13th Asia Oceania Geosciences Society Meeting to Host Experts from 50 CountriesThe 13th annual Asia Oceania Geosciences Society Meeting is being held July 31 – August 5 at China National Convention Centre in Beijing. Active since 2003, AGOS aims to promote geosciences and its application for the benefit of humanity, specifically in Asia (~4.4 billion people / 60% of World population) and Oceania (~39 million people) with an overarching approach to global issues. This year, about 230 sessions are being held under 9 sections: Solid Earth Sciences, Solar & Terrestrial Sciences, Planetary Sciences, Ocean Sciences, Interdisciplinary Geosciences, Hydrological Sciences, Biogeosciences, Atmospheric Sciences and Special Sessions. Highlighted lecturers (pictured L-R) include “Initial Results from the Akatsuki Mission at Venus” by Takehiko Satoh of JAXA, “The Martian – Science Fiction and Science Fact” by James Green of NASA, “The Effect of Surface Ice and Topography on the Atmospheric Circulation and Distribution of Nitrogen Ice on Pluto” by Scot Rafkin of SwRI, and “Impact and Mitigation of Space Weather Effects on GNSS Receiver Performance” by Vadakke Sreeja of University of Nottingham. Guo Huadong of CAS will present on “Earth Observation Big Data – A New Engine for Earth Sciences.” He also has proposed putting a series of sensors on the Moon to utilize the stable platform for long-term observations and study of macro phenomena on Earth. Other AOGS presentations and posters will cover VLBI support of Chang’e Lunar missions, exoplanet astronomy, solar storms and wind, hydrodynamics, regional climates and urban development impacts. (Image Credit: AOGS, CAS, NASA, JAXA, SwRI, U. of Nottingham, K. Hansen, CK-12 Foundation) |
MONDAY
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for terrestrial events in local time unless noted.
= All times for international terrestrial events in local time unless noted.
= All times for space events, and…
= All times for international space / astro events in Hawaii Standard Time unless noted. Add 10 hours to obtain UT (‘Universal Time;’ Greenwich, England).
Weekly Planet Watch – Evening Planets: Mercury (WNW), Venus (WNW), Mars (SW), Jupiter (W), Saturn (S); Morning Planets: Uranus (S), Neptune (S).
30th Annual Small Satellite Conference Expanding Opportunities in Space
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Jul 21 – Aug 6 — NASA, Aquarius Reef Base, 19 meters below sea-level, Key Largo FL: NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations (NEEMO) 21; international aquanauts simulated space mission, Matthias Maurer (ESA), Marc Griofa (Teloregen/VEGA/AirDocs), Megan McArthur (NASA), Reid Wiseman (NASA), Dawn Kernagis (Institute for Human & Machine Cognition), Noel Du Toit (Naval Postgraduate School).
Jul 25 – Aug 5 — University of Hawai`i at Hilo, Hilo HI: 2nd annual Software Systems in Astronomy course; with Professor Albert Conrad, covers software design & implementation of telescope / instrument control systems, observation planning tools, software for analyzing / archiving astronomical data.
Jul 31 – Aug 5 — American Astronomical Society, Caltech, Avalon CA: Conference: Mapping the Pathways of Galaxy Transformation Across Time and Space.
Jul 31 – Aug 5 — Asia Oceania Geosciences Society, Beijing, China: 13th Annual Meeting of the Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS).
TUESDAY
Aug 2 — SETI Institute, Mountain View CA: Lecture: Satellite Formation-Flying for Future Space Science and Exploration; Simone D’Amico, founder of Stanford’s Space Rendezvous Lab (SLAB), 12:00.
Aug 2 — Moon: 4.3° S of Beehive Cluster, 05:00; New Moon, 10:45.
Aug 2 — Comet 9P Tempel 1: At perihelion (1.5412 AU from Sun), 03:45.
Aug 2 — Amor Asteroid 2016 NX22: Near-Earth flyby (0.033 AU).
WEDNESDAY
Aug 3-5 — Associated Universities Inc. (AUI), Kavli Foundation, Baltimore MD: U.S. Radio-Millimeter-Submillimeter Futures II Conference; at Renaissance Baltimore Harborplace Hotel.
Aug 3-5 — Tah Poe Academia Institute for Theoretical Physics and Cosmology, Phitsanulok, Thailand: IF-YITP GR+HEP+Cosmo International Symposium VI.
Aug 3 — Moon: 2.8° SSW of Venus, 19:00; 1.6° SSW of Regulus, 22:00.
Aug 3 — Amor Asteroid 2005 OH3: Near-Earth flyby (0.015 AU).
THURSDAY
Aug 4-6 — University of New Hampshire, MIT, University of Michigan, Durham NH: Frontiers and Careers in Nuclear and Particle Physics.
Aug 4 — Moon: 0.54° S of Mercury, 12:00.
FRIDAY
Aug 5 — Curiosity, Mars Surface: Curiosity (Mars Science Laboratory) rover enters 5th year of operations on Mars surface today; launched Nov 26, 2011 – landed Aug 5, 2012 (Pacific Daylight Time).
Aug 5 — Juno, Jupiter Orbit: NASA spacecraft enters 6th year in Space today, launched in 2011; entered orbit around Jupiter Jul 4, 2016.
Aug 5 — Moon: 0.22° SW of Jupiter, 17:00.
Aug 5 — Venus: 1.0° NNE of Regulus, 06:00.
Aug 5 — Amor Asteroid 2016 NR55: Near-Earth flyby (0.064 AU).
SATURDAY
Aug 6 — Rosetta, Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko Orbit: ESA spacecraft enters 3rd year of operations around Comet; launched 2007, entered orbit 2014.
Aug 6 — Space Station Museum, The W Foundation, Winans Investments, et al, Novato CA: 2016 Novato Space Festival; featuring Astronauts Charlie Duke, Al Worden, Dan Bursch, Yvonne Cagle, Greg “Box” Johnson; free event, 10:00-16:00.
Aug 6-11 — AIAA, Utah State University, Logan UT: Small Satellite Conference 2016.
Aug 6 — Amor Asteroid 2016 NK39: Near-Earth flyby (0.077 AU).
SUNDAY
Aug 7 — Cassini OTM-456, Saturn Orbit: Spacecraft conducts Orbital Trim Maneuver #456 today.
Aug 7 — Mauna Kea Astronomy Outreach Committee, Mauna Kea HI, 2,800-meter level: The Universe Tonight; presentation on current research & discoveries occurring on Mauna Kea 18:00, followed by stargazing program, at Mauna Kea Visitor Information Center.
Aug 7-11 — Christa Corrigan McAuliffe Center at Framingham State University, Framingham MA: 2016 Challenger Center Annual Conference; STEM Education Through the Lens of Space Exploration featured on Aug 11 with NASA Astronauts, researchers, space industry leaders.
Aug 7-12 — The Meteoritical Society, Berlin, Germany: 79th Annual Meeting of The Meteoritical Society.
Aug 7-13 — Rencontres du Vietnam, Quy Nhon, Vietnam: Conference: Blowing in the Wind.
Aug 7 – Sep 30 — Airbus, Perlan Project, Teachers in Space, El Calafate, Argentina: Teachers in Space Ground Crew Education Program; team members will prepare experiments for flight, verify their operation and retrieve data for posting to internet.