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Announcements of Upcoming Meetings

Notice that this list is not meant to be all-inclusive, but concentrates on meetings of potential interest to X-ray, gamma-ray, cosmic-ray, and gravitational astrophysicists. The HEASARC also maintains a list of on-line proceedings of high-energy astrophysics meetings. Updates, corrections, and/or suggestions about meetings should be sent to drake@olegacy.gsfc.nasa.gov

Other Sources of Information on Upcoming Meetings

Liz Bryson's list of International Astronomy meetings
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) Space Calendar


High Energy Astrophysics meetings

2008 July 28 - August 1: Urbino 2008: High Energy Astrophysics Summer School

2008 August 4 - 15: SLAC Summer Institute: Cosmic Accelerators

2008 September 8 - 11: 7th INTEGRAL Workshop: An INTEGRAL View of Compact Objects

2008 September 17 - 19: Exploring the Hot Universe with XEUS

2008 October 20 - 23: The 6th Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium

2008 October 20 - 22: 6th Chandra/CIAO Workshop

2008 December 2 - 5 (Revised Dates): Second International SIMBOL-X Symposium

2008 December 7 - 14: 24th Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics

2009 September 7 - 11: X-ray Astronomy 2009: Present Status, Multiwavelength Approach and Future Perspectives


Other Selected Astronomy, Physics and Space Science meetings

2008 October 13 - 17: IAU Symposium 258: The Ages of Stars

2008 November 10 - 12: Hot and Cool: Bridging Gaps in Massive Star Evolution

2009 January 7 - 10: American Astronomical Society Meeting 213

2009 June 7 - 11: American Astronomical Society Meeting 214


Selected Astronomy-related Technology (e.g., Detectors) meetings


Selected Astronomy-related WWW, Computational, Data Analysis, Software or Statistics meetings


Selected Space Science-related Education and Public Outreach meetings


High Energy Astrophysics meetings

Urbino 2008: High Energy Astrophysics Summer School

Dates: 2008 July 28 - August 1
Final Program: 2008 March 31
Deadline for Applications: 2008 May 9
Notification for Acceptance: 2008 May 31
Place: Urbino, Italy

The High Energy Astrophysics Summer School, hosted at the University of Urbino, is aimed at enhancing interest in the area of high-energy astrophysics and at providing knowledge and expertise in data analysis techniques.

This school will review the field of high-energy astrophysics with a series of scientific and data analysis lectures. These include:

    * The history of the high energy astrophysics
    * Emission mechanisms
    * Instrumentation
    * Current high-energy hot topics

Much emphasis will be given to data analysis. Students will analyze data from current missions and will apply data analysis techniques to different astrophysical sources. The school is tailored for students at the end of their Masters degree or at the start of their PhD. The school attendance will be limited approximately to 30 students. The selection will be made on the basis of the CV and the description of the student present activities and interest.

SLAC Summer Institute: Cosmic Accelerators

Dates: 2008 August 4 - 15
Deadline for Early Registration: 2008 July 31
Place: Menlo Park, California, USA

This school was planned largely in anticipation of the GLAST mission, a highly successful collaboration involving astronomers and physicists from all around the world. (The proposal of its primary instrument, the Large Area Telescope or LAT, came from an international team led by Stanford, LAT integration and initial testing took place at SLAC, and LAT data are received at the Instrument Science Operation Center at SLAC for processing.) As you may have heard, GLAST was launched on June 11 and has been operating very well. It is planned to release the first-light information while the Institute is in session, and we anticipate the first important new science results over the next year, so this year's Institute is very well timed. With its large leap in capabilities, GLAST will make breakthrough observations of many classes of high-energy cosmic sources and has a very large discovery window for signals of new phenomena, including indirect detection of dark matter.

The organizers thus believe that this will be an unusually timely opportunity for students, postdocs and seasoned researchers who wish to expand their research area (no background in astrophysics is required) and learn about the exciting science of GLAST as well as recent advances in X-ray and TeV astronomy and cosmic-ray physics.

7th INTEGRAL Workshop: An INTEGRAL View of Compact Objects

Dates: 2008 September 8 - 11
Deadline for Pre-Registration and Abstract Submission: 2008 June 6
Deadline for Registration and Payment: 2008 July 18
Place: Copenhagen, Denmark

The main goal of the 7th INTEGRAL workshop is to present and discuss scientific results on compact objects. Contributed talks and posters covering the following scientific topics are invited:

* Galactic sources:
   -  Black hole binaries
   -  Neutron star and white dwarf binaries
   -  Isolated objects
   -  Source populations across the Galaxy

* Extragalactic sources:
   -  AGN
   -  GRB
   -  Source populations

* Other topics:
   -  Hot topics with INTEGRAL data
   -  Cosmic ray acceleration near compact sources

In addition to the contributed papers, highlight talks will review current hot topics in astrophysics and selected topics of prime relevance for INTEGRAL science:

* Nucleosynthesis observations with INTEGRAL
* The extragalactic background radiation
* Galactic diffuse emission
* The emerging TeV field, HESS, MAGIC, VERITAS, MILAGRO
* The GeV field, AGILE and GLAST first results
* Cosmic ray acceleration outside compact sources
* The evolving Zoo of neutron stars

Exploring the Hot Universe with XEUS

Dates: 2008 September 17 - 19
Deadline for Registration: 2008 July 30
Place: Garching, Munich, Germany

XEUS, the next generation X-ray observatory, has been selected as a candidate Large-class mission as part of ESA's Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 programme. Active study of the XEUS concept by ESA and JAXA is now underway in preparation for the Cosmic Vision downselection, expected at the end of 2009. The purpose of this workshop is to gather together members of the astronomical community with an interest in XEUS, to discuss the science we expect to be enabled by the m ission. As well as summarising the current status of the project, topics to be covered include:

- Evolution of black hole accretion and its relationship to galaxy formation

- Growth and evolution of large scale structure

- Matter under extreme physical conditions around black holes and neutron stars

- Dynamics and chemistry of cosmic plasmas

In addition, a major component of the workshop will be devoted to identifying new science goals and drivers.

The 6th Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium

Dates: 2008 October 20 - 23
Deadline for Abstract Submission: 2008 July 15
Place: Huntsville, Alabama, USA

This symposium will consist of presentations and posters on all aspects of GRBs, including: (1) observations of the prompt and afterglow emission in all wavelength regions, (2) progenitors of GRBs, (3) host galaxies, (4) cosmology, as related to GRB observations, (5) theory and simulations related to GRBs, and (6) instrumentation. Special emphasis will be given to early observations from the GLAST mission, scheduled for launch in June 2008.

This GRB Symposium is jointly sponsored by the GLAST and Swift communities. The GLAST Burst Monitor team, located in Huntsville, will host the meeting, thus continuing the tradition of GRB Symposia initiated during the GRO/BATSE era.

6th Chandra/CIAO Workshop

Dates: 2008 October 20 - 22
Place: Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

This is the sixth in a series of workshops which started in 2001 and is aimed at helping users to work with the Chandra Interactive Analysis of Observations (CIAO) software. CIAO is the Chandra X-Ray Center (CXC) software which was developed for the analysis of Chandra data. However, CIAO is non-mission specific (apart from a few instrument tools). More information on CIAO can be found at CXC. This workshop will be largely based on CIAO 4.0 which was released in December 2007 and any software patch available at the time. A summary of the features in the CIAO4.0 software can be found in the release notes.

Initial registration for this workshop is limited to 30 participants. In the event that the organizers receive a greater reponse than the workshop can accommodate, other registrants will be notified that they are on a waiting list.

Potential workshop talks include:

* Introduction to X-Ray Data Analysis
* Introduction to CIAO    
* Sherpa: CIAO's Modeling and Fitting Application    
* Source Detection   
* Statistics in the X-ray Regime    
* ChaRT: the Chandra Ray Tracer    
* Chandra Calibration    
* Analysis of Point-Like Sources    
* Grating Analysis   
* Analysis of Extended Sources    
* Timing Analysis    
* Python and S-Lang in CIAO    
* Pileup Modeling

Second International SIMBOL-X Symposium

Dates: 2008 December 2 - 5 (Revised Dates)
Place: Paris, France

Simbol-X is a high energy astrophysics mission dedicated to hard X-ray imaging and spectroscopy in the ~ 0.5 - 100 keV X-ray band with, for the first time, excellent angular resolution and sub-microCrab sensitivity. Simbol-X is jointly developed by the French and Italian space agencies, with a participation of Germany. The mission has just successfully completed a phase A study, and is entering in 2008 a phase B development in view of a launch in the middle of 2014.

The several orders of magnitude improvement in angular resolution and sensitivity provided by Simbol-X over all instruments which have operated so far in the hard X-ray range is obtained by using state of the art grazing incidence optics and imaging detectors in a very long focal length telescope. This is possible thanks to the use of the new formation flying technology. This breakthrough in instrumentation power will open a new window in astrophysics and cosmology, and will offer a very large discovery space. Simbol-X will, in particular, provide crucial advancements in the two domains which define the core science objectives of the mission: that of black hole physics and census, and that of particle acceleration mechanisms.

The first aim of this second workshop, after the first held in 2007 in Bologna, is to discuss the evolution of the science issues to be tackled by Simbol-X. Presentations of new results in relation with Simbol-X goals, from operating instruments and in particular from the recently launched missions Agile and GLAST, will be encouraged. The second aim is to present to the international community the advancement of the project from the technical point of view, on both aspects of instrumentation and on mission implementation.

The meeting organizers can be contacted at simbolx2008@apc.univ-paris7.fr.

24th Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics

Dates: 2008 December 7 - 14
Deadline for Abstract Submission & Early Registration: 2008 October 1
Place: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Following the tradition of past Texas Symposia the talks will emphasize recent developments in Cosmology, High Energy Astrophysics and the frontiers between these and Gravitation and Particle Physics. The symposium will include invited plenary talks, oral contributed talks and poster presentations on topics, including:

     * Cosmology
     * Compact Objects
     * Particle Astrophysics
     * Early Universe
     * Gamma Ray Astronomy
     * Active Galaxies
     * Cosmic Rays
     * Supernovae
     * Dark Energy
     * Tests of Gravity
     * Numerical Relativity
     * The Galactic Centre
     * Gravitational Waves

X-ray Astronomy 2009: Present Status, Multiwavelength Approach and Future Perspectives

Dates: 2009 September 7 - 11
Place: Bologna, Italy

Third in a decadal series of X-ray astronomy conferences in Bologna, this meeting will highlight the contribution of XMM-Newton and Chandra observatories, ten years after their launch. Emphasis will be given on cosmic source multiwavelength studies and associated synergies with major facilities at all wavelengths, and on the perspectives for future high energy astrophysics missions.

Other Selected Astronomy, Physics and Space Science meetings

IAU Symposium 258: The Ages of Stars

Dates: 2008 October 13 - 17
Deadline for Travel Grant Applications: 2008 June 23
Deadline for Early Registration: 2008 July 15
Place: Baltimore, Maryland, USA

How old is that star? That is one of the most difficult questions to answer in Galactic astrophysics. We have ways of determining the ages of ensembles of stars (groups and clusters), but critical astrophysical questions can only be addressed if we can estimate the ages of individual stars in the field. Stellar ages lie at the heart of astrophysics, and stellar evolution is all about time and how stars change with time. We want to know time-scales for physical processes such as angular momentum loss, nucleosynthetic processing, changes in magnetic fields, and the like, or we wish to compare objects or groups of objects at different stages in their lives. Stellar and galactic evolution cannot be understood without some knowledge of ages.

If we could pin ages on individual stars we could determine the star formation history of the Galaxy and its principal components, and we could understand the physics of low-mass stars much better. The well-studied spin-down of stars like the Sun and the concomitant decline of observed activity indices makes it possible to estimate rough ages for individual stars, but the scarcity and remoteness of older clusters makes calibrating and testing the activity-age relation problematic.

Ages of Resolved Populations: The discovery and study of multiple populations of stars in clusters and other resolved objects in recent years has been a major accomplishment of HST and has led to changing views on how clusters form and evolve. In some cases there is evidence for multiple ages, in others for differences in composition. A full and complete understanding of the nature and ages of groups of stars is vital to stellar astrophysics.

Now is an appropriate time to examine the problem of stellar ages in detail. It is time to bring together astronomers from the around the world to discuss the current state of the problem of estimating ages of individual stars and of populations, where the advances are now being made, and what the near future offers.

Hot and Cool: Bridging Gaps in Massive Star Evolution

Dates: 2008 November 10 - 12
Place: Pasadena, California, USA

This meeting aims to bridge the gap between researchers studying stars in the upper blue and red sections of the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (HRD). While morphologically separated, stars occupying these extremes of the HRD are intimately related via evolution, as well as both having atmospheric properties affected by extension and stellar wind outflow. At cosmological scales, like in distant starburst galaxies, the historical distinction between blue and red stellar populations becomes obsolete, and understanding the complex relation between the red and blue parts of the HRD is mandatory.

American Astronomical Society Meeting 213

Dates: 2009 January 7 - 10
Place: Long Beach, California, USA

American Astronomical Society Meeting 214

Dates: 2009 June 7 - 11
Place: Pasadena, California, USA

Selected Astronomy-related Technology (e.g., Detectors) meetings

None

Selected Astronomy-related WWW, Computational, Data Analysis, Software or Statistics meetings

None

Selected Space Science-related Education and Public Outreach meetings

None


Page Author: Stephen Drake


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Last modified: Tuesday, 22-Jul-2008 08:02:58 EDT