhuapl.edu (Dandenault, Patrick B.) Date: Sat, 18 Jun 2022 15:27:34 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: CEDAR Workshop: Thermospheric Neutral winds: Dynamics and Chemistry Message-ID: Folks, Please join us in this CEDAR workshop on Monday afternoon. We look forward to seeing you in Austin. Best regards, Pat, John, Qian, and Sovit Status & Needs For Modern Thermospheric Dynamics & Chemistry Measurements Monday, June 20th ; 1:30 - 3:30 (Austin; Central Daylight Time); Room: Topaz 2 Format: 6 discussions over 2 hours; Each (talk + Q&A) will last 20 minutes, max. Agenda: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1:30 - 1:50 - 1 - Jens Oberheide (Clemson U), ?Vertical Coupling by Solar Semidiurnal Tides in the Thermosphere From ICON/MIGHTI Measurements? 1:50 - 2:10 - 2 - Wenbin Wang (UCAR), ?The Effects of IMF By on the Middle Thermosphere During a Geomagnetically ?Quiet? Period at Solar Minimum? 2:10 - 2:30 - 3 - Cosme Alexandre Figueiredo (INPE), ?Asymmetric Development of Equatorial Plasma Bubbles Observed at Geomagnetically Conjugate Points Over the Brazilian Sector? 2:30 - 2:50 - 4 - Andrew Pepper (Clemson U), ?Mesoscale Spatial Variability of Lower Thermospheric Winds During the Anomalous Transport Rocket Experiment? 2:50 - 3:10 - 5 - Joe Huba (Syntek), ?Generalized Rayleigh-Taylor Instability: Ion Inertia, Acceleration Forces, and E Region Drivers? 3:10 - 3:30 - 6 - Jonathan Makela (U of Illinois), Asti Bhatt (SRI), Brian Harding (Berkeley/SSL), 'Early results from a distributed array of small instruments (DASI): Winds and Waves in the Mesosphere' URL: https://cedarscience.org/workshop/2022-workshop-themospheric-neutral-winds-dynamics-and-chemistry -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From nossal at physics.wisc.edu Sun Jun 19 14:40:02 2022 From: nossal at physics.wisc.edu (Susan M Nossal) Date: Sun, 19 Jun 2022 20:40:02 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Invitation to CEDAR and Climate Change workshop tomorrow, Monday, June 20th from 10-noon; in-person and virtual option Message-ID: <586D5E22-F1F4-4CCB-86D4-21A51005FDCC@physics.wisc.edu> Greetings everyone, We invite you to join us at the CEDAR and Climate Change workshop tomorrow, Monday, June 20th from 10-noon. This workshop will provide a forum to continue discussion about ways that the CEDAR community can contribute to global efforts to address climate change. The session includes talks spanning the atmosphere from the ecosystem-atmosphere boundary through the upper thermosphere and ionosphere. Additionally, we are grateful that Brittany Webster from the AGU Science Policy program will join us to share how scientists can get involved in science policy. We also have planned time for discussion at the end and look forward to your ideas. More information is at: https://cedarscience.org/workshop/2022-workshop-cedar-and-climate-change . Best wishes, Susan, Julio, and Komal Agenda CEDAR and Climate Change, Monday, June 20th, 10 AM ? noon Join in-person or virtual via Zoom ( https://uwmadison.zoom.us/j/98651652731?pwd=bUlFUitmWDNxTnY4NTFLYmpFcVlqdz09 ) 10:00 ? 10:10 Welcome and overview 10:10 ? 10:25 Long-term trends over Jicamarca: Analyzing ionosonde and coherent backscatter data, Kike (Enrique) Rojas Villaba, Cornell University 10:25 ? 10:40 Ionospheric climate trends/changes measured by incoherent scatter radars, Shunrong Zhang, MIT Haystack 10:40 ? 10:55 Upper Atmosphere 20th and 21st Century Changes from Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model - eXtended (WACCM-X) Simulations, Joe McInerney, National Center for Atmospheric Research 10:55 ? 11:10 Long-term trends in diurnal vertically-propagating atmospheric tides within the mesosphere and lower thermosphere from 1980 to 2020, McArthur Jones, Naval Research Laboratory 11:10 ? 11:27 Tales from a Greenhouse Gas Auditor, Kenneth Davis, Penn State University (invited and online) 11:27 ? 11:45 Opportunities to Advocate for Science Policy, Brittany Webster, American Geophysical Union (invited and online) 11:45 ? 11:58 Questions & Discussion 11:58 ? noon Wrap-up -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From andkav at bas.ac.uk Mon Jun 20 08:02:09 2022 From: andkav at bas.ac.uk (Andrew Kavanagh - BAS) Date: Mon, 20 Jun 2022 14:02:09 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Reminder: Call for ISR World Day Proposals for 2023 - deadline 27 June 2022 Message-ID: Dear Colleagues A reminder that the deadline for World Day proposals is Monday 27th June 2022. Original call below: We would like to solicit proposals for Incoherent Scatter Radar world day operations for 2023 Submission Deadline: Monday 27th June 2022 Please send applications to andkav at bas.ac.uk This is an opportunity to direct the global network of radars towards a single scientific objective for time scales of a few days. Guidelines for applying for a World Day are attached as is a template for the application. The process for selecting World-Days will follow a similar pattern to last year whereby submissions will be distributed to all ISR operators and an on-line discussion will take place. In the first instance this will be via email and will include the proposers and interested parties (a summary of the proposals will be provided to everyone). If it is required a video conference session will be set up, to discuss applications. If you wish to be included as a participant in the on-line discussion this year, then please send an email to me. If you are and ISR operator or responsible for ISR world day planning for a radar, also please contact me so that I can ensure that the email list is up to date. If you have benefitted from World Day operations in the past we would be very pleased to hear from you with details. It is good to assess how effective these experiments are, and useful for the radar operators when reporting to their funding bodies. Andrew Kavanagh ---------------------------------------------- Dr. Andrew J. Kavanagh |UK EISCAT Science Support |British Antarctic Survey High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ET Email: andkav at bas.ac.uk |Tel: +44 (0)1223 221314 NERC is part of UK Research and Innovation www.ukri.org Please think of the environment before printing out this message 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: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: ISR_WorldDay_proposal_template.docx Type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document Size: 19579 bytes Desc: ISR_WorldDay_proposal_template.docx URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: WorldDay_Guidelines.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 465613 bytes Desc: WorldDay_Guidelines.pdf URL: From jonesjr.mcarthur at gmail.com Wed Jun 22 05:55:27 2022 From: jonesjr.mcarthur at gmail.com (McArthur Jones Jr) Date: Wed, 22 Jun 2022 07:55:27 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: Join Us at the CEDAR DEI Workshop tomorrow at the 2022 CEDAR Workshop Message-ID: Greetings Colleagues and Friends, Please join us *TOMORROW, **Thursday, June 23rd from 1330-1530 Central time *at the 2022 CEDAR Workshop for the CEDAR DEI Session . This is purely a *HYBRID* session so please consider joining online (via Zoom, link below) or in-person if you are in Austin, TX. Our tentative schedule for this session is as follows: Dr. Fran Bagenal, LASP, On the Demographics studies of the AIP (American Institute of Physics) and NAS studies on Advancing DEIA of the Leadership of Competed Missions, 1335-1355 CST Dr. Debalina Maitra, ASU, Growing Roses in the Concrete: Beasting the impossible-International Scholars in the US Higher Education, 1355-1425 CST Dr. Audra Hern?ndez, UW Madison, Coping with Imposter Syndrome, 1425-1455 CST, Brief Description: While most professionals experience imposters syndrome, undergraduate students, especially those from marginalized communities, are no different. During this session, I will discuss my journey as a scientist and university administrator and how I assist the next generation of researchers with coping with imposter syndrome. Prof. Erika Mar?n-Spiotta, UW Madison, 1455-1525 CST We look forward to seeing everyone both in-person and virtually! Mack Jones on Behalf of the CEDAR DEI Task Force ======================================================= Please find the Zoom link for CEDAR. This is the link for all virtual sessions and will work for any/all of the sessions that you are logging into/presenting at. Maggie Costley is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting. Topic: CEDAR 2022 Time: Jun 20, 2022 07:30 AM Central Time (US and Canada) Every day, until Jun 23, 2022, 4 occurrence(s) Jun 20, 2022 07:30 AM Jun 21, 2022 07:30 AM Jun 22, 2022 07:30 AM Jun 23, 2022 07:30 AM Please download and import the following iCalendar (.ics) files to your calendar system. Daily: https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/tZMvd-GprDwjGdUkATc0GkmJ2llBq1nurdg9/ics?icsToken=98tyKuGvrDsiG9aSuRqGRpwEAIigWevzpmZEjadolz7RAHB0aQ7cZO5OEKMuHs3C Join Zoom Meeting https://us06web.zoom.us/j/87208127931?pwd=Wk5iVnNjbG5ZOWplVHJMaUNmWFFHUT09 Meeting ID: 872 0812 7931 Passcode: 271388 One tap mobile +13462487799,,87208127931#,,,,*271388# US (Houston) +12532158782,,87208127931#,,,,*271388# US (Tacoma) Dial by your location +1 346 248 7799 US (Houston) +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma) +1 408 638 0968 US (San Jose) +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose) +1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC) +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago) +1 646 876 9923 US (New York) Meeting ID: 872 0812 7931 Passcode: 271388 Find your local number: https://us06web.zoom.us/u/kpotNe4i -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From irfan.azeem at noaa.gov Wed Jun 22 11:25:54 2022 From: irfan.azeem at noaa.gov (Irfan Azeem - NOAA Federal) Date: Wed, 22 Jun 2022 13:25:54 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: JOB OPPORTUNITY | General Engineer, ZP-0801-5 | Office of Projects Planning and Analysis (OPPA) Message-ID: Can you please post the following opportunity to the CEDAR community. Regards, - Irfan *JOB OPPORTUNITY | General Engineer, ZP-0801-5 | Office of Projects Planning and Analysis (OPPA)* The NOAA Office of Projects Planning and Analysis (OPPA) is seeking an accomplished candidate for the position of Supervisory General Engineer in Silver Spring, MD. In this role, the selected candidate will serve as the Deputy Chief of the Research to Operations and Project Planning (ROPPD) Division. The division provides multidisciplinary science, engineering, and technical expertise to develop and execute projects to collect space weather observations from satellites. It leads pre-formulation and formulation phases of new satellite systems and/or instruments acquisition projects. The selected candidate will manages the formulation, development, and acquisition of space weather satellite projects, directs scientists and engineers to develop innovative ideas for data collection systems and space-based architectures for space weather observations, oversees data exploitation initiatives within the division to fulfill NESDIS?s strategic objectives in space weather, and supports and enhances activities for workforce development to ensure NOAA?s leadership in space weather satellite observations. Vacancy Announcement Information: ? NESDIS-2022-0036 (Direct Hire) ? *Opens:* 06/21/2022 ? *Closes:* 07/05/2022 The vacancy can be located via USAJOBS (search by the vacancy number) or by using the embedded link above. -- Irfan Azeem, PhD Chief, Research to Operations and Project Planning Division (ROPPD) Office of Projects Planning and Analysis (OPPA) NOAA/NESDIS Office: (301) 713-0572 Mobile: (240) 255-8072 -- My font is large to prioritize accessibility. Sans serif fonts at 14pt or larger are recommended as the most legible. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mcarthur.jones at nrl.navy.mil Wed Jun 22 16:09:18 2022 From: mcarthur.jones at nrl.navy.mil (Jones, Jr., McArthur) Date: Wed, 22 Jun 2022 22:09:18 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: ****CORRECTION: CEDAR DEI Workshop tomorrow at the 2022 CEDAR Workshop**** Message-ID: <6A5ECCE0-F469-4D7B-AE2E-0789C5A03A3C@nrl.navy.mil> Greetings Colleagues and Friends ? Again, I want to apologize for sending the incorrect information on how to join the CEDAR DEI Session VIRTUALLY, TOMORROW, Thursday, June 23rd from 1330-1530 Central time at the 2022 CEDAR Workshop. PLEASE DO NOT USE THE ZOOM LINK SENT PREVIOUSLY. FOR DETAILS ON HOW TO LIVESTREAM THIS SESSION PLEASE CHECK OUT the CEDAR DEI Slack Channel. THE PREVIOUSLY DISTIRIBUTED ZOOM LINK IS EXLUSIVELY FOR PRESENTERS AT THE SESSION. Thank you and Sorry for the Confusion, Mack on behalf of the CEDAR DEI Task Force -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eelco.doornbos at knmi.nl Fri Jun 24 10:20:41 2022 From: eelco.doornbos at knmi.nl (Doornbos, Eelco (KNMI)) Date: Fri, 24 Jun 2022 16:20:41 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: ESWW2022 - session SWR4 "Magnetosphere, ionosphere and thermosphere coupling" Message-ID: <700064b374fb4b7b9d9740d5aff64efd@knmi.nl> Dear Colleagues, The European Space Weather Week (ESWW) is the main annual event in the European Space Weather calendar. ESWW is an excellent place to meet people, to exchange knowledge and ideas, to discuss the latest on solar activity, how space weather influences the earth environment and our technologies, and how to deal with space weather. The ESWW2022 meeting will take place in Zagreb (Croatia) from 24 to 28 October, 2022. The abstract submission for the session SWR4 "Magnetosphere, Ionosphere and Thermosphere Coupling" is now open and available here: https://register-as.oma.be/esww2022/abstract.php The session focuses on the state-of-the-art understanding of the complex mechanisms ruling the Magnetosphere-Ionosphere-Thermosphere (M-I-T) coupling and how it translates into space weather impacts. Such an understanding is fundamental for the development of effective countermeasures against disruption, failure and deterioration of vulnerable technologies, such as GNSS critical applications, HF/VHF/UHF radio communications and LEO satellites operations. In order to forecast, warn, and mitigate adverse space weather effects, a better understanding of the M-I-T coupling plays a key role. It is essential to improve the prediction of: geomagnetic storm-time behaviour of the occurrence of spread-F, polar cap patches and scintillation phenomena that can degrade navigation and communication systems, thermospheric density variability affecting satellite drag and the enhancement of field-aligned currents, just to mention a few examples. Another crucial aspect of M-I-T coupling is the interhemispheric symmetric/asymmetric response to variable drivers that, if properly predicted, could support regional space weather modelling. Contributed papers may address (but are not limited to) recent developments in modelling and forecasting, monitoring methodologies, data analysis, measurement campaigns and international initiatives related to M-I-T coupling and associated threats on systems, at regional and global scale. Please note the close deadline for the consideration of oral presentations, here you can find the full timeline. We hope you will join us to present your latest results. We are looking forward to meeting you in Zagreb! Best regards, Lucilla, Yaqi, Eelco From yokoyama at rish.kyoto-u.ac.jp Sun Jun 26 15:26:44 2022 From: yokoyama at rish.kyoto-u.ac.jp (Tatsuhiro Yokoyama) Date: Mon, 27 Jun 2022 06:26:44 +0900 Subject: CEDAR email: MEETING: 16th International Symposium on Equatorial Aeronomy (ISEA-16), 12 - 16 September 2022 at Kyoto University -- submission deadline approaching Message-ID: THIRD ANNOUNCEMENT: 16TH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON EQUATORIAL AERONOMY (ISEA-16) during 12 - 16 September 2022 at Kyoto University (in person / virtual hybrid) The abstract submission deadline is approaching now. Please visit our website for more information. https://www.rish.kyoto-u.ac.jp/isea16/ The International Symposium on Equatorial Aeronomy (ISEA) is held once in every three to four years. Researchers from the fields of atmosphere, ionosphere and magnetosphere gather together in ISEA to share new findings, discuss the current status, and identify topics for future research. The 16th International Symposium on Equatorial Aeronomy (ISEA-16) will be held in person during 12 - 16 September 2022 at Kyoto University along with zoom virtual conference. Please also note the newest information of visa and quarantine requirements if you plan to attend in person. https://www.mofa.go.jp/p_pd/ipr/page7e_900126.html https://www.hco.mhlw.go.jp/en/ If you have any questions, please contact isea16contact (at) rish.kyoto-u.ac.jp From Robyn.Millan at dartmouth.edu Mon Jun 27 10:41:05 2022 From: Robyn.Millan at dartmouth.edu (Robyn Millan) Date: Mon, 27 Jun 2022 12:41:05 -0400 Subject: CEDAR email: Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) Decadal Survey Update and Call for White Papers Message-ID: The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine are pleased to announce that the third decadal survey in solar and space physics (heliophysics) is underway. The President of the National Academy of Sciences has appointed Dr. Stephen A. Fuselier and Dr. Robyn M. Millan to serve as co-chairs of the steering committee. The survey will be managed by a steering committee that will be supported by several study panels and possibly additional cross-disciplinary working groups. The survey is calling for white papers to inform the work of the steering committee and panels. White papers may focus on one or more science goals; notional instruments, missions, or ground-based investigations; or issues of broad concern to the community. The due date for white papers is *August 18, 2022*. The decadal survey?s statement of task, details of the call for white papers, biographical information for the co-chairs, and FAQs are on the survey?s webpage at https://nas.edu/ssphdecadal . For questions that are not addressed on the survey website, please send emails to the survey email address at SSPHDecadal at nas.edu Sincerely, Robyn Millan, Stephen Fuselier, Abigail Sheffer, and Art Charo -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From immel at ssl.berkeley.edu Tue Jun 28 15:04:35 2022 From: immel at ssl.berkeley.edu (Thomas J. Immel) Date: Tue, 28 Jun 2022 21:04:35 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: ISEA-16 Session #7 call for abstracts - "Future trends, opportunities, and challenges in low-latitude aeronomy" Message-ID: <225C21C5-7CE5-4949-B597-D63E2695965F@sunearth.ssl.berkeley.edu> Dear CEDAR community, Abstracts for the 16th International Symposium on Equatorial Aeronomy, Sept 12-16 in Kyoto, are due June 30, 2022. We are writing to invite your submissions to Session 7: "Future trends, opportunities, and challenges in low-latitude aeronomy". This and other sessions to be convened during the week are described on the ISEA-16 website : https://www.rish.kyoto-u.ac.jp/isea16/ The session description follows: Low-latitude aeronomy is a critical field for advancing knowledge on atmosphere coupling. This session will be devoted to current developments and future perspectives for improvements in both basic as well as applied sciences related to low-latitude aeronomy. Topics of this session include plans and developments for new, relevant ground- and satellite-based techniques, extracting new information from existing and improved techniques, integrating large datasets (multiple instrument datasets, model output/dataset integration), next-generation numerical models of the coupled geospace system, and meeting operational needs for space weather predictions. This final session of the conference offers an opportunity for you to share your ideas for new research and perspectives on the future of equatorial aeronomy. Invited speakers are Nick Pedatella and Huixin Lu. We cordially invite your additional contributions and participation. Thank you, Claudia Stolle Mamoru Yamamoto Thomas Immel -------------------------------------- Thomas J. Immel Space Sciences Laboratory UC Berkeley 7 Gauss Way Berkeley, CA 94720-7450 510-643-3504 -------------------------------------- AST:7731^29u18e3 From Sean.Hsu at lasp.colorado.edu Tue Jun 28 21:20:52 2022 From: Sean.Hsu at lasp.colorado.edu (Sean Hsu) Date: Wed, 29 Jun 2022 03:20:52 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: AGU 2022 - P024: Planetary rings, meteoroid and dust populations and effects Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, I?d like to bring your attention to a ring / meteoroid / dust-focused session at the 2022 AGU Fall Meeting (Chicago, IL and online, December 12-16). Abstracts submission link is here: https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm22/prelim.cgi/Home/0 The submission deadline is August 3rd. Please contact me or one of the other conveners if you have any questions. Best, Sean Hsu P024: Planetary rings, meteoroid and dust populations and effects New theoretical and observational studies of planetary rings, meteoroids, and dust. These collections of small particles are sensitive to a wide variety of dynamical phenomena, and so can provide information about the sources, sinks and transport of material. Rings can also encode detailed information about their dynamical environments such as their host planet's gravitational field, while meteoroids and dust interact with larger bodies through surface impacts and atmospheric ablation and therefore contribute to surface weathering or airless bodies and metal deposition in planetary atmospheres. Subjects to be covered include: the structure, dynamics and composition of rings; characterization of dust populations along with their effects on asteroids and spacecraft; dust chemistry; hypervelocity impacts of dust and meteoroids; the interaction of planetary rings with ionospheres, magnetospheres and interplanetary dust; and the origin and evolution of the rings. In response to the Decadal Survey on Planetary Science and Astrobiology 2023-2032, this year we particularly welcome papers focusing on related future developments, including instrumentation, missions, and observations. Conveners: Sean Hsu, Nicolas Lee, Richard Jerousek, Robert A. Marshall nnlee at stanford.edu sean.hsu at lasp.colorado.edu Richard.Jerousek at ucf.edu robert.marshall at colorado.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From orourk51 at msu.edu Thu Jun 30 10:58:19 2022 From: orourk51 at msu.edu (O'Rourke, Michael) Date: Thu, 30 Jun 2022 16:58:19 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Invitation to participate in an NSF-funded survey Message-ID: <2A3926F5-4AAA-4959-B84A-EF035488D85F@msu.edu> Dear Colleagues, I wanted to pass the following invitation along, in case you?re interested. This has to do with an NSF-funded research group that is seeking to validate a scale to measure epistemic exclusion, i.e., the ?devaluation of certain types of scholarship that occurs when invisible biases in systems of evaluation are coupled with prejudice toward, and negative stereotypes about, historically underrepresented groups.? (For more, see https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=2000021&HistoricalAwards=false.) This is supported by NSF HRD, and we believe that it could help to identify some obstacles to the diversification of the scientific workforce. (Here is the website for our project: https://we2project.weebly.com/.) Thank you, Michael O?Rourke Director, MSU Center for Interdisciplinarity Director, Toolbox Dialogue Initiative Professor, Department of Philosophy & AgBioResearch 368 Farm Lane Room 524A Michigan State University East Lansing, MI 48824-1032 orourk51 at msu.edu 517-432-0751 Dear Colleague, As a fellow tenured/tenure-track faculty member at a U.S. college or university, I would like to personally invite you to participate in a NSF-funded online survey about how your research is evaluated by other faculty in your department. Your participation will help us identify areas to improve faculty evaluation practices at colleges and universities across the U.S. The survey will take approximately 20-25 minutes to complete and you will receive a $20 Amazon gift card for your participation. If you are willing to participate: * Now, we are asking you to complete a brief 1 - 2 min screening survey to determine if you are eligible to participate. * In 1-2 weeks, you will receive a link to the full survey. * The survey will be available through June 15th for completion. Screening Survey Link: https://umich.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_8HComSxSila4ryu We hope you will participate as your input is unique and cannot be replaced. We also hope that you will pass this email along to other colleagues who may be interested in participating. If you have any questions or would like more information about the study, please contact our study coordinator, Dr. Petal Grower, at faculty.eval.study at umich.edu. Thank you, Dr. NiCole T. Buchanan, Professor in the Department of Psychology, Michigan State University (nbuchana at msu.edu) NSF Award #2000021 Dr. Isis H. Settles, Professor in the Departments of Psychology and Afroamerican and African Studies; Associate Director, ADVANCE Program, University of Michigan (isettles at umich.edu) NSF Award #2000580 Dr. Martinque Jones, Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology, University of North Texas (martinque.jones at unt.edu) NSF Award #2000076 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From clezio.denardin at inpe.br Thu Jun 30 15:00:34 2022 From: clezio.denardin at inpe.br (Clezio Marcos De Nardin) Date: Thu, 30 Jun 2022 18:00:34 -0300 Subject: CEDAR email: =?iso-8859-1?q?=5BCOAGE_2022=5D_Third_Announcement_?= =?iso-8859-1?q?-_Deadline_for_Abstract_submission_postpone_to_25_J?= =?iso-8859-1?q?uly_2022_!!?= Message-ID: <004a01d88cc4$713cac70$53b60550$@inpe.br> XIII COLAGE - Conferencia Latinoamericana de Geof?sica Espacial S?o Jos? dos Campos (SP), Brazil 27th November to 2nd December 2022 The Asociaci?n Latinoamericana de Geof?sica Espacial (ALAGE) is an autonomous scientific society that attempts to motivate the development of research in Space Geophysics, taking advantage of the human resources and the cultural unity, as well as the similar economic conditions of Latin America. ALAGE seeks to complement the activities of the existing regional geophysical organisms. One of the main activities of ALAGE is the periodical organization of meetings that are attended by most of the scientists working in the ALAGE areas of interest. These meetings are called Conferencia Latinoamericana de Geof?sica Espacial (COLAGE). Previous COLAGE workshops have been held in diverse locations: Brazil (1988), Mexico (1991), Cuba, (1993), Argentina (1996), Costa Rica, (1998) Chile (2001), Brazil (2004), Mexico (2007), Costa Rica (2011), Peru (2014), Argentina (2018), and Chile (2021, online). The XIII COLAGE will be held at the Fernando de Mendon?a Auditorium, in the Integration and Testing Laboratory (LIT), of the National Institute for Space Research (INPE), in S?o Jos? dos Campos (SP), Brazil, from 27th November to 2nd December 2022. Contributed and invited talks will be organized in the following scientific sessions: 1. Space Weather 2. Ionosphere and Upper Atmosphere 3. Solar Physics, Heliosphere, Cosmic Rays 4. Solar Wind, Magnetosphere and Geomagnetism 5. Space Plasma Physics and Nonlinear Processes in Space Geophysics COLAGE International Space Science School (ISSS) Historically, ALAGE also promotes schools associated with COLAGEs. The International Space Science School (ISSS) will take place from 24th to 26th November 2022, at the same venue as the XIII COLAGE. The aim of the school is to promote knowledge and training for undergraduate, master's, and doctoral candidates, from all over the world, in the area of Space Sciences, covering topics such as the Sun and the Solar Activity, Interplanetary Medium, and the Solar Wind, Magnetosphere, Ionosphere, Upper Atmosphere, Planetary Sciences, and Space Weather. For further details on the XIII COLAGE, please access (NB: in English and Portuguese): https://www.gov.br/inpe/en/events/colage/2022/ COLAGE e-mail address: colage.2022 at inpe.br ISSS school: isss at inpe.br We also ask you please to redistribute to your colleagues. Sincerely, Dr. Clezio Marcos De Nardin On behalf of the Local Organizing Committee -------------------------------------------------------------- [Warning] This message is intended solely for the use of its addressee and may contain privileged or confidential information. If you are not the addressee you should not distribute, copy or file this message. In this case, please notify the sender and destroy its contents immediately. [Aviso] Esta mensagem ? para uso exclusivo de seu destinat?rio e pode Conter informa??o privilegiada e confidencial. Se voc? n?o ? o destinat?rio n?o deve distribuir, copiar ou arquivar a mensagem. Neste caso, por favor, notifique o remetente da mesma e destrua imediatamente a mensagem. From andrew.marble at noaa.gov Thu Jun 30 13:25:57 2022 From: andrew.marble at noaa.gov (Andrew Marble - NOAA Affiliate) Date: Thu, 30 Jun 2022 13:25:57 -0600 Subject: CEDAR email: Solar Wind Research Scientist opening at CIRES/CU-Boulder NOAA/SWPC In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: The Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) invites applications for a full-time Research Scientist or Associate Scientist position at the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC). The successful applicant will work to improve solar wind and coronal mass ejection (CME) propagation models and products for forecasting geomagnetic storms at Earth. The primary role will be heliospheric modeling support with associated activities including long-term model verification, ensemble consideration, and application and product development. The successful applicant will also likely work closely with the SWPC 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=40514 This position will remain posted until filled. Applications received by July 17, 2022 will receive full consideration. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From leleyc1015 at gmail.com Thu Jun 30 21:12:19 2022 From: leleyc1015 at gmail.com (Yue Chao) Date: Fri, 1 Jul 2022 11:12:19 +0800 Subject: CEDAR email: AGU Fall Meeting Session SM025: Ring Current Dynamics and Its Coupling with Other Particle Populations Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, We invite you to submit contributions to the ring current session at the 2022 AGU Fall Meeting (Chicago, IL and online, December 12-16). Abstracts submission link is here: https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm22/prelim.cgi/Session/156827. The submission deadline is *August 3rd. * *SM025: Ring Current Dynamics and Its Coupling with Other Particle Populations* The terrestrial ring current is comprised of ions and electrons from 1 keV to several hundred keV and plays an important role in regulating the energy density and field configuration of the magnetosphere. Abrupt changes in this population are responsible for global decreases in the Earth's surface magnetic field, known as geomagnetic storms. The storm-time ring current is thus linked to harmful space weather effects, which have motivated the study of its formation, dynamics, decay, and coupling with other particle populations. The instability of ring current plasma provides free energy for various waves (e.g., EMIC, magnetosonic, and whistler-mode waves), which can heat or pitch-angle-scatter various other plasma populations through wave-particle interactions and result in plasma energization or loss via precipitation. The subsequent precipitation modifies the ionospheric conductance, which in turn changes the magnetospheric electric potential pattern. Understanding the coupling processes between the ring current and other particle populations is crucial to modeling the inner magnetosphere. We invite presentations on research progress of the ring current dynamics, wave-particle interactions, and the coupling between ring current system and particle populations in other regimes (e.g., plasmasphere, radiation belts, ionosphere and neutral atmosphere). Contributions including theoretical studies, numerical modeling, observations from satellite and ground-based missions are welcome. Conveners: Chao Yue, Cristian Ferradas, Jacob Bortnik, Qianli Ma -- Chao YUE, Ph.D Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences University of California, Los Angeles 405 Hilgard Ave. Los Angles, CA University Corporation for Atmospheric Research e-mail: yuechao at atmos.ucla.edu *http://people.atmos.ucla.edu/yuechao/ * -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: