From venkateshk at prl.res.in Mon Feb 3 00:24:56 2025 From: venkateshk at prl.res.in (Venkatesh Kavutarapu) Date: Mon, 03 Feb 2025 12:54:56 +0530 Subject: CEDAR email: Special Issue on new developments in Mesosphere-Thermosphere-Ionspheric studies in Advances in Space Research Message-ID: <20250203125456.Horde.qL4tC0FP4-DrNiHYHg5ShHV@mail.prl.res.in> Dear Friends and Colleagues, ? Please find below the announcement for a special issue in the journal of Advances in Space Research (ASR). This special issue focuses on the new developments on the mesosphere-thermosphere-ionosphere coupling processes from equatorial to mid-latitudes during quiet and disturbed conditions. Please find below the detailed information. We welcome manuscripts for this special issue. ? Guest Editors, K. Venkatesh & M. Pezzopane. ? ************************************************************************************ ASR SPECIAL ISSUE ON "RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN EQUATORIAL, LOW- AND MID-LATITUDE MESOSPHERE, THERMOSPHERE AND IONOSPHERE STUDIES" ? Papers are invited for a special topical issue of?/Advances in Space Research/?(ASR) entitled ?/Recent developments in equatorial, low- and mid-latitude mesosphere, thermosphere and ionosphere studies/?. ? Dynamic processes taking place in the mesosphere, thermosphere and ionosphere (MTI) are always intriguing to the scientific community. Ever increasing ground and space-based experiments are providing a huge amount of data, and unfolding new avenues to employ advanced Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) techniques to understand and simulate various physical processes taking place in the MTI region. ? This special issue is intended to report the recent developments in the field of equatorial, low- and mid-latitude mesosphere, thermosphere and ionosphere from observational (ground-based and space-borne), theoretical and simulation studies. ?Submissions are open to all scientists who have an appropriate scientific paper related to various aspects in this area that include: mesosphere and low-thermosphere region; the response of the thermosphere-ionosphere system to forcing from above and below; equatorial electrodynamic processes; coupling between mid-, low- and equatorial latitude regions; space weather impacts; magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling; ionospheric response to sudden stratospheric warmings; ionospheric irregularities and scintillations; latitudinal and/or longitudinal variability; ionosphere F-layer stratification; data-assimilation studies; modelling through AI/ML; advanced space and ground-based experiments; ionospheric tomography. Papers related to the response of the upper atmosphere during recent superstorms of May and October 2024 as well as papers presented at the C1.1 session of COSPAR 2024 are especially encouraged. ? Papers must be submitted electronically to?https://www.editorialmanager.com/aisr/. To ensure that all manuscripts are correctly identified for inclusion into the special issue,?AUTHORS MUST SELECT ?SI: MTI: NEW DEVELOPMENTS??when they reach the "Article Type" step in the submission process.? ? Submitted papers must be written in English and should include the full affiliation and postal addresses for all authors. Only full-length papers will be considered for publication, subject to peer review by a minimum of two reviewers. There are no page limits although the length of the paper should be appropriate for the material being presented. ? The?DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS IS?31 MAY 2025. ? Papers will be published electronically as soon as they are accepted. All articles will be typeset at no cost to the authors unless they want to publish an open access paper; there is also a nominal charge for printing color figures although there is no charge for color figures on the electronic version. ? Dr. Venkatesh Kavutarapu (venkateshk at prl.res.in[1]) and Dr. Michael Pezzopane (michael.pezzopane at ingv.it[1]) are the Guest Editors for this special issue. Questions can be directed to both of them or to the Co-Editor for Special Issues, Dr. Peggy Ann Shea (sssrc at msn.com[1]). ? The general format for submission of papers and instructions for authors can be found on the?/ASR/?Elsevier web site at?https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/advances-in-space-research/publish/guide-for-authors ******************************************************************************************************************************* Links: ------ [1] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- DR. K. VENKATESH Assistant Professor Space and Atmospheric Sciences Division Physical Research Laboratory Navrangpura, Ahmedabad-380009, INDIA Email: venkateshk at prl.res.in; venkatkau at gmail.com Phone: +91-79-26314653 URL:https://www.prl.res.in/~venkateshk/ ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ??. ??. ??????? ????????? ????????? ???????? ??? ?????????? ??????? ?????? ????? ????????? ?????????? ?????????, ????????-380009, ???? ????:?venkateshk at prl.res.in; venkatkau at gmail.com ????|:?+91-79-26314653 ??????:?https://www.prl.res.in/~venkateshk/ ----------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From vv.emyanov at gmail.com Mon Feb 3 03:43:38 2025 From: vv.emyanov at gmail.com (Vladislav Demyanov) Date: Mon, 3 Feb 2025 18:43:38 +0800 Subject: CEDAR email: Invitation to AOGS 2025 Interdisciplinary Session IG19 Message-ID: *Dear colleagues!* *We cordially invite all who are interested to participate in AOGS 2025 Interdisciplinary Session IG19 ?GNSS data of high temporal resolution, new GNSS signals, modern GNSS receivers: New research opportunities to study Earth?s ionosphere, atmosphere and geo-dynamics?.* *Deadline for Abstracts Submission comes soon on February 18, 2025. **Abstract submission link: https://www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2025/public.asp?page=sessions_and_conveners.asp * *We expected that participants provide novel results in the areas:* 1) Coordinated Arctic, Mid-latitude and Low latitude Ionospheric Monitoring involving novel advances in GNSS-based techniques: regional and international networks of modernized GNSS sites; innovations in Remote sensing, data handling and analysis; coordinated research campaigns and collaborations 2) New GNSS signals, GNSS data with high temporal resolution, and new opportunities in the Earth's atmosphere and ionosphere sounding; 3) Tropospheric and ionospheric indices and parameters based on measurements of new GNSS signals with high temporal resolution; 4) Problems and advances in scintillation studies based on new GNSS signals; 5) Impact of GNSS hardware and software on sensitivity and resolution of modern GNSS Remote sensing methods; 6) Modernization of GNSS upper atmospheric real?time disaster information and alert networks and systems, taking into account new progress in GNSS technologies; *Session Conveners:* *Vladislav Demyanov,* Department of Space Weather forecast, Institute of Solar and Terrestrial Physics, Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Irkutsk, Russia *Periyadan T. Jayachandran*, Physics Department, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, NB, Canada *Shuanggen Jin*, Vice-President & Professor at Henan Polytechnic University *IG19 Session Abstract.* The rapid advancement of GNSS technology, including new-generation satellites, signals, and receivers, presents a wealth of new research opportunities. These advancements, particularly the high-temporal-resolution GNSS signals, are now more accessible to research teams worldwide. However, the full potential of these technologies for studying the Atmosphere, Ionosphere, and other interdisciplinary fields has yet to be fully realized. For a Space physicist, a GNSS receiver is often a 'black box'. Can we rely on a specific receiver manufacturer and their expensive equipment to conduct crucial Atmospheric and Space physics studies? Do the GNSS signals recorded with high temporal resolution truly enhance our sensitivity and resolution for Ionosphere or Atmosphere explorations? Which ionosphere-free combination is most effective for reconstructing TEC with minimal noise and reliably detecting a weak earthquake or tsunami-related ionospheric response? These are the practical questions that emerge with the evolution of GNSS technologies. This section is devoted to new theories methods, and GNSS techniques which allow looking far beyond the limitations in the Earth's atmosphere, ionosphere and interdisciplinary fields such as geosciences, the availability of new GNSS signals, receivers and GNSS receivers with the capability of high sampling rate. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From robert.f.pfaff at nasa.gov Mon Feb 3 14:25:55 2025 From: robert.f.pfaff at nasa.gov (Pfaff, Robert F. (GSFC-6750)) Date: Mon, 3 Feb 2025 21:25:55 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: NASA Sounding Rocket Working Group Meeting on February 11 -- How to Join and Call for Senior Grad Students/Early Post-Docs to join Committee Message-ID: Please distribute this message to the CEDAR mailing list. Thank you. -- Rob Pfaff, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center NASA Sounding Rocket Working Group Meeting on February 11 -- How to Join and Call for Senior Grad Students/Early Post-Docs to join Committee NASA?s Sounding Rocket Working Group (SRWG) is an informal committee that meets twice a year, providing input to the Sounding Rocket Program Office at Wallops since the late 1980s. It is composed of 12 members who are active users -- representing researchers and PIs at universities and research labs across the country in the disciplines of Astrophysics, Solar, and Geospace. The winter meeting will take place on Tuesday, February 11, at Goddard starting at 9 AM (Eastern). The agenda may be found at this link: https://rscience.gsfc.nasa.gov/Presentations/SRWG_Agenda_February_2025.pdf The meeting will be conducted both In-person and Virtually. The virtual link is via Teams (Details below). Please join the meeting to learn the latest regarding the NASA sounding rocket program. ***NEW*** The Sounding Rocket Working Group recognizes the significant contributions from graduate students to payloads developed by university P.I.?s and to the program in general and has decided to expand our committee to include two members who are senior grad students or early post-docs to serve on the committee for 18 months (3 meetings) before rotating to new senior grad students/early post-docs. The initial thinking is to have one student who specializes in telescope (astro or solar) payloads such as launched at White Sands and one who specializes in geospace payloads. For those senior grad students/early post-docs with a strong interest in the rocket program who wish to serve on the committee and help further its goals and operational capabilities, please send your name, contact info, and rocket-related experience to Robert Pfaff, NASA SR Project Scientist, Robert.F.Pfaff at nasa.gov, with ?SRWG Grad/Post-Doc Candidate? in subject line. Travel expenses to the meetings will be covered by NASA. Robert Pfaff, Chair and Project Scientist, Sounding Rockets Scott Porter, Deputy Project Scientist, Sounding Rockets P.S. If you need assistance regarding logistics for the SRWG meeting, contact Steve Martin at steven.c.martin at nasa.gov or 301-286-6517. Information regarding virtual attendance at the main SRWG meeting on July 9, 2024: Microsoft Teams Need help? Join the meeting now Meeting ID: 298 445 672 980 Passcode: V9wY2MF9 Dial in by phone +1 256-715-9946,,769702509# United States, Huntsville Find a local number Phone conference ID: 769 702 509# -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sbender at iaa.es Tue Feb 4 03:17:25 2025 From: sbender at iaa.es (Stefan Bender) Date: Tue, 4 Feb 2025 11:17:25 +0100 Subject: CEDAR email: AOGS 2025 session AS33: Remote and In-situ Sensing and Modelling of the Chemistry and Dynamics of the Middle and Upper Atmosphere Message-ID: <54b2a9d9-d92f-4432-8e68-93735a3fd11a@iaa.es> Dear colleagues, Two weeks left to submit your abstract to AOGS 2025. We urge you and your colleagues to present your research at our AOGS session AS33, "Remote and In-situ Sensing and Modelling of the Chemistry and Dynamics of the Middle and Upper Atmosphere" at the 22nd AOGS in-person meeting in Singapore on 27 July -- 01 August 2025. For details on the AOGS Meeting and abstract submission, please visit: https://www.asiaoceania.org/ and as well as for abstract submissions. Session Description: AS33 - Remote and In-situ Sensing and Modelling of the Chemistry and Dynamics of the Middle and Upper Atmosphere The Earth's middle and upper atmosphere and ionosphere maintain a balance between solar radiative and particle forcing from above, and the action of atmospheric waves rising up from below. Quantifying how these forces drive the general circulation and waves in the atmosphere and control both the chemical balance and its temporal and spatial variability is crucial to understanding how composition, momentum, and energy couple together and structure the atmosphere and ionosphere. As a result, remote sensing and in-situ investigations, as well as the laboratory and modelling studies that complement and explain these observations, are the primary tools used to understand the aeronomy of this region. This session will look at recent results from those ground-based, in-situ and satellite-borne observations, modelling studies and relevant laboratory research. It will bring together studies of new sensing techniques and sensors, models and mission concepts, currently being planned or under development, to foster new collaborations, furthering the impact of their integrated results on our understanding of the stratosphere, mesosphere and ionosphere/thermosphere. The meeting will be held in-person from July 27 to August 01 2025. Abstract submissions are open and due February 18 2025. For details on the AOGS Meeting and abstract submission, please visit https://www.asiaoceania.org/ and We hope that you can accept our call to contribute a paper to our session and look forward to meeting you in Singapore at the 22nd AOGS2025. With best regards from your session convenors, Stefan Bender, Iain Reid, Jeng-Hwa Yee, and Jia Jia -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: smime.p7s Type: application/pkcs7-signature Size: 4782 bytes Desc: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature URL: From lqian at ucar.edu Tue Feb 4 10:18:21 2025 From: lqian at ucar.edu (Liying Qian) Date: Tue, 4 Feb 2025 10:18:21 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: =?utf-8?q?Dependent_Care_Grants_for_2025_CEDAR_Work?= =?utf-8?q?shop_=E2=80=93_Application_Now_Open?= Message-ID: Dear CEDAR Community, CEDAR offers small grants (up to $400) for CEDAR workshop attendees to reduce barriers that may arise as a result of the need for dependent care. A dependent is defined as a minor, a person with a disability regardless of age, or dependent elderly. Preference will be given to applicants in the early stages of their careers and applicants who explain clearly their need for dependent care support. The deadline to apply for dependent care grants is *May 9, 2025*. All applicants will be notified no later than 2 weeks before the CEDAR workshop about their dependent care grant status. Please read the dependent care grants information before filling out the Dependent Care Grants Form . A link to the form for requesting dependent care support can also be found on the 2025 CEDAR workshop page . Best regards, Liying Qian (on behalf of the CSSC) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Yongliang.Zhang at jhuapl.edu Tue Feb 4 14:55:41 2025 From: Yongliang.Zhang at jhuapl.edu (Zhang, Yongliang) Date: Tue, 4 Feb 2025 21:55:41 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Call for Abstracts: AOGS-2025 Session (ST08)- Auroral Dynamics and their impact on the geospace system Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, We invite you to contribute your work to the 2025 AOGS Annual Meeting session (ST08) - Auroral Dynamics and their impact on the geospace system. The meeting will be held in Marina Bay Sands, Singapore from July 27th to August 1st, 2025. The abstract deadline is February 18, 2025. Submission link: https://www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2025/public.asp?page=submissions.asp#SA Session description: Auroral precipitation is the result of coupling among the solar wind and geospace system which includes the ionosphere, thermosphere and magnetosphere (ITM). Dynamics in auroral particle precipitation reveals the physical processes in the magnetosphere and its response to the solar wind variations. The auroral dynamics also alters ionospheric and thermospheric conditions through photo-chemical, momentum transfer, and heating processes. These processes create a strong feedback effect on ITM system and thus modify auroral activities. This session welcomes all contributions on auroral and related ITM observations, theories and modeling studies under different geophysical conditions (geomagnetic activity, season, solar cycle and hemispheric dependence). Sincerely, Yongliang Zhang, Lei Cai, and Keisuke Hosokawa -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From chiyen.lin at g.ncu.edu.tw Wed Feb 5 02:51:15 2025 From: chiyen.lin at g.ncu.edu.tw (Chi-Yen Lin) Date: Wed, 5 Feb 2025 17:51:15 +0800 Subject: CEDAR email: [Call for Abstracts] AOGS 2025: ST25 (Upper atmosphere disturbances driven by natural events in the solar terrestrial environment) Message-ID: <22E4530F-A2D3-402B-B4DC-B1DB275D92ED@g.ncu.edu.tw> Dear Colleagues, The AOGS 22nd Annual Meeting (AOGS2025) will take place from July 27 to August 1, 2025, at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore. We would like to bring your attention to session ST25: Upper Atmosphere Disturbances Driven by Natural Events in the Solar Terrestrial Environment, which will emphasize all aspects of upper atmosphere disturbances caused by natural events, including seismic activity, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions, hurricanes, solar eclipses, and geomagnetic storms in the solar terrestrial environment. Session Scope Earth?s upper atmosphere, including the ionized component, ionosphere, is sensitive to upward propagated disturbances from the lower altitudes. These disturbances could be in atmospheric acoustic and gravity waves (AGWs), large-scale planetary waves, or tides. They can be generated by lithosphere activities and lower atmosphere disturbances, such as seismic, tsunami, volcano eruptions, hurricanes, tornados, and meteorological disturbances. Another source of the disturbances comes from solar-terrestrial events, such as solar eclipses or magnetic storms. Solar eclipse could produce various disturbances from the lower atmosphere to the thermosphere, resulting in complex upper atmosphere responses. Magnetic storms could also drive global atmospheric and thermospheric disturbances through the input of energy from electromagnetic and energetical precipitations. These disturbances interact with the upper atmosphere through various complex processes and thus provide opportunities for a better understanding of the vertical coupling and teleconnection in the whole atmosphere. This session's objective is to solicit discussions on the upper atmospheric disturbances in both neutral and ionized components resulting from the disturbances of these natural events in the solar terrestrial environments. The latest results from the recent extreme geomagnetic storm events have also been solicited. You can find more information, as well as the abstract submission at: https://www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2025/public.asp?page=home.asp Please note that the deadline for abstract submission is February 18, 2025. We would appreciate your attendance at the meeting and your contribution to the community. Sincerely, Chi-Yen Lin (National Central University) Min-Yang Chou (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center) Charles Lin (National Cheng Kung University) Yen-Jung Wu (University of California, Berkeley) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cyhuang1931 at gmail.com Wed Feb 5 08:34:27 2025 From: cyhuang1931 at gmail.com (Chun Yen Huang) Date: Thu, 6 Feb 2025 00:34:27 +0900 Subject: CEDAR email: Invitation to ST-22 Session of AOGS2025 Message-ID: Subject: AOGS-2025 Session (ST-22): Advances in Monitoring, Modeling, and Forecasting Equatorial Plasma Bubbles Dear Colleagues, We hope you will consider submitting an abstract to Session ST22 at AOGS-2025, which will be held in Marina Bay Sands, Singapore from July 27th to August 1st, 2025 This session brings researchers together to share perspectives on recent progress in understanding EPB dynamics, their driving mechanisms, and their impacts on the ionosphere. We welcome contributions that can help foster discussions on observational techniques, model simulations, and forecasting approaches for these phenomena. Session Description: Equatorial Plasma Bubbles (EPBs) are a major cause of amplitude and phase fluctuations in GNSS signals, leading impacts to positioning errors, signal loss, and degraded performance in applications such as ionospheric radio occultation (RO) at low latitudes. However, with increasing solar activity, recent observations show that EPBs are now extending more frequently into mid-latitudes, particularly during geomagnetic storms. This growing impact of EPBs at mid-latitudes highlights the need for a deeper understanding of their formation and behavior beyond low-latitude regions. This session aims to explore advancements in EPB monitoring and modeling, which have revealed the complexities of EPB formation and development related to wave disturbances and neutral wind dynamics in the ionosphere. Various monitoring techniques, including ground-based radar, optical and GNSS observations, space-based RO, and in-situ measurements, will provide valuable insights into this topic. Contributions focused on modeling and data assimilation analysis of the ionosphere are welcomed. We look forward to your participation in our AOGS session. Please note that the abstract submission deadline is Tuesday, 18 February 2025 at 23:59 (GMT +8, Singapore Standard Time) Sincerely, Session Conveners: Shih-Ping Chen, Chi-Yen Lin, Chun-Yen Huang -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sraizada at nsf.gov Wed Feb 5 11:13:26 2025 From: sraizada at nsf.gov (Raizada, Shikha) Date: Wed, 5 Feb 2025 18:13:26 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Expression of interest to serve as reviewers/panelists for upcoming NSF CEDAR solicitation Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, At the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), the program directors (PDs) ensure a fair merit review process for funding recommendations. To enable this, we rely on the expertise of our colleagues in the field, who provide critical feedback to the NSF PDs. For this upcoming CEDAR solicitation (NSF 25-510), we are looking for potential candidates to serve as either ad-hoc or panel reviewers. We encourage researchers with a wide expertise in Aeronomy and related research areas to help us with the merit evaluation and play a crucial role in this process. If you are interested and do not plan to submit proposal/s (a) relevant to Aeronomy research areas within Geospace Cluster (GC) and/or (b) for this year's CEDAR solicitation, please send the following information to me (sraizada at nsf.gov) by March 5, 2025 for consideration as an ad-hoc reviewer or a panelist. You should not have any pending proposals submitted to the Aeronomy research theme within GC to be eligible as a reviewer or panelist. Name: Affiliation: Current position/career stage: Research areas (keep it brief or use keywords): Note that expressing your interest in serving as a reviewer does not imply that you will be requested for the service. Thank you. Dr. Shikha Raizada (She, Her, Hers) Program Director Aeronomy, Geo/AGS National Science Foundation Ph: +1 703-292-8963 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From gperry at njit.edu Thu Feb 6 12:57:09 2025 From: gperry at njit.edu (Gareth Perry) Date: Thu, 6 Feb 2025 14:57:09 -0500 Subject: CEDAR email: Second circular (including hotel information) - 2025 HamSCI Workshop Announcement Message-ID: <2D59EAE6-F633-4549-8A27-88C65BD01E1B@njit.edu> This is the second announcement for the 2025 HamSCI Workshop to be held at the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT), March 14-15, 2025. A hotel block has been arranged at the Robert Treat Hotel in Newark for March 13 - 16, 2025. The hotel is a short distance away from NJIT. Use the code NJIT HAMSCI 2025 when booking rooms. You must phone the hotel (973-622-1000) to make a reservation with the code. The cut off date for the hotel block is February 22, 2025. The abstract submission system remains open. The abstract submission deadline, for both oral presentations and posters, is February 10, 2025. Abstracts can be submitted here: 2025 Workshop Abstract Submission . Abstract submissions are welcome from all sectors of the HamSCI Community, which includes: - Professional researchers - Academics / Educators - Students, at all academic career levels - Citizen scientist volunteers, including, of course, the ham radio community Potential topics (to get everyone's thought processes moving): - Observations and findings from HamSCI's Festivals of Eclipse Ionospheric Science - Personal Space Weather Station project updates - Data management and visualization techniques - Radio wave propagation modeling - The applicability of HamSCI's research to amateur radio operations - General interest topics, e.g. from the arts, literature, history, with an amateur radio, science or technology theme The registration system will be launched in the coming weeks. Registration for the two day event is expected to be $175; single day registration rates will also be available. More details can be found on the workshop? website . Questions can be directed to the HamSCI mailbox . Gareth Perry and Kuldeep Pandey, NJIT (on behalf of the 2025 HamSCI Workshop Local Organizing Committee) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From gross at bu.edu Fri Feb 7 10:48:03 2025 From: gross at bu.edu (Gross, Nicholas) Date: Fri, 7 Feb 2025 17:48:03 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Voyager StoryCorps SHIELD Webinar Message-ID: Join us for our next installment of the SHIELD Voyager StoryCorps Series: A Lifetime Exploring the Solar System from the Outer Planets to the Interstellar Medium Date: Friday, Feb. 21st at 2pm ET This conversation between Kostas Dialynas (Univ. Of Athens) and Tom Krimigis (JHU/APL) will span the decades of exploration of the Voyager Spacecraft with a specific focus on the LECP particle instrument for which Tom is the Principle Investigator. As the Voyager Mission approaches its 50 year mark, and continues its extraordinary legacy, a new generation of researchers works with Voyager data to understand the outer regions of our solar system and the interstellar environment outside of the heliosphere, we invite stories that capture the history of this mission and the people that made it happen. The SHIELD Webinar series for 2025 will be devoted to bringing together these unique voices to share stories in a ?Voyager StoryCorps?. For more details and registration: https://shielddrivecenter.com/shield-webinars/ [Title: SHIELD Logo] Find us on the web at: * Email: shield at bu.edu * Join our ?Friends of SHIELD? email list https://shielddrivecenter.com/news/ * Website: https://shielddrivecenter.com * Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SHIELDDriveScienceCenter * Twitter: @SHIELD_drive * Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/shield-nasa-dsc/ * Instagram: shield_dsc -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 6967 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: From mylin2 at berkeley.edu Mon Feb 10 12:39:17 2025 From: mylin2 at berkeley.edu (Mei-Yun Lin) Date: Mon, 10 Feb 2025 11:39:17 -0800 Subject: CEDAR email: Call for Abstracts: AOGS 2025 session PS03 and PS12 Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, I would like to advertise two 2025 AOGS Annual Meeting sessions that might be of interest to you. The meeting will be held in Marina Bay Sands, Singapore from July 27th to August 1st, 2025. The abstract deadline is February 18, 2025. Submission link: https://www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2025/public.asp?page=submissions.asp#SA Cheers, Mei-Yun Session PS03 - Aeronomy and Plasma Physics of Planetary Environments Session Abstract: This session focuses on the near-space neutral and ionized environments of solar system objects except Earth. Thermospheres, exospheres, ionospheres and magnetospheres are affected by the source regions at low altitudes and by their interaction with the solar wind. A variety of past and present missions are dedicated to analysis of such planetary environments. This wealth of data as well as increasingly sophisticated modeling capabilities have driven great advances over the last two decades in our understanding of the structure, variability, composition and dynamics of these environments. For example, we are starting to elucidate the complex two-way coupling between surfaces and surface-bound exospheres, between thermospheres and ionospheres, between photochemically-dominated collisional ionospheres and transport-dominated upper ionospheres, and between all these regions and the highly variable solar wind. We invite contributions concerning airless bodies such as Mercury (MESSENGER, BepiColombo), Earth?s moon (THEMIS-ARTEMIS, Kaguya, Chang?e, Chandrayaan), the Jovian moons (Galileo and Juno), Kuiper Belt Objects (New Horizons) and asteroids (Dawn) as well as bodies with substantial atmospheres such as Venus (PVO, VEx, Parker Solar Probe), Mars (MGS, MEx, MAVEN, InSight, EMM), Titan (Cassini), comets (Rosetta) and the giant planets (Cassini, Galileo, Juno). Both data-focused and modeling studies (and those which combine the two) are encouraged. Comparative studies are particularly welcome as are presentations on planned future missions which address the goal of understanding and characterizing planetary near-space environments. Both solicited and contributed talks will be included. Conveners: Shaosui Xu, Yuki Harada, Yutian Cao, Lina Hadid, Shahab Fatemi Session PS012: Contributions of Heavy Ions and Their Roles in Comparative Magnetospheres Session description: Heavy ions, including lower (He+, N+, O+, NO+, CO2+, O2+, etc.) and higher (C^n+, N^n+, O^n+ and Fe^n+, n>2) charge states, within planetary environments serve as important tracers for a multitude of plasma phenomena, such as ionospheric outflow, moon-magnetosphere interactions, mass transport, magnetic reconnection, and wave instability. By comparing the circulation of heavy ions in planetary magnetospheres with strong, weak, or no intrinsic magnetic fields, we can uncover the processes that govern plasma dynamics in response to various solar activities such as solar flares and CMEs. This session focuses on both observational and theoretical studies focusing on the sources, controlling factors of heavy ion flows, and their impacts in regulating plasma dynamics and magnetospheric structure, as well as new mission concepts that can measure the properties of heavy ion flows in the terrestrial and planetary environments. We invite researchers from planetary science as well as solar, magnetospheric, and ionospheric physics. We highly encourage comparative studies of different planetary environments throughout the solar system, including but not limited to the inner planets, outer planets, and their moons. Conveners: Mei-Yun Lin, Lihui Chai, Kanako Seki and Weijie Sun -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From lqian at ucar.edu Mon Feb 10 15:07:14 2025 From: lqian at ucar.edu (Liying Qian) Date: Mon, 10 Feb 2025 15:07:14 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: Student Travel Support for the 2025 Joint CEDAR-GEM Workshop Message-ID: Dear CEDAR Community, One of the hallmarks of the NSF CEDAR program is its commitment to supporting a significant number of graduate and undergraduate students to attend the annual workshop. However, given limited resources, it may not always be possible to fund all interested students. To ensure an equitable and well-defined selection process aligned with the NSF CEDAR program?s goals of engagement and education, the CEDAR Science Steering Committee (CSSC) has established *Student Travel Support Selection Criteria * to guide the allocation of financial support. We encourage all CEDAR students and their advisors to review the *Student Travel Support Selection Criteria * and submit applications via the *Student Travel Support Application website * by *March 21, 2025*. *New this year:* Advisors will receive an email notification when their students submit a travel support application, along with instructions to complete the *Advisor Financial Aid Recommendation Form *. Best regards, Liying (on behalf of the 2025 Joint CEDAR-GEM Workshop Organizers) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From lqian at ucar.edu Mon Feb 10 16:51:08 2025 From: lqian at ucar.edu (Liying Qian) Date: Mon, 10 Feb 2025 16:51:08 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: =?utf-8?q?Call_for_Breakout_Workshop_Proposals_?= =?utf-8?q?=E2=80=93_2025_Joint_CEDAR-GEM_Workshop?= Message-ID: Dear CEDAR Community, We invite you to submit proposals for breakout workshops at the *2025 Joint CEDAR-GEM Workshop *, which will take place from *June 22?27, 2025 in **Des Moines, Iowa*. This is a great opportunity to bring together the community to discuss important science topics and advance collaborative efforts within the community. You may submit proposals for the following types of workshops: - - *CEDAR Grand Challenge Workshop* ? A three-year effort focused on addressing urgent and overarching science questions. - *CEDAR Regular Workshop* ? A one-year effort centered on a specific topic and its associated science questions. - *NEW THIS YEAR: Joint CEDAR-GEM Workshop* ? A one-year effort dedicated to topics relevant to magnetosphere-ionosphere-thermosphere (MIT) coupling. Those interested in proposing a joint CEDAR-GEM workshop please contact GEM focus group leaders to coordinate their proposals. You can find current GEM focus groups and their leaders' contact information at the following website: https://gem.epss.ucla.edu/mediawiki/index.php/GEM_Focus_Groups Please note that the same workshop proposal submission form is used on the GEM website for the GEM community. As a result, you will see an option to submit a GEM-only proposal in addition to CEDAR and joint CEDAR-GEM proposals. Best regards, Liying (on behalf of the 2025 Joint CEDAR-GEM Workshop Organizers) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From xia.cai at nasa.gov Tue Feb 11 09:43:56 2025 From: xia.cai at nasa.gov (Cai, Xia (LARC-E3)) Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2025 16:43:56 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: NASA Space Weather Internship Opportunity in Summer 2025 Message-ID: NASA Heliophysics Space Weather Program partnered again with NASA Earth Science DEVELOP National Program to conduct two feasibility studies on space weather application in Summer 2025. The projects will be conducted at the NASA Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, from June 2nd to August 8th, 2025. They provide 10-week research opportunities to use NASA heliophysics and Earth observations to address community concerns on space weather. US citizenships are required for participants of these two projects. Additionally DEVELOP provides research opportunity in Earth Science at 5 NASA centers, 1 NOAA center, and 8 universities locations across the country this Summer. It offers both in-person and virtual experiences. All projects are open to currently enrolled college students, recent graduates, and early/transitioning career professionals. International students enrolled at US colleges or universities can apply for projects hosted at universities or virtual projects at any locations, including NASA centers. Click here to browse 30 DEVELOP projects: https://appliedsciences.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/2025-02/2025Sum_ProposedProjectList_2.4.25.pdf The due date is February 21, 2025. Click here to apply: https://appliedsciences.nasa.gov/what-we-do/capacity-building/develop/apply Join the information webinar from 2-3 PM ET on February 12, 2025: https://bit.ly/DEVELOPSummer2025WebinarFeb12 Please contact NASA-DL-DEVELOP at mail.nasa.gov if you have any questions. Thank you, Dr. Xia Cai (xia.cai at nasa.gov) Program Scientist of NASA DEVELOP National Program -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Jon.Vandegriff at jhuapl.edu Tue Feb 11 11:59:04 2025 From: Jon.Vandegriff at jhuapl.edu (Vandegriff, Jon) Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2025 18:59:04 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: DASH meeting info as item for CEDAR listserv Message-ID: <947D9DFE-3C47-4CC8-83CF-A65714156FD6@contoso.com> Hi, Can you please include the call for DASH 2025 session proposals in the next CEDAR newsletter? Thanks, Jon Vandegriff, on behalf of the DASH planning committee DASH - Call for Sessions The Data, Analysis, and Software in Heliophysics (DASH) meeting serves as a forum for scientists and software developers to present and discuss algorithms, software, and data systems used throughout Heliophysics, including space and ground-based measurements as well as models. The meeting especially aims to connect practitioners and promote collaboration across the international heliophysics software community. All ranges of experience are welcome. The 2025 program will contain invited and contributed talks (with virtual participation possible), as well as posters (in-person only). The goal of the International Heliophysics Data Environment Alliance (IHDEA) is to encourage the use of common standards and services in order to enable sharing of data and to enhance science. Please consider proposing a session topic for DASH. We particularly encourage early career applicants. Proposals are due by March 10, 2025. Selected sessions will be announced by March 31, 2025, after which we will solicit contributions to the sessions. In scope topics include, but are not limited to: * New algorithms and disruptive technologies * Machine learning * Analysis tools * Scientific software development * Cloud and hybrid computing * Multi-heliophysical domain science * Implementing standards: data, metadata, and services * Software techniques in modeling (models and software) * Science mission software: planning, operations, and data pipelines * Research Software Engineer (RSE) career pathways https://dash2025.space.swri.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From kreeves at cfa.harvard.edu Wed Feb 12 16:01:15 2025 From: kreeves at cfa.harvard.edu (Katharine Reeves) Date: Wed, 12 Feb 2025 18:01:15 -0500 Subject: CEDAR email: Reminder: Applications for AGU/SPA Section Awards are due March 13! Message-ID: Do you know someone amazing whose achievements deserve to be recognized? The AGU SPA section has many awards to choose from! *The Basu U.S. Early Career for Research Excellence in Sun-Earth Systems Science. This award recognizes significant work by an early career researcher that shows promise of making outstanding contributions to research in Sun-Earth systems science and furthers the understanding of plasma physical processes and their applications for the benefit of society *The Basu International Early Career Award in Sun-Earth Systems Science: This award recognizes significant work by an early career scientist from a developing nation that shows promise of making outstanding contributions to research in Space Physics and Aeronomy Sciences and furthers the understanding of plasma physical processes or advances their applications for the benefit of society. *The Fred L. Scarf Award: This award is in recognition of an outstanding dissertation that contributes directly to solar-planetary science. *The Space Physics & Aeronomy Richard Carrington (SPARC) Education & Public Outreach Award: This award is presented annually to a senior scientist for significant impact on the public?s understanding of space physics and aeronomy through their education or outreach activities. *The James Van Allen Lecture: This lecture is presented every other year to a space scientist who has made significant contributions to the field of magnetospheric science. *The Marcel Nicolet Lecture:This lecture is presented every other year to a space scientist who has made significant contributions to the field of aeronomy. More information: https://www.agu.org/honors/section-awards-lectures Best regards, Kathy Reeves SPA President From krywonos at ucf.edu Thu Feb 13 12:38:22 2025 From: krywonos at ucf.edu (Andrey Krywonos) Date: Thu, 13 Feb 2025 19:38:22 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: APPLY NOW for the 2025 Incoherent Scatter Radar (ISR) Summer School Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, Applications are now open for the 2025 Incoherent Scatter Radar (ISR) Summer School at the school website: https://amisr.com/school The 2025 ISR summer school will include a mandatory virtual session (via Zoom) on July 14, 2025 followed by the in-person school at University of Alaska (Fairbanks) July 20-26, 2025. The school's goal is to train students in the theory and concepts of incoherent scatter radar and allows for hands-on opportunities to design and run experiments at ISR facilities. This year's school will focus on high-latitude / auroral observations using the Poker Flat ISR (PFISR) as a part of the NSF supported Geospace Facility. ISRs are the most powerful ground-based tools for ionospheric remote sensing with high temporal and altitudinal resolution. ISR data sets include measurements of electron density, electron and ion temperatures, and plasma drifts, with the possibility of further derived parameters. The main objectives of the school are: 1. Provide a "hands-on" learning experience in small groups 2. Promote team-work and collaborative skills 3. Encourage substantial interactions with instructors 4. Give students the training necessary to begin incorporating ISR into their research At the school, students will learn: * How the ionosphere forms and why it is important. * The physical principles of incoherent scatter radar. * The mathematical principles of radar signal processing. * How to design and run an ISR experiment. * How to extract and visualize data from the Madrigal database. * How ISR complements and adds insight to other observations. We encourage graduate/advanced undergraduate students to apply for the school. Those candidates who are selected for the 2025 ISR summer school and are enrolled at U.S. universities/institutions will receive travel support and accommodation to attend this event. Self-funded students from institutions outside the United States may also apply; however, they will not receive travel support if selected. The deadline for application submission is March 20, 2025. Notice of acceptance will be sent to participants by March 28, 2025. The ISR summer school is funded by the US National Science Foundation (NSF) through the Geospace Facilities Program within the Geosciences Directorate and is organized by the University of Central Florida. For more information about the school, contact Andrey Krywonos: krywonos at ucf.edu ISR summer school organizing committee: Andrey Krywonos, Phil Erickson, Roger Varney, Asti Bhatt, Pablo Reyes, Josh Semeter, Craig Heinselman, Anthea Coster, Bill Rideout -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Adam.Michael at jhuapl.edu Thu Feb 13 18:10:24 2025 From: Adam.Michael at jhuapl.edu (Michael, Adam T.) Date: Fri, 14 Feb 2025 01:10:24 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: GeoDAWG Seminar Series Message-ID: <8BEC1895-2AA5-4CD2-B588-0FDFF65BF1A6@jhuapl.edu> Dear Colleagues, We are pleased to invite you to attend the monthly seminar series of the IAGA ?Geospace Data Assimilation Working Group? (GeoDAWG). GeoDAWG?s purpose is to provide a forum to aid in the discussion of data assimilative modeling methods across the geospace sciences. More information can be found on our website: https://sites.google.com/view/geodawg/home Seminars are held virtually at 12 pm Eastern Time on the first Tuesday of every month. The next seminar will be on March 4th by Jiahui Hu titled ?Improving a data assimilation algorithm EMPIRE via data augmentation and Kalman smoother integration.? A link to join the seminar via Zoom can be found on the GeoDAWG website: https://sites.google.com/view/geodawg/seminars, along with the current GeoDAWG seminar schedule. You can request to join our mailing list, https://sites.google.com/view/geodawg/mailing-list, if you would like to receive our regular newsletter where we share research highlights and information relevant to the community. Speaker suggestions or questions can be also submitted online: https://sites.google.com/view/geodawg/contact-us, or you can email us directly at iaga.geodawg at gmail.com - Tomoko Matsuo, David Themens, Anthony Sciola, Adam Michael -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From AGUILAJ9 at erau.edu Fri Feb 14 18:06:00 2025 From: AGUILAJ9 at erau.edu (Aguilar Guerrero, Jaime) Date: Sat, 15 Feb 2025 01:06:00 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: =?utf-8?q?Invitation=3A_Final_Conference_for_DARPA?= =?utf-8?q?=E2=80=99s_AtmoSense_Phase_2?= Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, We would like to invite you to the final conference for phase 2 of DARPA?s AtmoSense program (https://www.darpa.mil/research/programs/atmosphere-as-a-sensor and https://www.darpa.mil/news/2020/atmosphere-global-sensor). The conference will be held in Daytona Beach, FL, April 16-17, 2025; further logistical details will be forthcoming via later email(s). The AtmoSense AIRWaveS project spans ten organizations with a focus on modeling and detection of modest ground-level impulsive disturbances through remote sensing (ionospheric HF, GPS TEC measurements, and pressure sensors). Signals from such sources have duration and amplitude that place extreme requirements on numerical models (both in terms of resolution and coupling of neutral to plasma gases) and push detectability limits of TEC and HF measurements. To address these challenges, the AIRWaveS team has worked with technical advances in adaptive mesh refinement, coupling of different numerical codes (physics and solvers) to create multi-physics simulation framework(s), and development of synthetic data capabilities to study atmosphere-ionosphere disturbances. Field experiments from phase 2 have demonstrated detectability of signals of interest in various radio diagnostics as well as suggested specific approaches to improve chances of detection and estimation of source characteristics (e.g. amplitude, timing, geolocation) ? while using the new modeling tools to help interpret signals of interest. The intent of this conference is to: (a) summarize key accomplishments from phase 2 of the AtmoSense program (i.e. new field tests and numerical applications), and (b) explore and foster potential connections of this program to the broader research community, e.g. Heliophysics and space weather, fluid modeling, applied mathematics and numerical methods, remote sensing, seismoacoustics, infrasound, and other fields. To this end, this meeting will feature talks from AtmoSense phase 2 performers alongside presentations from other attendees in related/adjacent fields. We hope this will encourage and prioritize new discussions among different groups and spark project ideas in and across these various disciplines. Please let us know if you have any questions or would like to contribute ? we will follow up soon with an official registration site to gauge interest in the meeting and identify potential speakers. We plan to have a hybrid/asynchronous option, but in-person contributions will be prioritized. Thanks for your consideration, ? Matthew Zettergren (PI) and Jaime Aguilar Guerrero (project manager) on behalf of the DARPA AtmoSense and AIRWaveS teams (zettergm at erau.edu and aguilaj9 at erau.edu) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From david.themens at unb.ca Sat Feb 15 03:46:48 2025 From: david.themens at unb.ca (David Russel Themens) Date: Sat, 15 Feb 2025 10:46:48 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: PhD Studentship at the University of New Brunswick Message-ID: Hi, We have a PhD project open at the University of New Brunswick, in close collaboration with McGill University, leveraging signals of opportunity and a radio telescope array in the Arctic to study small scale ionospheric structures. Full information here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1bzuEosyu-qZ6-pzQrmG542dMgK5bbV_2/view?usp=sharing PhD Project: Volumetric imaging of small-scale ionospheric structures in the polar cap using radio telescope observations The University of New Brunswick (UNB) is seeking applications from students interested in conducting a PhD in Physics Engineering in collaboration with McGill University and focused on using observations from the Array of Long Baseline Antennas for Taking Radio Observations from the Subantarctic (ALBATROS) radio telescope (now located in the Arctic) and sounding systems from UNB?s Canadian High Arctic Ionospheric Network (CHAIN) to examine the structure and dynamics of the polar cap ionosphere and its corresponding interactions with radio waves in the High Frequency (HF, 3-30MHz) band. The high latitude ionosphere is a highly dynamic plasma environment embedded in the Earth?s upper atmosphere and riddled with small scale structures produced through a wide variety of turbulence mechanisms. Radio waves in the HF band that propagate within this medium are slowed down and bent by the plasma, such that they will reflect off of the ionosphere at low frequencies. The ionospheric impact on these signals poses a challenge for radio telescope observations within this band, causing signals from distant radio sources or the Cosmic Dawn to be reflected back out to space, to be attenuated, or to be warped. To make use of the signals that make it through the ionosphere, one must have an accurate model of the ionospheric plasma environment to correct these impacts. Using sounders, which transmit signals across the entire HF band, we can generate profiles of the vertical structure of the ionosphere. By also leveraging signals from these sounders that are received at ALBATROS, we can furthermore reconstruct complete 3D representations of the plasma environment in which these signals propagate; thereby, we can produce high-resolution reconstructions of the ionosphere above ALBATROS to enable radio astronomy applications and study plasma dynamics at small scales. The selected student will develop skills and conduct research in the following areas: 1) The student will work with radio scientists within the group to develop interferometry tools to track and characterize signals transmitted from CHAIN sounders, bounced off of the ionosphere, and received at ALBATROS. 2) The student will use these signals to reconstruct the structure of the ionosphere above ALBATROS and compare their results to nearby Incoherent Scatter Radar Observations. 3) The student will finally develop ionospheric corrections to support the McGill team?s use of ALBATROS to study the radio emissions from the Cosmic Dawn. Interested students should either have experience in or be interested in developing skills in the following areas: 1) Interferometry and Signal Processing 2) Ionospheric Physics 3) Radio Propagation 4) Tomography or other data assimilation techniques This work is part of a New Frontiers in Research Fund (NFRF) project in close collaboration with McGill University and will involve some travel to McGill and, possibly, the Arctic. Supervisors: David R. Themens and Torsten Reuschel Apply: Send a copy of your transcripts and a one- or two-page expression of interest to david.themens at unb.ca and torsten.reuschel at unb.ca -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From lindsaygoodw at gmail.com Sat Feb 15 15:31:49 2025 From: lindsaygoodw at gmail.com (Lindsay Goodwin) Date: Sat, 15 Feb 2025 17:31:49 -0500 Subject: CEDAR email: URSI AP-RASC Session G08: New results and contemporary developments in incoherent scatter radar Message-ID: Hello All, This year URSI Asia-Pacific Radio Science Conference (AP-RASC, https://ap-rasc.com/) will be held from August 17 to 22 in Sydney (Australia), and Session G08 (*New results and contemporary developments in incoherent scatter radar*) is looking for your *presentations related to incoherent scatter radars* (also known as Thomson Scatter Radars). This includes presentations relating to new incoherent scatter radar methods, systems, and measurement techniques, as well as ionospheric studies that heavily utilize incoherent scatter radar data. The* call for abstracts is open until February 20th*. Abstracts can be submitted using the conference submission website: https://ap-rasc.com/papersubmission.php A full list of Commission G (Ionosphere and Radio Propagation) sessions can be found here: https://cloud.ilabt.imec.be/index.php/s/FQKn4MZb94Kc8dn Please reach out if you have any questions! Best, Session G08 Chairs (Lindsay Goodwin and Gareth Perry) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From geoff.crowley at arcfield.com Sun Feb 16 18:16:06 2025 From: geoff.crowley at arcfield.com (Crowley, Geoffrey) Date: Mon, 17 Feb 2025 01:16:06 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Abstract deadline Feb 20: URSI-Sydney, Australia 2025: Call for papers Session G11 on TIDs In-Reply-To: <3bb64731-9f82-41c1-885e-b91e2d8a9811@gmail.com> References: <3bb64731-9f82-41c1-885e-b91e2d8a9811@gmail.com> Message-ID: Dear Colleagues Thursday Feb 20th is the Abstract deadline for the Sydney, Australia URSI meeting. We would like to draw your attention to the session G11: Nowcasting and forecasting Travelling Ionospheric Disturbances for ionospheric weather and mitigation services. The URSI AP-RASC 2025 conference (https://ap-rasc.com/home.php) will be held in Sydney, Australia, from 17 to 22 August 2025. The session description follows: Travelling Ionospheric Disturbances (TIDs) are significant perturbations in the ionosphere that can adversely affect radio communications, navigation systems, and surveillance operations due to rapid changes in electron density. Accurate nowcasting and forecasting of TIDs are essential for developing ionospheric weather services and implementing effective mitigation strategies. This session focuses on the latest advancements in detecting, modelling, and predicting TIDs to support operational services. We invite contributions that address innovative observational techniques, including ground-based and satellite-based measurements, data assimilation methods, and the development of physics-based or empirical models for TID prediction. Studies exploring the underlying physical mechanisms, sources of TIDs, and their propagation characteristics are also encouraged. The session aims to facilitate discussions that enhance the reliability of TID forecasts and improve mitigation services for users impacted by ionospheric disturbances. Please, consider session G11 of the URSI AP-RASC 2025 conference to submit your contributions. The abstract submissions can be done through the conference submission website: https://ap-rasc.com/papersubmission.php. The deadline for abstract submission is 20 February 2025. We look forward to receiving your contributions and to your presence at the G11 session of the URSI AP-RASC 2025 conference. Best regards on behalf of Session G11 Conveners, Geoff Crowley, Anna Belehaki, David Altadill, Sivakandan Mani. Sincerely, Geoff Geoff Crowley, Ph.D. Chief Scientist M: 210.834.3475 geoff.crowley at arcfield.com ??[Icon Description automatically generated] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image.png Type: image/png Size: 6439 bytes Desc: image.png URL: From vv.emyanov at gmail.com Mon Feb 17 02:16:20 2025 From: vv.emyanov at gmail.com (Vladislav Demyanov) Date: Mon, 17 Feb 2025 17:16:20 +0800 Subject: CEDAR email: AOGS2025, Session IG19: novel ideas and area of research. Please support and participate! Message-ID: *Dear colleagues!* *We cordially invite everybody are interesting novel ideas in GNSS for Geosciences to participate in AOGS 2025 Interdisciplinary Session IG19 ?GNSS data of high temporal resolution, new GNSS signals, modern GNSS receivers: New research opportunities to study Earth?s ionosphere, atmosphere and geo-dynamics?* *Deadline for Abstracts Submission comes soon on February 18, 2025. **Abstract submission link: https://www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2025/public.asp?page=sessions_and_conveners.asp * *We expected that participants provide novel results in the areas:* 1) Coordinated Arctic, Mid-latitude and Low latitude Ionospheric Monitoring involving novel advances in GNSS-based techniques: regional and international networks of modernized GNSS sites; innovations in Remote sensing, data handling and analysis; coordinated research campaigns and collaborations 2) New GNSS signals, GNSS data with high temporal resolution, and new opportunities in the Earth's atmosphere and ionosphere sounding; 3) Tropospheric and ionospheric indices and parameters based on measurements of new GNSS signals with high temporal resolution; 4) Problems and advances in scintillation studies based on new GNSS signals; 5) Impact of GNSS hardware and software on sensitivity and resolution of modern GNSS Remote sensing methods; 6) Modernization of GNSS upper atmospheric real?time disaster information and alert networks and systems, taking into account new progress in GNSS technologies; *Session Conveners:* *Vladislav Demyanov,* Department of Space Weather forecast, Institute of Solar and Terrestrial Physics, Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Irkutsk, Russia *Periyadan T. Jayachandran*, Physics Department, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, NB, Canada *Shuanggen Jin*, Vice-President & Professor at Henan Polytechnic University *IG19 Session Abstract.* The rapid advancement of GNSS technology, including new-generation satellites, signals, and receivers, presents a wealth of new research opportunities. These advancements, particularly the high-temporal-resolution GNSS signals, are now more accessible to research teams worldwide. However, the full potential of these technologies for studying the Atmosphere, Ionosphere, and other interdisciplinary fields has yet to be fully realized. For a Space physicist, a GNSS receiver is often a 'black box'. Can we rely on a specific receiver manufacturer and their expensive equipment to conduct crucial Atmospheric and Space physics studies? Do the GNSS signals recorded with high temporal resolution truly enhance our sensitivity and resolution for Ionosphere or Atmosphere explorations? Which ionosphere-free combination is most effective for reconstructing TEC with minimal noise and reliably detecting a weak earthquake or tsunami-related ionospheric response? These are the practical questions that emerge with the evolution of GNSS technologies. This section is devoted to new theories methods, and GNSS techniques which allow looking far beyond the limitations in the Earth's atmosphere, ionosphere and interdisciplinary fields such as geosciences, the availability of new GNSS signals, receivers and GNSS receivers with the capability of high sampling rate. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sbender at iaa.es Mon Feb 17 02:41:33 2025 From: sbender at iaa.es (Stefan Bender) Date: Mon, 17 Feb 2025 10:41:33 +0100 Subject: CEDAR email: AOGS 2025 session AS33: Remote and In-situ Sensing and Modelling of the Chemistry and Dynamics of the Middle and Upper Atmosphere Message-ID: <2df2672c-aa98-4158-b46c-88ceef05c7bd@iaa.es> Dear colleagues, One day left to submit your abstract to AOGS 2025, 18 Feb 2025, 23:39 Singapore time UTC+8). We urge you and your colleagues to present your research at our AOGS session AS33, "Remote and In-situ Sensing and Modelling of the Chemistry and Dynamics of the Middle and Upper Atmosphere" at the 22nd AOGS in-person meeting in Singapore on 27 July -- 01 August 2025. For details on the AOGS Meeting and abstract submission, please visit: https://www.asiaoceania.org/ and as well as for abstract submissions. Session Description: AS33 - Remote and In-situ Sensing and Modelling of the Chemistry and Dynamics of the Middle and Upper Atmosphere The Earth's middle and upper atmosphere and ionosphere maintain a balance between solar radiative and particle forcing from above, and the action of atmospheric waves rising up from below. Quantifying how these forces drive the general circulation and waves in the atmosphere and control both the chemical balance and its temporal and spatial variability is crucial to understanding how composition, momentum, and energy couple together and structure the atmosphere and ionosphere. As a result, remote sensing and in-situ investigations, as well as the laboratory and modelling studies that complement and explain these observations, are the primary tools used to understand the aeronomy of this region. This session will look at recent results from those ground-based, in-situ and satellite-borne observations, modelling studies and relevant laboratory research. It will bring together studies of new sensing techniques and sensors, models and mission concepts, currently being planned or under development, to foster new collaborations, furthering the impact of their integrated results on our understanding of the stratosphere, mesosphere and ionosphere/thermosphere. The meeting will be held in-person from July 27 to August 01 2025. Abstract submissions are open and due February 18 2025. For details on the AOGS Meeting and abstract submission, please visit https://www.asiaoceania.org/ and We hope that you can accept our call to contribute a paper to our session and look forward to meeting you in Singapore at the 22nd AOGS2025. With best regards from your session convenors, Stefan Bender, Iain Reid, Jeng-Hwa Yee, and Jia Jia -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: smime.p7s Type: application/pkcs7-signature Size: 4782 bytes Desc: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature URL: From resendiz at lanl.gov Tue Feb 18 08:32:22 2025 From: resendiz at lanl.gov (Resendiz Lira, Pedro Alberto) Date: Tue, 18 Feb 2025 15:32:22 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Cold Plasma Seminar Series Message-ID: Hi, I would like to advertise our coming cold plasma seminar on February 19th. Thanks in advance, -Pedro Resendiz. ===================================== Announcement ===================================== Dear colleagues, Please join us for our Cold-Plasma Seminar series taking place on February 19th, 2025. This seminar will be held virtually. The Webex link will be made available prior the seminar on our website at: https://www.lanl.gov/org/ddste/aldsc/theoretical/applied-mathematics-plasma-physics/cold-plasma-seminars.php You can join the distribution mailing list by contacting Gian Luca Delzanno (delzanno at lanl.gov). The speaker is Myeong Joon Kim from Boston University: Speaker: Myeong Joon Kim, Center for Space Physics at Boston University. Title: Statistical Analysis of the Relationship Between the Low-Energy Plasma and the Linear Instability of Whistler-mode Chorus Waves Date: February 19th, 2025 Time: 12 PM - 1 PM Eastern Time, 4-5 PM Universal Time Coordinated, 6-7 PM Central European Time. Thanks, Pedro Resendiz Los Alamos National Laboratory -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From lqian at ucar.edu Tue Feb 18 09:59:55 2025 From: lqian at ucar.edu (Liying Qian) Date: Tue, 18 Feb 2025 09:59:55 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: Reminder: Book Your Hotel for the 2025 Joint CEDAR-GEM Workshop Message-ID: Dear CEDAR Community, This is a friendly reminder to book your hotel accommodations for the *2025 Joint CEDAR-GEM Workshop .* We have secured discounted rates at the following workshop hotels: - *Hilton Des Moines Downtown* Book your lodging *Discounted rate available until May 30, 2025.* - *Embassy Suites Des Moines Downtown* Book your lodging *Discounted rate available until May 21, 2025.* - *Fairfield by Marriott* Book your lodging *Discounted rate available until May 25, 2025.* You can also find more details and book your stay at the *2025 Joint CEDAR-GEM Workshop Hotel Booking site *. We look forward to seeing you there! Best regards, Liying On behalf of the 2025 Joint CEDAR-GEM Workshop Organizers -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dscipion at gmail.com Tue Feb 18 16:54:09 2025 From: dscipion at gmail.com (Danny Scipion) Date: Tue, 18 Feb 2025 18:54:09 -0500 Subject: CEDAR email: Extension of the deadline! JIREP Undergraduate/Graduate student summer applications 2025 Message-ID: <4FDD7389-37FE-41D5-9B25-E570597856A7@gmail.com> Dear CEDAR community: We are pleased to announce that we are extending the deadline for our international internship program JIREP, organized by Geophysical Institute of Peru (IGP) at the Jicamarca Radio Observatory in Lima, Peru. Please consider the following the new dates to apply for the program: Application deadline: March 2nd, 2025 Decision: March 17th, 2025 Start date: Anytime between May and June, 2025 Duration: 10 weeks More information about our program is available on our website: https://www.igp.gob.pe/observatorios/radio-observatorio-jicamarca/?page_id=9834 If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us at irep_igp at igp.gob.pe We hope to see you at the Jicamarca Radio Observatory this 2025! ? -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: JIREP - Redes.png Type: image/png Size: 2381981 bytes Desc: not available URL: From sbender at iaa.es Wed Feb 19 05:28:37 2025 From: sbender at iaa.es (Stefan Bender) Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2025 13:28:37 +0100 Subject: CEDAR email: **Deadline extended** AOGS 2025 session AS33: Remote and In-situ Sensing and Modelling of the Chemistry and Dynamics of the Middle and Upper Atmosphere Message-ID: <24327a43-900d-4b8f-86bb-324922afb409@iaa.es> Dear colleagues, **Deadline Extended to 28 February 2025!** A few more days left to submit your abstract to AOGS 2025, **new deadline** 28 Feb 2025, 23:39 Singapore time UTC+8). We urge you and your colleagues to present your research at our AOGS session AS33, "Remote and In-situ Sensing and Modelling of the Chemistry and Dynamics of the Middle and Upper Atmosphere" at the 22nd AOGS in-person meeting in Singapore on 27 July -- 01 August 2025. For details on the AOGS Meeting and abstract submission, please visit: https://www.asiaoceania.org/ and as well as for abstract submissions. Session Description: AS33 - Remote and In-situ Sensing and Modelling of the Chemistry and Dynamics of the Middle and Upper Atmosphere The Earth's middle and upper atmosphere and ionosphere maintain a balance between solar radiative and particle forcing from above, and the action of atmospheric waves rising up from below. Quantifying how these forces drive the general circulation and waves in the atmosphere and control both the chemical balance and its temporal and spatial variability is crucial to understanding how composition, momentum, and energy couple together and structure the atmosphere and ionosphere. As a result, remote sensing and in-situ investigations, as well as the laboratory and modelling studies that complement and explain these observations, are the primary tools used to understand the aeronomy of this region. This session will look at recent results from those ground-based, in-situ and satellite-borne observations, modelling studies and relevant laboratory research. It will bring together studies of new sensing techniques and sensors, models and mission concepts, currently being planned or under development, to foster new collaborations, furthering the impact of their integrated results on our understanding of the stratosphere, mesosphere and ionosphere/thermosphere. The meeting will be held in-person from July 27 to August 01 2025. Abstract submissions are open and due February 18 2025. For details on the AOGS Meeting and abstract submission, please visit https://www.asiaoceania.org/ and We hope that you can accept our call to contribute a paper to our session and look forward to meeting you in Singapore at the 22nd AOGS2025. With best regards from your session convenors, Stefan Bender, Iain Reid, Jeng-Hwa Yee, and Jia Jia -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: smime.p7s Type: application/pkcs7-signature Size: 4782 bytes Desc: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature URL: From david-hartley at uiowa.edu Wed Feb 19 08:06:04 2025 From: david-hartley at uiowa.edu (Hartley, David P) Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2025 15:06:04 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: =?utf-8?q?Session_H02=3A_=E2=80=9CPlasma_waves=2C_w?= =?utf-8?q?ave-particle_interactions=2C_and_their_multifold_effects_on_the?= =?utf-8?q?_radiation_belts=E2=80=9D__at_AP-RASC_2025?= Message-ID: <7A9CC98F-E12A-4B13-A125-22ED46438B7B@uiowa.edu> Dear colleagues, The AP-RASC 2025 (https://www.ap-rasc.com), will take place in Sydney, Australia, August 17-22, 2025. For information on convened sessions for Commission H: Waves in Plasmas (including conveners and session descriptions), please visit: https://cloud.ilabt.imec.be/index.php/s/kRFTmKnXgDFLgA5. Please consider submitting an abstract to the URSI Commission H Session H02: ?Plasma waves, wave-particle interactions, and their multifold effects on the radiation belts?. The deadline for abstract submission is 20 February 2025, through this website: https://www.eventure-online.com/eventure/login.form?A3b8e6c39-9667-4c2b-8469-0bc57640ad13. Session H02: ?Plasma waves, wave-particle interactions, and their multifold effects on the radiation belts? Session H02 Description: "In the collisionless magnetospheric environment, plasma waves are crucial for the rapid storm-time enhancements in the radiation belts, as well as abrupt dropouts and gradual rebuilding of the belts, in combination with radial transport. However, major uncertainties remain on the spatial distribution, propagation, and spectral properties of key plasma waves in the inner magnetosphere and their feedback on energetic particle dynamics. Improved knowledge on the inclusion of nonlinear wave-particle interactions and the role of cold and hot plasma in the wave growth and propagation are needed. This session invites studies that advance our current understanding of wave-particle interactions and their role in radiation belt dynamics from observational, theoretical, and numerical points of view. We especially welcome investigations related to the development of new methods and mission concepts, as well as those that can gain insights on the global dynamics from multi-spacecraft and ground-based network observations." Session H02 Conveners: David Hartley Ondrej Santolik Vania Jordanova Yoshizumi Miyoshi -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From licr at norceresearch.no Thu Feb 20 07:00:48 2025 From: licr at norceresearch.no (Liliana Macotela) Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2025 14:00:48 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: URSI AP-RASC 2025 - submission deadline extended - G13 - THE HIGH-LATITUDE ATMOSPHERE Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, The paper submission deadline for URSI AP-RASC 2025 has been extended to March 6th. We invite you to submit an abstract for SESSION G13 - THE HIGH-LATITUDE ATMOSPHERE Description: The use of a multi-disciplinary and multi-instruments approach, with the aid of modelling efforts, is imperative to advance the current knowledge of the high-latitude atmosphere, including the ionosphere, and geospace. Some of the outstanding scientific questions within atmospheric and space physics, are: 1) How are different atmospheric layers coupled in the polar regions?, 2) How does the upper polar atmosphere, i.e., mesosphere, thermosphere, and ionosphere, respond to increased geomagnetic activity, including energy transfer from space?, 3) How does the whole polar atmosphere impact short- and long-term climate variations? Answering these questions will not only have implications on the understanding of processes in the polar atmosphere, but it will also greatly improve our understanding of the global atmospheric dynamics. This will contribute to AGATA (Antarctic Geospace and ATmosphere reseArch), endorsed as a new SCAR (Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research) Scientific Research Programme and recognized by the ICARP IV (Fourth International Conference on Arctic Research Planning), as an open platform of collaboration among scientists and stakeholders. We welcome contributions that help to answer the outstanding scientific questions related to the whole-atmosphere coupling, space weather influences and whole atmosphere response to climate change. We also welcome presentation and discussion of existing and planned instrumentation at high-latitudes and space-borne sensors". USEFUL LINKS * paper submission https://www.eventure-online.com/eventure/login.form?A3b8e6c39-9667-4c2b-8469-0bc57640ad13 * URSI makes available a generous and exciting program for students and young scientists with prizes and awards. * student paper competition https://ap-rasc.com/student-paper-competition.php * young scientists award https://ap-rasc.com/youngscientistaward.php Looking forward to seeing you all in Sydney Kind Regards Liliana on behalf of the G13 session conveners Liliana Macotela Seniorforsker Senoir Researcher +47 402 86 950 Forskningsparken Troms?, Sykehusvn 23, 9019 Troms? [cid:image001.png at 01DB83A7.B341C290] norceresearch.no -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 2384 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: From bea.gallardolacourt at nasa.gov Thu Feb 20 10:19:33 2025 From: bea.gallardolacourt at nasa.gov (Bea Gallardo-Lacourt (GSFC-675.0)[CATHOLIC UNIV OF AMERICA]) Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2025 17:19:33 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Call for Nominations: 2025 NSF CEDAR Prize & Distinguished Lecture Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, It?s that exciting time of the year again! The CEDAR Science Steering Committee is seeking community nominations for the 2025 NSF CEDAR Prize Lecture and Distinguished Lecture. The criteria and guidelines for submitting nominations, as well as names of previous presenters and presentations, can be found at the following links: * CEDAR Prize Lecture * CEDAR Distinguished Lecture Nominations should be emailed to Nathaniel Frissell and Bea Gallardo-Lacourt. The nominations will be considered by the full CEDAR Science Steering Committee and are due March 14, 2025. If you have any questions, please don?t hesitate to contact Nathaniel Frissell (nathaniel.frissell at scranton.edu) or Bea Gallardo-Lacourt (bea.gallardolacourt at nasa.gov). Thank you for helping us recognize the outstanding contributions of our colleagues! Cheers, Bea Gallardo-Lacourt and Nathaniel Frissell on behalf of the CSSC -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From anagelias at yahoo.com Thu Feb 20 10:24:45 2025 From: anagelias at yahoo.com (Ana Elias) Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2025 17:24:45 +0000 (UTC) Subject: CEDAR email: Request to share information about a postgraduate course in Spanish References: <1195458041.2548446.1740072285121.ref@mail.yahoo.com> Message-ID: <1195458041.2548446.1740072285121@mail.yahoo.com> I would like to announce to the CEDAR Community a postgraduate course, in Spanish, which will be online.The announcment is the following: ------- Postgraduate Course "Introduction to the Study of theIonosphere: Physics, Variability, Data Analysis Techniques, and TrendEstimations" in Spanish, 26 March-22 April 2025 El Doctorado en Ciencias Exactas e Ingenier?a de la Facultad de CienciasExactas y Tecnolog?a (FACET), de la Universidad Nacional de Tucum?n (UNT)invita a participar del Curso de Postgrado: "Introducci?n al Estudio de laIonosfera: F?sica, Variabilidad, T?cnicas de An?lisis de Datos y Estimacionesde Tendencias" Se desarrollar? entre los d?as 26de marzo y 22 de abril, 2025 Modalidad: Virtual Carga horaria: 60 horas Objetivos: En este curso se estudiar? la f?sica de la ionosfera, suscaracter?sticas generales y sus variaciones en distintas escalas de tiempo. Seestudiar?n y aplicar?n modelos te?ricos y semi-emp?ricos, siguiendo con m?todosestad?sticos de an?lisis de datos y de series de tiempo, detecci?n detendencias y an?lisis de forzantes. Estos temas se desarrollar?n en 13cap?tulos. El objetivo de este Curso de Postgrado es introducir al alumno entemas de f?sica de la atm?sfera superior, f?sica espacial, f?sica de plasmas ygeof?sica en general, junto con t?cnicas de an?lisis de datos, y generarinquietud por los ?ltimos avances y los temas de investigaci?n m?s activos enesta ?rea. Unidades del programa: 1. Atm?sfera neutra, 2. Campo magn?tico de la Tierra, 3. Actividad solary geomagn?tica, 4. F?sica de la ionosfera, estructura y variabilidad, 5.Din?mica del plasma ionosf?rico, 6. Propagaci?n en la ionosfera, 7.Caracter?sticas de la ionosfera a latitudes medias y bajas, 8. Caracter?sticasde la ionosfera a latitudes altas, 9. T?cnicas de medici?n de la ionosfera, 10.Cambio clim?tico, 11. Modelos Ionosf?ricos, 12. T?cnicas de an?lisis de datos,13. Variaciones a largo plazo en la ionosfera. (Programa completo en https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KDjKDvWinsn9iHuzAfcU89z9x7-a4jRn/edit?usp=drive_link&ouid=117036567394452213209&rtpof=true&sd=true) Destinatarios: Licenciados en F?sica, Licenciados en Matem?tica, Ingenieros, ocarreras afines. Ver m?s informaci?n e inscripci?n en: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Z75BJVy1Vt898UFZV-Kupi9WbGSx2LUb/view?usp=drive_link Contacto: Ana G. Elias (aelias at herrera.unt.edu.ar) & Blas F. de Haro Barbas(bdeharo at herrera.unt.edu.ar) Flyer: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nnNfFg6B0uk4pFvfl4tt0epRZoe_4Kal/view?usp=drive_link ? Warmest regards,Ana Ana G. Elias Universidad Nacional de Tucuman Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Tecnologia Departamento de Fisica 4000 Tucuman - Argentina -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jmakela at illinois.edu Thu Feb 20 10:43:37 2025 From: jmakela at illinois.edu (Makela, Jonathan) Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2025 17:43:37 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Postdoctoral Position at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Message-ID: Dear CEDAR Colleagues, The Remote Sensing and Space Sciences group in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign seeks applicants for a full-time postdoctoral researcher to join our NSF-funded MANGO (Midlatitude-Allsky-imaging Network for GeoSpace Observations) project. The successful candidate will develop algorithms for optical imaging and interferometry data analysis, conduct independent research on the upper atmosphere, and help maintain our distributed network of ground-based instruments. Applicants must have an earned Ph.D. (within the last 10 years) in Electrical Engineering, Physics, Atmospheric Sciences, or a related field; strong Python programming skills; experience with space weather data analysis; and a strong track record of publications. Visit https://go.ece.illinois.edu/AirglowPostDoc2025 to view the complete position announcement and application instructions. Full consideration will be given to complete applications received by 6:00pm (CST) on March 7, 2025. The U of I is an EEO Employer/Vet/Disabled that participates in the federal E-Verify program and participates in a background check program focused on prior criminal or sexual misconduct history. Please feel free to contact Jonathan Makela (jmakela at illinois.edu) with any questions. Regards, Jonathan JONATHAN J. MAKELA Associate Dean for Undergraduate Programs, The Grainger College of Engineering Abel Bliss Professor of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign 206 Engineering Hall 1308 W. Green St. Urbana, IL 61801 Phone: (217) 333-2280 Fax: (217) 244-4974 http://airglow.ece.illinois.edu/ [Image] Under the Illinois Freedom of Information Act any written communication to or from university employees regarding university business is a public record and may be subject to public disclosure. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: img-0a47d5e0-731a-4cda-9e7a-70fc0cbf0ec0 Type: application/octet-stream Size: 2606 bytes Desc: img-0a47d5e0-731a-4cda-9e7a-70fc0cbf0ec0 URL: From lqian at ucar.edu Fri Feb 21 09:46:38 2025 From: lqian at ucar.edu (Liying Qian) Date: Fri, 21 Feb 2025 09:46:38 -0700 Subject: CEDAR email: =?utf-8?q?2025_Joint_CEDAR-GEM_Workshop_=E2=80=93_U?= =?utf-8?q?pcoming_Deadlines?= Message-ID: Dear CEDAR community, We invite you to attend the *2025 Joint CEDAR-GEM Workshop* in *Des Moines, Iowa, from June 22 to 27, 2025*. All key details can be found on the 2025 Joint CEDAR-GEM workshop page . *Upcoming Deadlines:* - *March 7:* Workshop proposal submission deadline - *March 14:* CEDAR Prize and Distinguished Lecture nominations due - *March 21:* Student travel support application deadline (*application package must include *Workshop Registration , Poster Abstract Submission , S tudent Travel Support Form , and Advisor Financial Aid Recommendation Form ) *Other Important Deadlines:* - *May 1:* Early bird registration ends - *May 9:* Dependent care grant application deadline - *May 9:* Poster abstract submission deadline - *Hotel Booking Deadlines:* - *May 21, 25, 30* (varies by hotel) We look forward to seeing you in *Des Moines, Iowa, this summer*! Best regards, *Liying* *On behalf of the 2025 Joint CEDAR-GEM Workshop Organizers* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Ian.Cohen at jhuapl.edu Thu Feb 20 15:26:28 2025 From: Ian.Cohen at jhuapl.edu (Cohen, Ian J.) Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2025 22:26:28 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: Job Posting: Space Physics Instrument/Mission Leader, APL Message-ID: Hello all, The Solar and Space Physics Group at Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) seeks a Space Physics Instrument/Mission Leader to join our ~50 full- and part-time professional staff and postdoctoral researchers. Our staff conduct original scientific research, provide scientific leadership of instruments that measure solar and space physics phenomena, lead national space physics initiatives, bridge research to operations to research for space weather and national security applications, and support the design, implementation, and operation of a variety of spaceflight missions including Parker Solar Probe (PSP) and Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP). The group operates in close conjunction with APL?s Atmospheres and Ionospheres Group, bringing together scientific expertise across all realms of space physics. We take pride in our extensive involvement in instrument development and mission concept formulation. This position is a fantastic opportunity to get involved in mission and instrument development and leadership at a key space science and mission implementation institution. Responsibilities include leading instrument development efforts through internally- and externally-funded development grants; leading proposal efforts to NASA and other sponsors for competed space physics missions and instruments; developing scientific requirements and traceability for space physics mission concepts and instruments; and conducting high-impact original research. Interested parties should apply using APL?s careers webpage: https://careers.jhuapl.edu/science/jobs/56684?lang=en-us. Please contact Ian Cohen (Ian.Cohen at jhuapl.edu) for more information. ?????????? Ian J. Cohen, Ph.D. (he/him/his) Group Supervisor, Solar & Space Physics The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory 11100 Johns Hopkins Road, MS200-W569 Laurel, MD 20723 Office: 200-E574 Email: ian.cohen at jhuapl.edu Office Phone: 240-228-1637 Cell Phone: 240-584-7261 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mikeruo at vt.edu Fri Feb 21 13:29:42 2025 From: mikeruo at vt.edu (Ruohoniemi, Mike) Date: Fri, 21 Feb 2025 20:29:42 +0000 Subject: CEDAR email: =?windows-1252?q?SuperDARN_2025_Workshop_=96_Websit?= =?windows-1252?q?e_Now_Open?= Message-ID: The Virginia Tech SuperDARN group is pleased to host the 2025 Workshop at the Hotel Roanoke and Conference Center in Roanoke, Virginia, June 2 - 6. The website is now open for registration, booking rooms at the special discount rate and submitting abstracts. Technical and scientific sessions will be held each day with an excursion to Virginia Tech campus on Wednesday. We mark two special features of this Workshop: (i) students and early career researchers can apply to have their registration fee waived, and, (ii) a 3-day registration is available that could be particularly suitable for non-SuperDARNers who are more interested in attending the science-focused sessions on Tuesday through Thursday (all workshop activities on those days are included). For information and links see the Workshop website: http://vt.superdarn.org/workshop Questions may be directed to the organizing committee at sd-2025-g at vt.edu Important deadlines: Early bird registration: April 1, 2025 Hotel reduced rate: April 18, 2025 Abstract submission: May 2, 2025 Regarding requests for registration fee waiver for early career attendees: The request needs to be made and decided upon before registering. The timeline for this processing to be completed is relatively short (March 15). This will leave time to still register at the early bird rate (April 1). From the Workshop website: To encourage participation by students and early-career researchers (less than 5 years from award of PhD), limited funds are available to waive the cost of registration (Early bird rates: $500 for full, $375 for mid-week). The costs of traveling to the meeting and accommodation remain the responsibility of the attendee. Please fill out the form at https:forms.office.com/r/NwW6yp5jAL. Review of applications will begin March 1 and decisions regarding support will be made by March 15. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: