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UKSP  October 2018

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Subject:

UKSP Newsletter - October 1st 2018

From:

Richard Morton <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

[log in to unmask][log in to unmask]>

Date:

Mon, 1 Oct 2018 15:14:27 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (462 lines)

Dear Colleagues,

Some of you may remember that last year we set up a list for PhD students and Post-docs who where happy to give seminars at other institutes. If you would like your name added to the list or would like a copy of the list please drop Richard an email. 

To keep the list up to date, any PhD students on the list who were in their 3rd year last year will be removed. You can always let Richard know if you are still doing your PhD or have got a post-doc position.


Here are a few items which have come to our attention since the last Newsletter. 


You can find this news also at the UKSP website:
  http://www.uksolphys.org/news/last-15-days/

or the newsletter in full in our JISCMail archive:
  http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/uksp

Richard ([log in to unmask])
Mihalis ([log in to unmask])



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General News/UKSP Business:

	UK solar missions forum


Nuggets:

	HMI Science Nuggets in September 2018
	New UKSP Nugget #94

Meetings/Workshops/Summer Schools:

	Hinode-13/IPELS 2019 (Tokyo, Japan: 2–6 September 2019)
	Second Announcement – FReSWeD 2019, San Juan Argentina
	First announcement of Les Houches school in plasma physics
	Summer school/Workshop “Waves, Instabilities and Turbulences in Geophysical and Astrophysical Flows”


Jobs/Studentships:

	International Max Planck Research School for Solar System Science (University of Göttingen, Germany) – PhD Positions in Solar System Science
	Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) (Palo Alto, CA) – Postdoctoral Position
	University of Oslo, Rosseland Centre for Solar Physics – 1–2 Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Solar Physics
	Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC, Tenerife, Spain) – Post Doctoral Positions
	Institute for Solar Physics of Stockholm University – Postdoctoral Fellowship
	JAXA International Top Young Fellowship (ITYF) – ISAS/JAXA, Sagamihara, Japan
	Research Fellow in Geomagnetic Forecasting using Computational Optimisation at the School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds

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		General News/UKSP Business:

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UK solar missions forum
from Louise Harra [September 21, 2018]

The next UK solar missions forum is on the 10th January 2019 at the RAS.
We strongly encourage early career scientists and students to come along, and see what the future holds, and how they can influence it! Lots of amazing new facilities coming online, but we always need to look beyond that.

The agenda is here:

http://www.mssl.ucl.ac.uk/~lkh/UKsolarmissions/uk-solar-missions-forum-3.html




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				Nuggets:

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HMI Science Nuggets in September 2018
from Richard Morton [October 1, 2018]

We announce 5 new HMI Science Nuggets for September 2018.

#109 “How Many Active Regions Are Necessary to Predict the Solar Dipole Moment?”, contributed by Tim Whitbread (hmi.stanford.edu/hminuggets/?p=2639)

#110 “Onset of Photospheric Impacts and Helioseismic Waves in X9.3 Solar Flare of September 6, 2017”, contributed by Alexander Kosovichev (hmi.stanford.edu/hminuggets/?p=2649)

#111 “Synoptic Q-Maps — Insight into the Topology of the Coronal Magnetic Field”, contributed by Todd Hoeksema (hmi.stanford.edu/hminuggets/?p=2670)

#112 “A possible explanation of the double peaks in solar cycles”, contributed by Bidya Binay Karak (hmi.stanford.edu/hminuggets/?p=2685)

#113 “What Makes CME-producing Solar Eruptions Happen? Insight from Coronal Jets”, contributed by Alphonse Sterling (hmi.stanford.edu/hminuggets/?p=2694)

We welcome submissions on work related to HMI scientific goals. More information can be found at hmi.stanford.edu/hminuggets/ .



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New UKSP Nugget #94
from Iain Hannah [September 17, 2018]

94. Evidence of coronal jets in the solar wind?
by Tim Horbury, David Stansby (Imperial) and Lorenzo Matteini (LESIA/Paris).

Short, large amplitude velocity spikes observed at 60 solar radii.

http://www.uksolphys.org/?p=14829

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
UKSP Nuggets are published on a monthly basis highlighting solar physics research led from the UK.

http://www.uksolphys.org/uksp-nuggets

Iain Hannah and Lyndsay Fletcher

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

http://www.uksolphys.org/?p=14829



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		Meetings/Workshops/Summer Schools:

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Hinode-13/IPELS 2019 (Tokyo, Japan: 2–6 September 2019)
from Richard Morton [October 1, 2018]

The next Hinode meeting (Hinode-13) will be held as a joint meeting with the 15th symposium of IPELS (Interrelationship between Plasma Experiments in the Laboratory and in Space).

Place: Tokyo, Japan
Dates: 2–6 September 2019
Conference web site: hinode.nao.ac.jp/meeting/hinode-13

Details will be sent out later, but remember to mark the date in your calendar already now.

About the meeting:

The solar atmosphere is filled with various types of heating and dynamic phenomena. These include the dynamo mechanism that creates the magnetic field, magneto-convection and MHD waves that transport energy via magnetic fields, MHD instabilities that result in large-scale explosions like flares and CMEs, and magnetic reconnection that transiently dissipates magnetic energy. All of these are physical mechanisms that work ubiquitously in the universe, and they have all been extensively studied in laboratory experiments and theoretical investigations.

Recent space-borne observatories such as Hinode, SDO, and IRIS have been providing high spatial resolution observations of dynamics in the solar atmosphere. New advanced facilities will also start their observations in the coming years. The 4-m aperture DKIST will have first light in 2019. Parker Solar Probe has just been launched, and together with Solar Orbiter, to be launched in 2020, will investigate plasma in the solar atmosphere by making a close approach to the Sun.

At the dawn of this new era, it is important to review recent observations by Hinode, SDO, IRIS and all other observatories, recent progress in space and laboratory plasma physics, and to have stimulating discussions on the future direction of laboratory and space plasma research.

Second Announcement – FReSWeD 2019, San Juan Argentina
from Laura Balmaceda [October 1, 2018]


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SECOND ANNOUNCEMENT

FReSWeD 2019
Towards Future Research on Space Weather Drivers
July 2-7 2019, San Juan, Argentina

The goal of this meeting is to promote the exchange of information in the area of space weather from the point of view of the phenomena that drive it from its origin in the solar atmosphere, through its evolution in the interplanetary medium, to its arrival in geospace.
The Meeting will be accompanied by a School geared towards students and young researchers who seek to gain a broad overview of space weather domains, concepts, tools and resources.

These events are being organized on the occasion of the total solar eclipse of 2019, whose totality path will cross five provinces of Argentina extending for more than 1200 km.

Because of the large affluence of tourists during 30 June – 2 July (around 8000 people are expected), we urge those interested in attending to make their travel and lodging arrangements as soon as possible. Please check the “Travel and Lodging” section in our website (http://www.iafe.uba.ar/freswed2019/travel.html) where we have recently updated relevant information in this respect.

Students and young researchers planning to attend the school, please notice the information at: http://www.iafe.uba.ar/freswed2019/school.html

Important dates on registration and abstract submission have also been updated, please see www.iafe.uba.ar/freswed2019/dates.html.

Apologies for duplicate emails.

Hebe Cremades, Cristina Mandrini, and Carlos Francile
On behalf of FReSWeD SOC and LOC

www.iafe.uba.ar/freswed2019/index.html



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First announcement of Les Houches school in plasma physics
from Miho Janvier [September 28, 2018]

THE MULTIPLE APPROACHES TO PLASMA PHYSICS FROM LABORATORY TO ASTROPHYSICS

Dates and location: May 13-24 2019, Les Houches, France.

Overview and objectives:

The two-week school held in the French Alps focuses on plasma physics and its manifestations in laboratory experiments, space environment and in astrophysics. It targets an international audience primarily composed of PhD students and junior postdoctoral researchers. The objective is to introduce the participants to a wide range of fundamental aspects of plasma physics, as well as on the state-of-the-art in many of the sub-disciplines. It will provide blackboard-style lectures, hands-on activities, talks on latest research, presentation by students, as well as group work such as journal clubs and social activities. This school follows up on four previous sessions held every two years since 2011 in Les Houches (France) on similar topics (2011, 2013, 2015, 2017).

The conference center in Les Houches can accommodate up to 46 participants. Pre-registration will open on November 1st, 2018 on the school website and will close on February 15th, 2019. Applicants will be notified at the beginning of March, 2019.

For more information about the program and updates see: https://plasmas2019.sciencesconf.org/

Confirmed Lecturers:

Troy Carter (UCLA, USA)

Benoît Cerutti (CNRS & Université Grenoble Alpes, France)
Christopher Chen (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
Andrea Ciardi (Sorbonne Université, France)
Mickaël Grech (CNRS & Ecole Polytechnique, France)
Thomas Grismayer (IPFN Portugal)
Per Helander (IPP, Germany)
Emmanuel d’Humières (Université de Bordeaux, France)
Karine Issautier (CNRS & Observatoire de Paris, France)
Miho Janvier (Université Paris-Sud, France)
Kumiko Kotera (CNRS & Sorbonne Université, France)
Matthew Kunz (Princeton University, USA)
Henrik Latter (University of Cambridge, UK)
Sergei Lebedev (Imperial College London, UK)
Nuno Loureiro (MIT, USA)
Andrea Mignone (University of Torino, Italy)
Paolo Ricci (EPFL, Switzerland)
François Rincon (CNRS & Université Paul Sabatier, France)
Alexander Schekochihin (University of Oxford, UK)
Anatoly Spitkovsky (Princeton University, USA)
Hendrik Spruit (MPIA Garching, Germany)
Tommaso Vinci (CNRS & Ecole Polytechnique, France)
Philippe Zarka (CNRS & Observatoire de Paris, France)
Ellen Zweibel (Wisconsin-Madison, USA)

Scientific and local organising committee:

Benoît Cerutti (CNRS & Université Grenoble Alpes, France)
Andrea Ciardi (Sorbonne Université, France)
Emmanuel d’Humières (Université de Bordeaux, France)
Miho Janvier (Université Paris-Sud, France)
Nuno Loureiro (MIT, USA)

Contact: [log in to unmask]

https://plasmas2019.sciencesconf.org/


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Summer school/Workshop “Waves, Instabilities and Turbulences in Geophysical and Astrophysical Flows”
from Richard Morton [September 25, 2018]

Summer school/Workshop “Waves, Instabilities and Turbulences in Geophysical and Astrophysical Flows”
July 8 – July 19, 2019
IESC Cargese, Corsica, France
https://witgaf2019.sciencesconf.org/

Scientific scope: Understanding the dynamics of geophysical and astrophysical systems, such as oceans, atmospheres, planetary cores, stellar interiors, accretion disks, remains a tremendous interdisciplinary task. Beyond the challenge in fundamental fluid mechanics to understand these extraordinary flows involving rotation, buoyancy, magnetic fields, at typical scales well beyond our day-to-day experience, a global knowledge of the involved processes is fundamental to a better understanding of the dynamics of these systems.
Much research efforts have been devoted to understanding geophysical and astrophysical  flows, within and between the various communities of Mechanics, Applied Mathematics, Engineering, Physics, Planetary and Earth Sciences, Astrophysics… While open questions from the various application domains actually rely on the same fundamental concepts and phenomena, lots of progresses have been made within each enclosed domain, with only marginal cross-fertilisations. The objective of the workshop is to go beyond this state. Our goal is to bring together researchers interested in geophysical and astrophysical fluid dynamics, and to provide for students and confirmed researchers, the fundamental fluid mechanics background as well as the last research developments on waves, instabilities and turbulence in the contexts of oceans, atmospheres, planetary cores, stellar interiors and accretion disks.

Venue: The Center for Scientific Studies in Cargese, Corsica, France (IESC) (http://www.iesc.univ-corse.fr/) .

Program: One week of school including five 4h courses, five 1h invited lectures and a poster session (8-13 july)
One week of workshop including six 1h invited lectures and 60 contributed talks (14-19 july)

Important dates:
*   February 1, 2019:      deadline for the pre-registration and abstract submission
*   February 15, 2019:    notification of acceptance
*   March 15, 2019:        final registration and payment

Topics:
Fluid mechanics topics such as
–    Inertial waves and internal waves (attractors, internal shear layers, nonlinear interactions)
–    Instabilities (MRI, SRI, ZVI, …)
–    MHD waves and Dynamo (Geodynamos, Experiments)
–    Turbulences (wave turbulence, rotating/stratified/MHD turbulence)
applied to
–    Oceans
–    Atmospheres
–    Planetary cores
–    Stellar interiors
–    Accretion disks.

Invited speakers

For the courses (4h)

*   C. Staquet (Grenoble, France). Waves, instabilities. Oceans and atmospheres.
*   J. Noir (Zurich, Switzerland). Inertial waves. Planets.
*   T. Rogers (Newcastle, UK). Waves. Instabilities. Stars.
*   S. Fauve (Paris, France). Dynamo. Turbulence.
*   H. Latter (Cambridge, UK). Instabilities. Accretion Disks.

For the lectures (1h)

*   T. Akylas (Boston, USA). Waves, instabilities. Oceans
*   S. Legg (Princeton, USA). Waves. Mixing. Oceans
*   J. Alexander (Boulder, USA). Atmospheres.
*   P. Read (Oxford, UK). Instabilities. Atmospheres.
*   K. Zhang (Exeter, UK). Waves, instabilities. Planets.
*   K. Julien (Boulder, USA). Waves, instabilities. Planets.
*   D. Lecoanet (Princeton, USA). Waves, instabilities. Stars.
*   S. Tobias (Leeds, UK). Turbulence. MHD. Planets and Stars.
*   S. Galtier (Palaiseau, France). Wave turbulence.  Cosmology.
*   R. Kerswell (Cambridge, UK). Instabilities, Turbulence.  Oceans and Accretion disks.
*   P. Armitage (Boulder, USA). Accretion disks.

Scientific committee: Jon Aurnou (Los Angeles, USA), Phil Marcus (Berkeley, USA), Gordon Ogilvie (Cambridge, UK),  Andrew Soward (Newcastle, UK), Chantal Staquet (Grenoble, France), Bruce Sutherland (Edmonton, Canada)

Organising committee: Benjamin Favier, Michael Le Bars, Stéphane Le Dizès, Patrice Le Gal, Patrice Meunier (IRPHE, Marseille, France)
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			Jobs/Studentships:

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International Max Planck Research School for Solar System Science (University of Göttingen, Germany) – PhD Positions in Solar System Science
from Richard Morton [October 1, 2018]

The International Max Planck Research School for Solar System Science at the University of Göttingen in Germany (Solar System School) offers a research-oriented doctoral programme covering the physical aspects of Solar system science. It is jointly run by the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS) and the University of Göttingen. Research at the MPS covers three main research areas: “Sun and Heliosphere” (director S. Solanki), “Solar and Stellar Interiors” (director L. Gizon) and “Planets and Comets” (director U. Christensen). Solar System School students collaborate with leading scientists in these fields and graduates are awarded a doctoral degree from the renowned University of Göttingen or, if they choose, another university.

The Solar System School is open to students from all countries and offers an international three-year PhD programme in an exceptional research environment with state-of-the-art facilities on the Göttingen Campus. Successful applicants will be offered a three-year doctoral support contract as well as post-doc wrap-up funding.

The language of the structured graduate programme is English, with German language courses offered (optional). The programme includes an inspiring curriculum of scientific lectures and seminars as well as advanced training workshops and provides a relocation cost subsidy and travel funds to attend international conferences.

Applicants to the Solar System School should have a keen interest in Solar system science and a record of academic excellence. They must have, or must be about to obtain, an M.Sc. degree or equivalent in physics, earth sciences or a related field, including a written Masters thesis, and must document a good command of the English language.

Applicants can register immediately at the online application portal.
Applications should be submitted between October 1 and November 15.
The School will contact the referees named by the candidate upon submission of the application and will ask referees to submit their letters through the online portal no later than November 20.
To start your application, please see the following pages:

Solar System School www.solar-system-school.de
Call for Applications 2018 www.mps.mpg.de/phd/applynow
Frequently Asked Questions www.mps.mpg.de/phd/faq
List of Open PhD Projects www.mps.mpg.de/phd/open-projects
Online Application Portal www.application.mps.mpg.de/
Dr. Sonja Schuh <[log in to unmask]>
IMPRS Scientific Coordinator



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Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) (Palo Alto, CA) – Postdoctoral Position
from Richard Morton [October 1, 2018]

A postdoctoral position is available within the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) project.  The postdoctoral researcher will be employed by the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute (BAERI, baeri.org), be part of the IRIS team (iris.lmsal.com), and work in Palo Alto, CA at the Lockheed Martin Solar & Astrophysics Laboratory (LMSAL, which leads the IRIS mission and is also involved in Hinode, SDO and STEREO). This position is initially for 2 years, but can be extended to 3 years or more.

The IRIS small explorer was launched successfully in June 2013 and is focused on studying the physics of the interface region between the photosphere and corona. The IRIS science investigation combines a high-resolution ultraviolet spectrograph with advanced numerical modeling to study which types of non-thermal energy dominate in the chromosphere and beyond, and how magnetic flux rises through the solar atmosphere and powers flares and coronal mass ejections.

The work will involve a subset or a combination of: 1. analysis of IRIS observations using artificial intelligence techniques such as machine learning; 2. calculation of advanced numerical radiative MHD or multi-fluid simulations and comparison with IRIS (and other) observations.  For more information about the project, please contact Dr. Bart De Pontieu (LMSAL, [log in to unmask]) and Dr. Juan Martinez Sykora (BAERI, [log in to unmask]).

Candidates should have a PhD (or expect to complete a PhD in the next 3 months) in data science, solar physics, plasma physics or a closely related field. The applicant is expected to have experience in either machine learning or numerical modeling. Candidates with numerical modeling interest will have an opportunity to work with the Bifrost code and/or the newly developed multi-fluid code Ebysus.

The initial position is for a 2-year period and will start as soon as possible after October 17, 2018.  The postdoctoral researcher will be employed by the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute. The salary range is $78 to $88K, depending on experience.  The job benefits include medical, dental, vision, life, short-term and long-term disability insurance, a 403b defined contribution plan for which employer contributes 10% of gross salary, eligibility for participation in optional 403b tax-deferred annuity plan, 10 paid holidays, and a total of 3 weeks of vacation per year through accrual of 10 hours of vacation and 8 hours of sick-time per month. BAER Institute is an equal opportunity employer.

Closing date for applications is 17 October, 2018. Submit resumes, a 1-page research statement and two letters of reference to:  The Bay Area Environmental Research Institute at:  [log in to unmask]" target="_blank">http:[log in to unmask]
For more details about the job, see the job posting at baeri.org.  BAER Institute is an equal opportunity employer.

Inquiries about the job application should be made to Donna Turnley, Human Resources Director, BAERI Institute at [log in to unmask]


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University of Oslo, Rosseland Centre for Solar Physics – 1–2 Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Solar Physics
from Richard Morton [October 1, 2018]

The fellowships are for a period of 3 years. The postdoctoral fellowships are connected to the Rosseland Centre for Solar Physics (RoCS) funded by the Research Council of Norway and the University of Oslo from November 1st, 2017. The primary goal of RoCS 10-year effort lies in understanding the workings of the energetic Sun. To attack this goal a concerted effort of numerical modelling, both fluid (extended MHD) and particle oriented, will be combined with high quality observations taken at ground based and space based observatories to produce models of the active Sun. More information and application procedure:
www.jobbnorge.no/en/available-jobs/job/158405/postdoctoral-research-fellowship-in-solar-physics



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Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC, Tenerife, Spain) – Post Doctoral Positions
from Richard Morton [October 1, 2018]

The Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC, Tenerife, Spain) invites applications for one postdoctoral contract and one computer programmer contract funded by the European Research Council (ERC) Consolidator Grant project “Partial Ionisation: 2-fluid approach” (PI2FA), led by Dr. Elena Khomenko. The successful candidates will work on the development and analysis of multi-fluid simulations of partially ionized solar plasma (waves, instabilities, magneto-convection).

Previous experience in Solar Physics is considered as an advantage. Scientists with experience in treatment of astrophysical partially ionized plasmas (interstellar medium, solar chromosphere, Earth’s ionosphere) are encouraged to apply.

Duration: the computer programmer contract is of 3 years duration; the postdoctoral contract is of 3 years duration with possible extension for another 2 years (5 in total).

Applicants must be in possession of a PhD degree in Astrophysics, Physics or Informatics at the time of application deadline 31st of October (23:59h London time).

To apply please use the online application system, www.iac.es/jobs/research/

For more information contact Elena Khomenko: khomenko (at) iac.es


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Institute for Solar Physics of Stockholm University – Postdoctoral Fellowship
from Richard Morton [October 1, 2018]

Postdoctoral Fellow in determination of solar chromospheric magnetic fields with applications to space weather predictions

The Institute for Solar Physics at Stockholm University, Sweden invites applications for a postdoctoral fellow. The successful candidate will work on the “Determination of solar chromospheric magnetic fields with applications to space weather predictions”.

This work is part of a large project titled “Research to develop, verify and quality control the infrastructure for warnings of extreme and dangerous solar storms” which is funded by the Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency. The project is a collaboration between the Institute for Solar Physics in Stockholm, the Institute for Space Physics in Uppsala, and the Swedish Defence Research Agency.

Qualification requirements:
Candidates must posses a PhD in astrophysics or a closely related field at the start of employment. Experience in the inversion of spectropolarimetric data, non-LTE radiative transfer and significant programming experience are assets. The ability to work well in a collaborative project is important. Stockholm University strives to be a workplace free from discrimination, with equal opportunities for all.

Main responsibilities:
The candidate will work mainly with Dr. Sanja Danilovic, Dr. Jaime de la Cruz Rodriguez and Dr. Jorrit Leenaarts on the further development and application of an inversion code that can reliably invert spectropolarimetric data from solar chromospheric lines such as Ca II 8542 and He I 10830. The ultimate goal is to develop a user friendly inversion code that can be used to derive force-free boundary conditions for both global and local magnetic field extrapolations that can be used as input to space weather applications such as the forecasting of the evolution of coronal mass ejections.

Terms of employment:
This is a 2-year full-time position. Candidates can start directly, and preferably no later than Jan 1, 2019.

Contact:
Further information about the position can be obtained from Dr. Sanja Danilovic ([log in to unmask])

Application:
To apply for this position, please use the Stockholm University web-based application form in English before October 31st 2018.www.su.se/english/about/working-at-su/jobs?rmpage=job&rmjob=6870&rmlang=UK

The applicant must ask the reference persons to send their recommendation letters directly by email to [log in to unmask] (use only for reference letters).


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JAXA International Top Young Fellowship (ITYF) – ISAS/JAXA, Sagamihara, Japan
from Richard Morton [October 1, 2018]

JAXA is seeking talented, energetic and highly motivated young scientists to work as ITYF fellow at ISAS, Sagamihara, Japan. The application deadline is 17:00 PM (JST) / 8:00AM (UTC) on Tuesday, November 20, 2018. Please go to the follow site for details: www.isas.jaxa.jp/en/researchers/ityf/

Note that Carlos Quintero Noda is currently appointed as one of ITYF fellows in solar physics.


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Research Fellow in Geomagnetic Forecasting using Computational Optimisation at the School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds
from Richard Morton [September 25, 2018]

We are seeking a Research Fellow to produce forecasts for the Earth’s internally generated magnetic field over the next 10-100 years, and the quantification of future ground-based space weather hazard. You will work closely with Phil Livermore and Jon Mound, and be based in the deep-Earth research group within the School of Earth and Environment at the University of Leeds. This work is part of a UK-wide NERC-funded consortium of research institutes whose focus is on characterising space weather impacts on ground-based systems.

More details are available here:
https://jobs.leeds.ac.uk/Vacancy.aspx?ref=ENVEE1274

To explore the post further or for any queries you may have, please contact:

Phil Livermore Tel: +44 (0)113 343 0379, email: [log in to unmask]   or
Jon Mound Tel: +4

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