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02 Sep '10
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Table of Contents
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1. Conferences
1.1 The Ins and Outs of Black Holes
1.2 Mario Novello Symposium On Bouncing Models
2. Jobs
2.1 Tenure track position in Mathematical/Theoretical Physics at Waterloo
2.2 Postdoctoral positions at Perimeter Institute
2.3 Joliot-Curie Fellowship for Women at Radboud University Nijmegen
2.4 CIFAR Junior Fellowship Cosmology and Gravity Program
3. News
3.1 Living Reviews in Relativity: "The Pioneer Anomaly"
3.2 Special Session at ERE2010 Dedicated to the Memory of Brian Edgar
3.3 Publishing papers with no author's approval
=================================================================
1. Conferences
=================================================================
1.1 The Ins and Outs of Black Holes
-----------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/08/22/the-ins-and-outs-of-black-holes/
Starting Mon, Nov 15, 2010 to Wed, Nov 17, 2010
Location: Annapolis, MD, U.S.A.
Additional Information: http://www.mdjsi.org/
"The Ins and Outs of Black Holes"
Annapolis, Maryland, USA
November 15-17, 2010
The Joint Space Science Institute (JSI) -- consisting of astrophysicists and physicists from the University of Maryland and NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center -- is hosting a cross-cutting conference to examine the physics and astrophysics of energy flows in and around black holes. We plan to bring together 80-100 scientists from around the world to discuss observations, phenomenology, fundamental theory and how they all fit together. Sessions will be organized around broad questions:
* What are the observations that we need to explain?
* How is plasma physics important for understanding accretion?
* What interesting particle physics takes place near black holes?
* How does black hole spin modulate the nature of the emitted energy?
* What can observations of black holes tell us about the theory of gravity?
* What can we learn from emissions from merging black holes?
Confirmed invited Speakers:
Nahum Arav (Virginia Tech)
Steven Balbus (ENS-Paris)
Roger Blandford (KIRPAC/Stanford)
Tamara Bogdanovic (Maryland)
Andrew Fabian (Cambridge)
Ted Jacobson (Maryland)
Julian Krolik (Johns Hopkins)
Kristen Menou (Columbia)
Richard Mushotzky (Maryland)
Angela Olinto (Chicago)
Tsvi Piran (Hebrew U. of Jerusalem)
Guenter Sigl (Hamburg)
Nico Yunes (Princeton)
VENUE: The conference will be held at the Loews Annapolis Hotel, located less than half a mile from the Maryland State House in the historic capital city of Maryland, and within easy walking distance of the waterfront and restaurant district. Annapolis is easily accessible from Baltimore-Washington International Airport (BWI), Reagan National Airport and Dulles International Airport.
REGISTRATION: Registration will open in early September and will be on a first-come first-serve basis. Registration will be accessible via http://www.mdjsi.org . We encourage you to register early.
FURTHER INFORMATION: To sign up for further email announcements, or if you have any other queries about this meeting, please email Chris Reynolds (chris[at]astro.umd.edu) or Peter Shawhan (pshawhan[at]umd.edu) For further information, please go to http://www.mdjsi.org .
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:
Alessandra Buonanno
Jean Cottam
Bill Dorland
Jordan Goodman
Richard Mushotzky
Chris Reynolds (co-Chair)
Peter Shawhan (Chair)
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1.2 Mario Novello Symposium On Bouncing Models
----------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/08/19/symposium-mario-novello-on-bouncing…
Starting Fri, Nov 26, 2010 to Tue, Nov 30, 2010
Location: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Additional Information: http://www.cbpf.br/~smnbm/
The "Mario Novello Symposium on Bouncing Models" is to honor the decades of long work of M. Novello to promote cosmology in Brazil and develop numerous interactions with other countries, and for his emphasis, for many years, on bouncing models that culminated in 2008 with an exhaustive report on the subject. All aspects of this subject, from the high energy theory implementation to the observational consequences, will be covered. The Symposium on bouncing cosmological models will be held in the state of Rio de Janeiro, in the charming beach Resort of Portobello, Mangaratiba, 100 km away from Rio de Janeiro.
=================================================================
2. Jobs
=================================================================
2.1 Tenure track position in Mathematical/Theoretical Physics at Waterloo
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/08/29/tenure-track-position-in-mathematic…
Institution: Waterloo, ON, Canada
Deadline: Mon, Jan 10, 2011
Additional Information: http://www.math.uwaterloo.ca/~akempf/facultyposition.pdf
Tenure track position in Mathematical/Theoretical Physics
Applications are invited for a tenure-track faculty position in the Department of Applied Mathematics at the University of Waterloo, in the field of Mathematical/Theoretical Physics, to begin on or after July 1, 2011. The deadline for receiving applications, including three letters of reference, is January 10, 2011. Apply via email to
am-positions AT math.uwaterloo.ca
with “MPposition” in the subject line.
We are particularly interested in applicants with expertise in the areas of gravity, quantum gravity or cosmology.
The successful applicant may be considered for an Associate Membership at the independent Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics and/or the Institute for Quantum Computing at the University of Waterloo.
For full details, see the official ad here:
http://www.math.uwaterloo.ca/~akempf/facultyposition.pdf
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2.2 Postdoctoral positions at Perimeter Institute
-------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/08/12/postdoctoral-positions-at-the-perim…
Institution: Waterloo, ON, Canada
Deadline: Mon, Nov 15, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.perimeterinstitute.ca/Scientific/Applications/Postdoctoral_Resea…
Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics invites applications for postdoctoral positions from new and recent PhD’s working in fundamental theoretical physics. Our areas of strength include quantum gravity, string theory, quantum information, cosmology, quantum foundations, particle physics and condensed matter theory. We also encourage applications from scientists whose work overlaps these categories or falls in more than one of them. Our postdoctoral positions are normally for a period of three years. Outstanding candidates may also be considered for a senior postdoctoral position with a five-year term.
Further details on this opportunity, online application instructions and Perimeter Institute, can be found at: http://www.perimeterinstitute.ca/postdoctoralresearcher. Please note that to be considered for this position, you must apply online.
We welcome all candidates to apply by November 15th, 2010, but applications will be considered until all positions are filled.
PI may also nominate exceptional candidates for a Banting Fellowship, sponsored by the Government of Canada. Applicants who may be interested in this opportunity are requested to have their application materials and references submitted by October 15th, 2010.
Perimeter Institute offers a dynamic, multi-disciplinary environment with maximum research freedom and opportunity to collaborate within and across fields. Our postdoctoral positions are intended for highly original and intellectually independent young theorists and offer exceptional support including a generous research and travel fund, opportunities to invite their own collaborators as visitors, and the possibility of organizing workshops and conferences.
Perimeter Institute is located west of Toronto, in Waterloo, Canada and opened in September 2001 as an independent Institute supporting research in foundational areas of theoretical physics. The Institute offers an exceptional research environment and is currently staffed with 25 full-time and part-time faculty members, 20 Distinguished Research Chairs, 45 Postdoctoral Researchers, 25 Graduate Students, 31 exceptional masters-level students participating in Perimeter Scholars International, and hosts hundreds of visitors and conference participants throughout the academic year.
Perimeter Institute is an equal opportunity employer. All qualified candidates are encouraged to apply; however Canadian citizens and Permanent Residents will be given priority.
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2.3 Joliot-Curie Fellowship for Women at Radboud University Nijmegen
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/08/03/joliot-curie-fellowship-for-women-a…
Institution: Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Deadline: Wed, Sep 15, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.ru.nl/vacatures/details/details_vacature_0?recid=500121
The Faculty of Science at the Radboud University Nijmegen (Netherlands) is pleased to offer several tenure track fellowships to talented young women with outstanding potential in the field of chemistry, physics, and astronomy. The Joliot-Curie fellowships are available in three of the faculty’s prestigious research institutes. This highly interdisciplinary and collaborative environment offers exceptional research opportunities to independent, motivated and gifted female scientists.
Requirements
You are encouraged to launch your own independent research program at one of the faculty's research institutes. You are expected to publish in high-profile journals, attract your own external funding and contribute to the teaching programs.
Organization
The Faculty of Science has three interdisciplinary research institutes with fellowship opportunities in the field of chemistry, physics, and astronomy:
Institute for Molecules and Materials (IMM): conducts excellent interdisciplinary research in the field of chemistry and physics and offers a strong interplay between experimental and theoretical research groups. IMM and the Nijmegen Centre for Molecular Life Sciences aim to further strengthen their leading activities at the interface of chemistry and biology.IMM also has several unique research facilities, including the High-Field Magnet Laboratory, NanoLab, Free Electron Lasers, and a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance laboratory. Fellowships are available in the field of chemical biology and advanced spectroscopy of molecules and materials.
Institute for Mathematics, Astronomy, and Particle Physics (IMAPP): centers around the theme of the origin of the universe. The particle physics group – member of Nikhef – has a vigorous theory program and participates in experiments at CERN and Fermilab. The astronomy group is active in the area of compact binaries, radio astronomy and, jointly with the particle physics group, the area of gravitational waves and cosmic ray physics. Fellowships are available in the field of mathematical physics, particle physics or astroparticle physics.
Donders Centre for Neuroscience (DCN): studies the human and animal brain with a broad repertoire of experimental techniques and informatics tools. The research is conducted on different levels: from genetic, molecular, neuronal cells to behavior. Fellowships are available in the field of new molecular imaging techniques in neuronal systems.
Website: http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1935/joliot-curie-bi…
Conditions of employment
Employment: 0,8 - 1,0 fte
Maximum salary per month, based on a fulltime employment: € 5,920 gross/month
Starting salary depends on experience.
Salary scale: 14
Additional conditions of employment
You will be appointed as assistant professor (UD) for up to five years and will be offered a permanent position as assistant or associate professor (UHD) depending a successful evaluation. The evaluation will be based on a set of objective criteria.
The university also welcomes applications from women with a more senior profile and is happy to offer them a customized tenure track. A full professorship is possible depending on the fellow’s long-term performance.
Other Information
Your application should include a cover letter, a research and teaching statement, CV, three referents and a list of publications. Suggestons for suiteble candidates are also welcomed.
Additional Information
Dr. Iwan Holleman, Managing Director IMM
Telephone: +31 24 3653189
E-mail: i.holleman[at]science.ru.nl
Application
You can apply for the job (mention the vacancy number 62.51.10) before 15 September 2010 by sending your application – preferably by email – to:
RU Nijmegen, FNWI, P&O, Ms. Astrid Schröder
P.O Box 9010, 6500 GL Nijmegen
Telephone: +31 24 3652764
E-mail: pz[at]science.ru.nl
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2.4 CIFAR Junior Fellowship Cosmology and Gravity Program
----------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/08/02/cifar-junior-fellowship-cosmology-a…
Institution: Canada
Additional Information: http://www2.cifar.ca/media/files/C%26G%20Junior%20Fellow%20Ad%20%2D%20June%…
The Junior Fellow Academy of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research is an elite fellowship program designed to build research and leadership capacity in gifted young scholars at a critical early stage of career development. The Academy provides unique opportunities for personal and professional growth through close collaboration with and mentorship from some of the best researchers in Canada and around the world.
CIFAR’s Cosmology and Gravity Program is seeking outstanding postdoctoral researchers to fill two Junior Fellowship positions: the first beginning in January 2011 and the second in July 2011. The Junior Fellowship will be held in conjunction with a university postdoctoral appointment under the supervision of one or more program Fellows or Scholars. The position is tenable at any of the Canadian institutions where members of the Cosmology and Gravity Program are based.
=================================================================
3. News
=================================================================
3.1 Living Reviews in Relativity: "The Pioneer Anomaly"
-------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/08/31/living-reviews-in-relativity-the-pi…
Additional Information: http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2010-4
Living Reviews in Relativity has published a new review article on "The Pioneer Anomaly" by Slava G. Turyshev and Viktor T. Toth on September 1, 2010.
Please find the abstract and further details below.
------------------
PUB.NO. lrr-2010-4
Turyshev, Slava and Toth, Viktor T.
"The Pioneer Anomaly"
ACCEPTED: 2010-07-16
PUBLISHED: 2010-09-01
FULL ARTICLE AT:
http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2010-4
ABSTRACT:
Radio-metric Doppler tracking data received from the Pioneer 10 and 11 spacecraft from heliocentric distances of 20-70 AU has consistently indicated the presence of a small, anomalous, blue-shifted frequency drift uniformly changing with a rate of $\sim 6\times 10^{-9}$ Hz/s. Ultimately, the drift was interpreted as a constant sunward deceleration of each particular spacecraft at the level of $a_P = (8.74 \pm 1.33)\times 10^{-10}$ m/s$^2$. This apparent violation of the Newton's gravitational inverse square law has become known as the Pioneer anomaly; the nature of this anomaly remains unexplained. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge of the physical properties of the anomaly and the conditions that led to its detection and characterization. We review various mechanisms proposed to explain the anomaly and discuss the current state of efforts to determine its nature. A comprehensive new investigation of the anomalous behavior of the two Pioneers has begun recen
tly. The new efforts rely on the much-extended set of radio-metric Doppler data for both spacecraft in conjunction with the newly available complete record of their telemetry files and a large archive of original project documentation. As the new study is yet to report its findings, this review provides the necessary background for the new results to appear in the near future. In particular, we provide a significant amount of information on the design, operations and behavior of the two Pioneers during their entire missions, including descriptions of various data formats and techniques used for their navigation and radio-science data analysis. As most of this information was recovered relatively recently, it was not used in the previous studies of the Pioneer anomaly, but it is critical for the new investigation.
UPCOMING ARTICLES AT:
http://relativity.livingreviews.org/Articles/upcoming.html
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.2 Special Session at ERE2010 Dedicated to the Memory of Brian Edgar
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/08/23/special-session-at-ere2010-dedicate…
Additional Information: http://www.iaa.es/ere2010/website/modules/tinyd0/
On the afternoon of Thursday 9th September a special session of talks will be held at the Spanish Relativity Meeting (ERE2010) to honour the memory of S. Brian Edgar who died on 10th June 2010. The ERE2010 meeting will be held at the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA-CSIC) in Granada, Spain from 6th-10th September 2010.
Brian was a frequent attendee at the ERE meetings in recent years and shared fruitful collaborations with several groups in Iberia and indeed world-wide. Brian was a dedicated teacher and supervisor and a very able and productive researcher. However to many of us, Brian was more than just a colleague, but rather a dear friend.
Further details of the programme may be found on the ERE2010 web-site: http://www.iaa.es/ere2010/website/modules/tinyd0/index.php?id=22
On hyperspace@aei there is an obituary (http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/06/15/death-of-brian-edgar/) written mainly by Marcos Maia, who was a PhD student together with Brian at King's college in London, with input from others, and on MAI an obituary (http://www.phys.umu.se/bradley/GRSweden/maiobituary.pdf) written by his colleagues at the Department of Mathematics at Linköping University.
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3.3 Publishing papers with no author's approval
-----------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/08/17/publishing-papers-with-no-authors-a…
Dear hyperspace@aei Users!
I want inform you about interesting event I have met recently. Namely, I noticed that one of my arXiv's contributions to gr-qc titled "On quantum cosmology as field theory of bosonic string mass groundstate" has been published as "On quantum cosmology as field theory of bononic string mass groundstate" (i.e. with mispronounced word bosonic) in the journal International Journal of Physics by International Sciences Press within Serial Publications, see the webpage
http://www.serialspublications.com/contentnormal.asp?jid=501&jtype=1
I have submitted the appropriate info (with the link cited above) to arXiv, and SPIRES also accepted this information. After this I sent email to the Editor in Chief M. Agop affiliated to Department of Physics, Technical University “Gh. Asachi” Iasi 700050, Romania with my question about the publication procedures of the journal. My doubts were serious, because I did not sent my paper to the journal, as well as I did not give my approval for publication of the manuscript. Moreover, I suppose there was not applied peer-review, because the paper consists few minor mistakes. I have not obtained any reply from the Editor in Chief, however, I have noticed today that the paper has been withdrawn from the journal.
Really, I do not know what one should do in this type of situations. I do not wish to suggest manifestly the opinion about the journal and its Editors.
Best regards,
L. Glinka
1
0

02 Aug '10
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Table of Contents
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1. Conferences
1.1 Colombo-Venezuelan Meeting in Relativity, Fields and Gravitation
1.2 Multimessenger Emissions from Sources of Gravitational Waves
1.3 20th Midwest Relativity Meeting at Guelph
1.4 Mathematical Relativity Workshop at Edinburgh
2. Jobs
2.1 Tenure track University Assistant in Physics at Vienna
2.2 Postdoc positions in Gravitational-Wave Physics at Birmingham
2.3 Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Cosmology at Oslo
3. News
3.1 Highlights and Conclusions of the Chalonge CIAS Meudon Workshop Dark Matter in the Universe 2010
3.2 Presentations of 14th Paris Cosmology Colloquium Chalonge 2010
3.3 Travel Grants for Chandra Centennial Symposium
3.4 2010 IOP Gravitational Physics Group Thesis Prize
=================================================================
1. Conferences
=================================================================
1.1 Colombo-Venezuelan Meeting in Relativity, Fields and Gravitation
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/07/31/colombo-venezuelan-meeting-in-relat…
Starting Wed, Dec 01, 2010 to Fri, Dec 03, 2010
Location: San Gil, Santander Colombia
Additional Information: http://eventos.saber.ula.ve/rcvr2010
The 3rd Colombo-Venezuelan Meeting in Relativity, Fields and Gravitation is looking to be a latinamerican forum for researchers, advanced undergraduate and graduate students to share/discuss ideas in Gravitational and Field Physics.
This meeting is the continuation of the Colombian-Venezuelan effort for academic cooperation in Science and Technology. It is organized by the Universidad Industrial de Santander, Universidad del Valle (Colombia) and Universidad de Los Andes (Venezuela). This meeting is a joint effort between research groups in two brother countries to strengthen joint research and academic exchanges that are so important and necessary for the growth of our collective intellectual heritage. Nowadays it becomes more important facing the intolerance of governments and showing the reality of a population with no border, working together, exchanging ideas, projects, researchers and students to get mutual benefit.
This short event will have three workshops (3h) by the invited speakers, three invited lectures (1h), short presentations (20 minutes), a poster session and a plenary to discuss the future of the Colombo-Venezuelan Network Relativity and Gravitation
IMPORTANT DATES:
- 20th of September: Deadline for Abstract Submision.
- 30th of September: Deadline for Conference Registration + Payment of Registration Fee
Information regarding registration, abstract submission, accommodation and travel issues will be posted soon at the web page of the conference http://eventos.saber.ula.ve/rcvr2010
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1.2 Multimessenger Emissions from Sources of Gravitational Waves
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/07/23/multimessenger-emissions-from-sourc…
Starting Mon, Nov 29, 2010 to Fri, Dec 03, 2010
Location: Sao Sebastiao, Brazil
Additional Information: http://hostel.ufabc.edu.br/~cecilia.chirenti/mesgw/index.html
The workshop Multimessenger Emissions from Sources of Gravitational Waves will take place from November 29th to December 3rd 2010, and it will be held at the Maresias Beach Hotel in Sao Sebastiao, Brazil. The objective of this 5-day workshop is to discuss the state of the art of different aspects of gravitational wave emission, including EM counterparts, supernovae and neutrino emission, different astrophysical sources, numerical simulations, analytical methods and data analysis.
The workshop is partly motivated by the 2010-2011 German-Brazilian Year of Science, Technology and Innovation. Both countries have an active interest in the study of gravitational waves, both in the theoretical and observational aspects, and are currently developing gravitational-wave detectors: the Mario Schenberg detector in Brazil, and the GEO600 in Germany.
Local Organizing Committee:
Elcio Abdalla (USP), Odylio Aguiar (INPE), Cecilia Chirenti (UFABC), Rodrigo Macedo (USP/AEI), Alberto Saa (UNICAMP), Vilson Zanchin (UFABC).
Scientific Advisory Board:
Hans-Thomas Janka, Kostas Kokkotas, Badri Krishnan, Cole Miller, Luciano Rezzolla, Stephen Rosswog, B.S. Sathyaprakash, Gerhard Schaefer, Bernard Schutz, Anna Watts.
Confirmed invited speakers so far:
Lee Lindblom, Joan Centrella, Zoltan Haiman, Stefanie Komossa, Kostas Kokkotas, Luciano Rezzolla, B.S. Sathyaprakash, Vitor Cardoso, Elcio Abdalla.
Registration is now open until November 1st, and we encourage the participants to present contributions in the form of short talks or posters. Limited financial support is available.
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1.3 20th Midwest Relativity Meeting at Guelph
---------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/07/19/20th-midwest-relativity-meeting-at-…
Starting Fri, Nov 05, 2010 to Sat, Nov 06, 2010
Location: Guelph, ON, Canada
Additional Information: http://www.physics.uoguelph.ca/poisson/midwest/
This is an informal meeting that gathers researchers in general relativity and gravitation who work in or near the United States midwest. The format of the meeting will be as in past Midwest Relativity Meetings. Each participant may present a talk of approximately 15 minutes, depending on the total number of talks. Registration and abstract submission will open on 13 September 2010 and close on 15 October 2010. Abstracts submitted after this date may still be considered, but no guarantee can be given. Undergraduates, graduate students and post-doctoral follows are especially encouraged to make presentations.
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1.4 Mathematical Relativity Workshop at Edinburgh
-------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/07/12/mathematical-relativity-workshop-at…
Starting Wed, Sep 01, 2010 to Tue, Sep 07, 2010
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Additional Information: http://www.icms.org.uk/workshops/relativity
A workshop on Mathematical Relativity will take place on Sep 1, 2010 - Sep 7, 2010 at the James Clerk Maxwell Building (JCMB), King's Buildings, University of Edinburgh.
The focus of interest of the workshop is on recent developments in the understanding of the mathematical structure of general relativity, with an emphasis on global properties of solutions of Einstein equations.
Further information can be found on
http://www.icms.org.uk/workshops/relativity
There is no conference fee. Non-invited participants are welcome to attend, after letting one of the undersigned know about the intended participation, and making their own housing arrangements.
Pieter Blue, Piotr Chrusciel, Paul Tod
=================================================================
2. Jobs
=================================================================
2.1 Tenure track University Assistant in Physics at Vienna
----------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/07/08/tenure-track-university-assistant-i…
Institution: Vienna, Austria
Deadline: Fri, Sep 10, 2010
Additional Information: http://personalwesen.univie.ac.at/en/for-applicants/tenure-tracks/faculty-o…
The Rectorate of the University of Vienna invites applications for a tenure-track position of University Assistant (UniversitätsassistentIn) at the Faculty of Physics. The position is expected to be filled by March 1st, 2011, and the deadline for applications is September 10, 2010. Applications should be done online at
http://jobcenter.univie.ac.at
Position Reference No: 1368
Successful candidates will have an outstanding research record or show exceptional promise in any of the research areas of the Faculty of Physics, which include Gravitational Physics. Prerequisites for application:
a. PhD and a minimum of 2 years of post-doc experience
b. Scientific publications relevant to the field
c. Teaching experience or teaching concept
See also
http://personalwesen.univie.ac.at/en/for-applicants/tenure-tracks/faculty-o…
More information can be obtained from Gabriele Marzoner of the Dean's office: dekanat.physik[AT]univie.ac.at
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2.2 Postdoc positions in Gravitational-Wave Physics at Birmingham
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/07/07/postdoc-positions-in-gravitational-…
Institution: Birmingham, UK
Deadline: Fri, Aug 20, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.sr.bham.ac.uk/gravity/
The Gravitational-Wave Group at the University of Birmingham invites applications for two post-doctoral positions. One position is to support research in advanced interferometry for future gravitational wave detectors. The second position is in the area LIGO/GEO/Virgo data analysis, with emphasis on compact object binary systems.
The positions are available from 1st September 2010 until 31st March 2013, and can be extended by a further year subject to available funding. The starting salary is in the range of GBP 27,319 to 35,646 a year, with potential progression to £37,839 a year.
The Birmingham Gravitational-wave Group currently consists of faculty members Mike Cruise, Andreas Freise and Alberto Vecchio, two postdoctoral research assistants and five post-graduate students. The group has a broad range of research interests including gravitational-wave advanced interferometer research and gravitational-wave data analysis. The group is member of the GEO Collaboration, the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, and has roles in the LISA International Science Team, GEO-HF (the upgrade of GEO 600) and the Einstein gravitational-wave Telescope. Project grants support activities in Advanced LIGO, the Einstein gravitational-wave Telescope, and LISA-Pathfinder. The group has excellent laboratory and computer facilities.
For full consideration, candidates must submit an electronic application online at www.hr.bham.ac.uk/jobs (please quote ref 35882 for advanced interferometry and ref 43560 for data analysis). In addition, candidates are requested to submit a curriculum vita, list of publications, statement of research interests to:
Mrs Annette Jenkins
School of Physics and Astronomy
University of Birmingham
Edgbaston B15 2TT
United Kingdom
Email: a.jenkins[at]bham.ac.uk
and to arrange for three letters of reference to be sent to the same address. The deadline for application is 20th August 2010.
For further information and informal enquiries please contact: Dr. Alberto Vecchio (av[at]star.sr.bham.ac.uk) or Dr. Andreas Freise (adf[at]star.sr.bham.ac.uk).
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.3 Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Cosmology at Oslo
-----------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/07/02/postdoctoral-research-fellow-in-cos…
Institution: Oslo, Norway
Deadline: Fri, Oct 01, 2010
Additional Information: http://uio.easycruit.com/vacancy/430138/64278?iso=gb
A postdoctoral fellowship in cosmology is open at the Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics of the University of Oslo. The fellowship period is 3 years. The position is available from 1st January, 2011 but can also be started later in 2011. Closing date for applications: 1 October, 2010.
Salary: NOK 448.200 – 510.000 depending on qualifications and seniority
Applications should be done electronically: http://uio.easycruit.com/vacancy/430138/64278?iso=gb
Description:
The Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences has appointed the cosmology group of the Institute as an emerging top-tier research group. The participation in the European Space Agency’s flagship mission PLANCK and the ground based CMB polarization experiment QUIET, and a strong effort in fundamental cosmological theory, act as two foci for consolidating the group and developing it further to become one of Norway’s internationally most visible research groups in the physical sciences.
The position is connected to the project ”Cosmological Probes of Modified Gravity”, funded by the Research Council of Norway. The successful applicant is expected to carry out research on cosmological structure formation within theories of gravity beyond General Relativity. The research will focus on both the linear and nonlinear regime of structure formation in the framework of scalar-tensor theories, vector-tensor theories and brane world models. It may involve testing these alternatives to dark energy using N-body simulations and/or lensing and/or the CMB and matter power spectra among others.
=================================================================
3. News
=================================================================
3.1 Highlights and Conclusions of the Chalonge CIAS Meudon Workshop Dark Matter in the Universe 2010
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/07/29/highlights-and-conclusions-of-the-c…
Additional Information: http://www.chalonge.obspm.fr/Cias_Meudon2010.html
Ecole Internationale d'Astrophysique Daniel Chalonge
Workshop CIAS Meudon 2010 "Dark Matter in the Universe and Universal Properties of Galaxies: Theory and Observation"
HIGHLIGHTS AND CONCLUSIONS OF THE WORKSHOP
Greetings from Paris. We are pleased to inform you that the Highlights and Conclusions of the Chalonge CIAS Meudon Workshop Dark Matter in the Universe 2010 (41 pages, 10 figures, 3 photos) have appeared as http://arxiv.org/abs/1007.2411 and are also available (.pdf format) on the web site of this Workshop:
http://www.chalonge.obspm.fr/Cias_Meudon2010.html
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstract:
The Workshop approached DM in a fourfold way: astronomical observations of DM structures (galaxy properties, halos, rotation curves and density profiles), DM numerical simulations (with and without baryons), theoretical astrophysics and cosmology (kinetic theory, Boltzmann-Vlasov evolution), astroparticle physics. Peter Biermann, Alfonso Cavaliere, Hector J. de Vega, Gianfranco Gentile, Chandra Jog, Andrea Lapi, Paolo Salucci, Norma G. Sanchez, Pasquale Serpico, Rainer Stiele, Janine van Eymeren and Markus Weber present here their highlights of the Workshop.
The summary and conclusions by H. J. de Vega and N. G. Sanchez stress among other points the growing evidence that DM particles have a mass in the keV scale and that those keV scale particles naturally produce the small scale structures observed in galaxies. Wimps (DM particles heavier than 1 GeV) are strongly disfavoured combining theory with galaxy astronomical observations.
Peter Biermann presents his live minutes of the Workshop and concludes that a right-handed sterile neutrino of mass of a few keV is the most interesting DM candidate. Photos of the Workshop are included.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
We thank all again, both lecturers and participants, for having contributed so much to this Workshop and look forward to seeing you again in a next Meeting of this series.
With Compliments and kind regards
Norma G Sanchez, Hector J de Vega
http://chalonge.obspm.fr
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.2 Presentations of 14th Paris Cosmology Colloquium Chalonge 2010
------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/07/28/presentations-of-14th-paris-cosmolo…
Additional Information: http://www.chalonge.obspm.fr/colloque2010.html
Ecole Internationale d'Astrophysique Daniel Chalonge
The 14th Paris Cosmology Colloquium Chalonge 2010
"The Standard Model of the Universe: Theory and Observations"
We are pleased to inform you that the presentations by the lecturers during the 14th Paris Cosmology Colloquium Chalonge 2010 are available on-line (in pdf format) in "Programme and Lecturers" at the web site of this Colloquium:
http://www.chalonge.obspm.fr/colloque2010.html
http://www.chalonge.obspm.fr/Programme_Paris2010.html
The photographs of the Colloquium capturing moments of the stimulating and outstanding atmosphere created by all lecturers and participants during the Colloquium will be posted soon in this site.
We thank all again, both lecturers and participants, for having contributed so much to this Colloquium and look forward to seeing you again in a next Meeting of this series.
With Compliments and kind regards
Norma G Sanchez, Hector J de Vega
http://chalonge.obspm.fr
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.3 Travel Grants for Chandra Centennial Symposium
--------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/07/15/travel-grants-for-chandra-centennia…
Additional Information: http://chandra100.uchicago.edu
As previously announced, a Symposium marking the 100th anniversary of the birth of S. Chandrasekhar will be held on the University of Chicago campus, October 15-17, 2010. The Symposium has now received a small amount of funding from the NSF to pay the travel costs of junior participants (assistant professors, postdocs, and graduate students) who are U.S. scientists. Applications and instructions can be found by going to the Chandra Symposium website (chandra100.uchicago.edu) and clicking on the "Travel" tab. The application deadline is September 1, 2010.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.4 2010 IOP Gravitational Physics Group Thesis Prize
-----------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/07/06/2010-iop-gravitational-physics-grou…
Additional Information: http://gp.iop.org/
The 2010 Gravitational Physics Group Thesis Prize will be made for excellence in postgraduate research and communication skills in gravitational physics. All members of the IOP Gravitational Physics Group who passed their PhD viva voce exam between 30 September 2008 and 1 October 2009 are entitled to enter the competition, and the winner will receive £250. The closing date for nominations is 31 October 2010.
Please note that anyone (student or otherwise) can nominate a candidate (including the candidate themselves).
Furthermore, please note that the student's external PhD examiner must be willing to comment on the student's research, quality of the student's thesis and the student's ability to cogently communicate their work (evidenced by their viva performance and/or seminars). Students are advised to consult their external examiner before entering the competition.
For further information please click on the "Group prize" link on the web page http://gp.iop.org/, and click on "Details of the 2010 Gravitational Physics Group Thesis Prize" at the top of the page.
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Table of Contents
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1. Conferences
1.1 MG13: Thirteenth Marcel Grossmann Meeting
1.2 2nd Galileo-Xu Guangqi Meeting (final program)
1.3 XIVth Brazilian School of Cosmology and Gravitation (second announcement)
2. Jobs
2.1 Postdoc position in mathematical and/or numerical relativity at the University of Vienna
3. News
3.1 Einstein Toolkit Release
3.2 Presentations of Workshop CIAS Meudon 2010 "Dark Matter in the Universe and Universal Properties of Galaxies: Theory and Observations"
3.3 Death of Brian Edgar
=================================================================
1. Conferences
=================================================================
1.1 MG13: Thirteenth Marcel Grossmann Meeting
---------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/06/30/mg13-thirteenth-marcel-grossmann-me…
Starting Sun, Jul 01, 2012 to Sat, Jul 07, 2012
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
Additional Information: http://www.icra.it/MG/
The International Organizing Committee chaired by Remo Ruffini, the International Coordinating Committee chaired by Robert Jantzen, and the Local Organizing Committee chaired by Kjell Rosquist are pleased to announce the Thirteenth Marcel Grossmann Meeting on Recent Developments in Theoretical and Experimental General Relativity, Gravitation, and Relativistic Field Theory at the University of Stockholm in Stockholm, Sweden July 1 - 7, 2012.
As information becomes available, it will be posted at the
meeting website linked to this page:
http://www.icra.it/MG/
Regards,
Remo Ruffini, University of Rome
Robert Jantzen, Villanova University
Kjell Rosquist, University of Stockholm
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.2 2nd Galileo-Xu Guangqi Meeting (final program)
--------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/06/29/2nd-galileo-xu-guangqi-meeting-fina…
Starting Sun, Jul 11, 2010 to Fri, Jul 16, 2010
Location: Ventimiglia, Italy and Nice, France
Additional Information: http://www.icranet.org/2nd_galileo-xuguangqi
Registration at: http://ntsrvg9-2.icra.it/meetings/RegistrationXU2.htm
The conference fee will be 350 € and it will cover coffee breaks, conference banquet and proceedings.
The 2nd Galileo - Xu Guanqi meeting will be limited to 100 participants and will be held on July 11 - 17, 2010.
The final program, together with wonderful images of Villa Hanbury, Villa Ratti and the Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur, can be downloaded clicking on the following link: http://www.icranet.org/images/stories/Meetings/XU2/program.pdf
On the webpage you can find the list of titles and abstracts too.
See also the previous announcements on hyperspace@aei: http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/tag/galileo-xuguangqi2/
Li-Zhi Fang and Remo Ruffini,
Co-Chairs of the "2nd Galileo - Xu Guanqgi meeting"
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.3 XIVth Brazilian School of Cosmology and Gravitation (second announcement)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/06/04/xivth-brazilian-school-of-cosmology…
Starting Mon, Aug 30, 2010 to Sat, Sep 11, 2010
Location: Rio de Janero, Brazil
Additional Information: http://www.icranet.org.br
The XIV Brazilian School of Cosmology and Gravitation (BSCG) will take place in Mangaratiba, two hours from Rio de Janeiro, from August 30 to September 11, 2010. The BSCG was founded in 1978 through the initiative of the Cosmology and Gravitation Group, of the Brazilian Center for Research in Physics (CBPF). The School is dedicated to the discussion of current research in Cosmology, Gravitation, Astrophysics and related fields, as well as to bringing together students and researchers from different countries.
Details can be found at http://www.icranet.org.br
=================================================================
2. Jobs
=================================================================
2.1 Postdoc position in mathematical and/or numerical relativity at the University of Vienna
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/06/07/postdoc-position-in-mathematical-an…
Institution: Vienna, Austria
Deadline: Thu, Jul 15, 2010
Additional Information: http://jobcenter.univie.ac.at/
The Gravitational Physics group of the Department of Physics of University of Vienna (see http://gravity.univie.ac.at/) is seeking to fill a post-doctoral position (Universitätsassistent/in) in the field of mathematical general relativity and/or numerical general relativity; in the latter case candidates with strong interest in rigorous aspects of numerical analysis will be sought. The initial appointment will be for two years, with a possibility of extension. The employment could start as early as September 2010, and we wish to fill the position before October 2010 in any case.
The list of members of the group, including scientifically active retired members, includes Peter Aichelburg, Robert Beig, Piotr Chrusciel, Mark Hannam, Mark Heinzle, Helmut Rumpf and Helmut Urbantke.
The gross salary is EUR 3248,70.- fourteen times a year. The teaching load is four hours/week, in English or in German.
Applications should be done online before July 15, 2010 at URL
http://jobcenter.univie.ac.at/
position numbered “Kennzahl 1195" (follow the link to the online advertisements)
The candidates should arrange to have three letters of recommendation to be sent to
Mrs Karin Picek,
Mathematical Physics,
Faculty of Physics,
Boltzmanngasse 5/5/3521,
A-1090 Vienna, Austria
before July 15, 2010. Further enquiries can be directed to karin.picek[AT]univie.ac.at
=================================================================
3. News
=================================================================
3.1 Einstein Toolkit Release
----------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/06/18/einstein-toolkit-release/
Additional Information: http://einsteintoolkit.org/
We are pleased to announce the first release (code name "Bohr") of the Einstein Toolkit, an open, community developed software infrastructure for relativistic astrophysics. The Einstein Toolkit is a collection of over 130 software components and tools for simulating and analyzing general relativistic astrophysical systems that builds on numerous software efforts in the numerical relativity community including CactusEinstein, the Whisky hydrodynamics code, and the Carpet AMR infrastructure. The Cactus Framework is used as the underlying computational infrastructure providing large-scale parallelization, general computational components, and a model for collaborative, portable code development. The toolkit includes modules to build complete codes for simulating black hole spacetimes as well as systems governed by relativistic hydrodynamics. Current development in the consortium is targeted at providing additional infrastructure for general relativistic magnetohydrodynamics.
The Einstein Toolkit uses a distributed software model and its different modules are developed, distributed, and supported either by the core team of Einstein Toolkit Maintainers, or by individual groups. Where modules are provided by external groups, the Einstein Toolkit Maintainers provide quality control for modules for inclusion in the toolkit and help coordinate support. The Einstein Toolkit Maintainers currently involve postdocs and faculty from five different institutions, and hold weekly meetings that are open for anyone to join in.
Guiding principles for the design and implementation of the toolkit include:
1: Open, community-driven software development that encourages the sharing of code across the community, prevents code duplication, and leads to sustainable support and development of essential code.
2: Well thought out and stable interfaces between components that enable multiple implementations of physics capabilities, and allow groups or individuals to concentrate on their areas of interest.
3: Separation of physics software from computational science infrastructure so that new technologies for large scale computing, processor accelerators, or parallel I/O can be easily integrated with science codes.
4: The provision of complete working production codes to provide: prototypes, standard benchmarks, and testcases; codes that are available for and usable by the general astrophysics community; tools for new researchers and groups to enter this field; training and education for a new generation of researchers.
For more information about using or contributing to the Einstein Toolkit, or to join the Einstein Toolkit Consortium, please visit our web pages at <http://einsteintoolkit.org>.
We thank the numerous people who contributed to this software over the past many years; there are too many to be listed here. We also gratefully acknowledge those who helped in the past months to make this release happen. The Einstein Toolkit is primarily supported by NSF 0903973/0903782/0904015 (CIGR), and also by NSF 0701566/0855892 (XiRel), 0721915 (Alpaca), 0725070 (Blue Waters), and 0905046/0941653 (PetaCactus).
The "Bohr" Release Team on behalf of the Einstein Toolkit Consortium
(2010-06-17)
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.2 Presentations of Workshop CIAS Meudon 2010 "Dark Matter in the Universe and Universal Properties of Galaxies: Theory and Observations"
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/06/16/workshop-cias-meudon-2010-dark-matt…
Additional Information: http://www.chalonge.obspm.fr/Cias_Meudon2010.html
Ecole Internationale d'Astrophysique Daniel Chalonge
Workshop CIAS Meudon 2010 "Dark Matter in the Universe and Universal Properties of Galaxies: Theory and Observations"
We are pleased to inform you that the presentations by the lecturers during The Chalonge Workshop CIAS Meudon 2010 are available on-line (in pdf format) in "Programme and Lecturers" at the Workshop site:
http://www.chalonge.obspm.fr/Cias_Meudon2010.html
http://www.chalonge.obspm.fr/Programme_CIAS2010.html
The photographs of the workshop will be posted soon on this site.
We thank all again, both lecturers and participants, for having contributed so much to this workshop and look forward to seeing you again in a next meeting of this series.
With compliments and kind regards,
Norma G Sanchez,
Hector J de Vega
http://chalonge.obspm.fr/
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.3 Death of Brian Edgar
------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/06/15/death-of-brian-edgar/
Brian Edgar
Brian Edgar sadly passed away last Thursday June 10th from a stroke. He is survived by a wife, son, daughter and grandson who all live in Linköping, Sweden. Brian worked at the Mathematics Department of Linköping University (LiU). He was born in Northern Ireland and had that marvellous broad Northern Ireland accent which people loved to hear.
Brian finished his PhD under the supervision of Clive Kilmister (who also sadly died about a month ago). Brian was an ‘Effer’, a name given by and to the PhD students who shared the office at room F of the old building of King's College, on Surrey Street, just above the Aldwych station and the London Roman Bath, from mid 60's to mid 70’s. That was a very rich period for gravitation physics when we lived under the strong influence of Felix Pirani, Hermann Bondi, Roger Penrose, Stephen Hawking, William Bonnor, Clive Kilmister among others. This was a rich period when many new ideas on gravitational physics were being created, mostly on its mathematical aspects.
After graduating from Queen’s Belfast, Brian worked in Cameroon and Ghana before his PhD studies and after his PhD exam he went back to work in Ghana. After many years in Ghana he moved to Botswana in 1982. During this time he also in secret supervised a banned ANC activist that later became a South African minister who opened the Durban GR meeting in 2001. He then moved to Linköping in Sweden in 1987, where he and Malcolm Ludvigsen inaugurated and developed the gravitational physics program at LiU. He was the supervisor of several successful PhD students.
One of his characteristics was to help the development of applied mathematics programs in developing countries, a passion that was born during his time in Africa. He was working on a program for collaboration between the Swedish and Brazilian applied mathematical programs, but it was beaten by the slow pace of bureaucracy and shortness of life.
Brian was a classical relativist, in the sense that his works were mainly motivated by geometrical aspects of Riemann geometry in general relativity. Part of his work was devoted to the field of exact solutions and in particular the GHP formalism and generalisations of it. An important outcome of these studies is the Edgar-Ludwig metrics. In the latter period, motivated by the support of Kilmister, he was working with various collaborators on the problem of Lanczos potentials and dimensionally-dependent identities for general relativity. At the time of his passing he was finishing one of such papers. We will miss his scientific enthusiasm, his willingness to help scientists around the world, and above all his always joyful presence.
>From all friends of Brian
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Table of Contents
#################################################################
1. Conferences
1.1 2nd Galileo-Xu Guangqi Meeting (registration)
1.2 Chandra Centennial Symposium
1.3 5th VESF School on Gravitational Waves
1.4 IPMU focus week on string cosmology
1.5 Primordial Features and Non-Gaussianities (PFNG-2010)
2. Jobs
2.1 International Relativistic Astrophysics PhD Program 2010-2011
2.2 Research Fellow in Fundamental Physics in the European Space Agency
3. News
3.1 Death of Clive Kilmister
3.2 2010 Awards for Essays on Gravitation Winners
3.3 Prizes and Honors at the GR19 Conference in Mexico City
=================================================================
1. Conferences
=================================================================
1.1 2nd Galileo-Xu Guangqi Meeting (registration)
-------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/05/31/2nd-galileo-xu-guangqi-meeting-regi…
Starting Sun, Jul 11, 2010 to Fri, Jul 16, 2010
Location: Ventimiglia, Italy and Nice, France
Additional Information: http://www.icranet.org/2nd_galileo-xuguangqi
Registration at:
http://ntsrvg9-2.icra.it/meetings/RegistrationXU2.htm
A reduced fee of 350 EUR will be applied prior to June 15th, 2010. After this date the fee will be 450 EUR.
Dear Colleagues,
The 2nd Galileo-XuGuangqi meeting follows the 1st meeting of this series held on October 2009 in Shanghai. The goal is to create once a year a forum for strategic exchanges between eastern and western science at the highest level dealing with Relativistic Astrophysics and related fundamental theoretical, experimental and observational fields. We plan to continue the format of this meeting addressing topics generally related to Relativistic Astrophysics and theoretical and observational topics. The aim is to enlarge the audience from the one strictly Chinese and Italian to one embracing European and western scientific interests and the Eastern ones. In this sense a broader participation from Korea and Taiwan has been encouraged, as well as a participation of scientists from Europe and the Americas.
The 2nd Galileo - Xu Guanqi meeting will be limited to 90 participants and will be held on July 11 - 17, 2010. It represents a collaboration between the University of Nice - Sophie Antipolis, ICRANet, University of Genova, University of Roma “La Sapienza”, Institute for the Early Universe, APCTP, ENEA, Embassy of Italy in Seoul, Stockholm University, NAOC, INFN, Korean Astronomy and Space Science Institute, Cote d’Azur Observatory, Free University of Berlin, ICTP. The lectures will take place at the splendid Hanbury Villa (http://www.giardinihanbury.com) on the border between Italy and France on the Riviera. A special visit will be planned on the 14th of July to Villa Ratti, Nice, where a new ICRANet Center is going to be inaugurated.
This 2nd Galileo –Xu Guangqi meeting will be the occasion to establish the lectures of the IRAP PhD program sponsored by the European Community, which will be delivered starting from September 2010 at the University of Nice - Sophia Antipolis. Such a program sees the participation of the University of Nice-Sophia Antipolis, the University of Savoie, the University of Stockholm, the University of Berlin, the University of Ferrara, the University of Roma, ICRANet, Observatoire de la Cote d'Azur, the Tartu Observatory, the Shanghai Astronomical Observatory, the Albert Einstein Institut, the Indian Centre for Space Physics and the Brazilian Centre for Physics Research. The ten selected international students, four from Europe and six from Asia and the Americas, will participate in these lectures.
The preliminary program can be downloaded clicking on the following link: http://www.icranet.org/images/stories/Meetings/XU2/program.pdf On the webpage you can find the list of titles and abstracts too.
Moreover, on the same page you can find a list of hotels; you can directly contact the hotel you prefer, indicating you are taking part in the conference in order to have the special rate reserved for the participants. A transportation to and from Villa Hanbury in the morning and at the end of the afternoon session will be provided. There will be the possibility of having lunch in the Garden of the Villa.
Li-Zhi Fang and Remo Ruffini,
Co-Chairs of the "2nd Galileo - Xu Guanqgi meeting"
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.2 Chandra Centennial Symposium
---------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/05/20/chandra-centennial-symposium-2/
Starting Fri, Oct 15, 2010 to Sun, Oct 17, 2010
Location: Chicago, U.S.A.
Additional Information: http://chandra100.uchicago.edu/
The website for the previously announced Chandra Centennial Symposium is now "live":
http://chandra100.uchicago.edu/
We recommend that you register for the Symposium and book your accommodations as early as possible.
Full announcement at http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/13/chandra-centennial-symposium/
Bob Wald
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.3 5th VESF School on Gravitational Waves
------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/05/18/5th-vesf-school-on-gravitational-wa…
Starting Mon, Jul 26, 2010 to Fri, Jul 30, 2010
Location: Sesto Pusteria (Bolzano), Italy
Additional Information: http://www.roma1.infn.it/teongrav/VESF/SCHOOL.html
This is the annual school on Gravitational Waves, now in its 10th edition (5th under the VESF auspices. This year, for the first time, the school will take place in the summer and in the Dolomites village of Sesto Val Pusteria (Sexten in German).
Topics taught in the school will be:
* Introduction to GR and sources of GW: isolated (burst and periodic) binaries and stochastic background
* Interferometers, present and future facilities
* Data Analysis
* LISA space interferometer
* Related astrophysical searches: neutrinos, gamma and X ray, pulsar timing etc.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.4 IPMU focus week on string cosmology
---------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/05/18/ipmu-focus-week-on-string-cosmology/
Starting Mon, Oct 04, 2010 to Fri, Oct 08, 2010
Location: Kashiwa, Japan
Additional Information: http://www.ipmu.jp/node/709
We project a workshop on string cosmology just after the COSMO/CosPa 2010 conference. Covered topics include stringy inflation models, string phenomenology, and various theoretical approaches to string cosmology. The daily schedule will include a few presentations and plenty of time for informal discussions.
Dates: October 4-8, 2010
Place: Lecture Hall, IPMU, University of Tokyo, Japan
Organizers:
* Robert Brandenberger (McGill)
* Shinji Mukohyama (IPMU)
* Fuminobu Takahashi (IPMU)
Confirmed invited speakers:
* Daniel Baumann (IAS)
* Robert Brandenberger (McGill)
* Kiwoon Choi (KAIST)
* Sumit R. Das (Kentucky)
* Elias Kiritsis (Crete)
* Tatsuo Kobayashi (Kyoto)
* Gary Shiu (Wisconsin)
* Kostas Skenderis (Amsterdam)
Contributed talk:
Those who wish to apply for a contributed talk are requested to send the title and abstract to the registration form before July 30, 2010 (JST): http://regist.ipmu.jp/fw2010oct/
Registration:
If you would like to attend, please register on-line: http://regist.ipmu.jp/fw2010oct/
Registration Deadline:
July 30, 2010.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.5 Primordial Features and Non-Gaussianities (PFNG-2010)
---------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/05/17/primordial-features-and-non-gaussia…
Starting Tue, Dec 14, 2010 to Sat, Dec 18, 2010
Location: Allahabad, India
Additional Information: http://www.hri.res.in/~pfng/index.html
We are pleased to announce the international meeting titled "Primordial features and non-Gaussianities (PFNG-2010)" that is to be held at the Harish-Chandra Research Institute (HRI), Allahabad, India, during December 14-18, 2010.
The meeting will focus on understanding the generation and detection of primordial (both inflationary as well as non/post-inflationary) features and non-Gaussianities. While the first four days (December 14-17, 2010) of the meeting will be dedicated to these topics, the fifth day (i.e. December 18, 2010) will focus on issues in string cosmology.
The web-site for the meeting can be accessed at either of the following URLs:
http://www.hri.res.in/~pfng/index.html
http://www.mri.ernet.in/~pfng/index.html
The Scientific Organizing Committee of the meeting consists of:
* Richard Easther (Yale University)
* Alan Heavens (Institute for Astronomy, Edinburgh)
* Eiichiro Komatsu (University of Texas at Austin)
* Juan Maldacena (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton)
* Jerome Martin, Chair (Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris)
* Subir Sarkar (University of Oxford)
* Tarun Souradeep (IUCAA, Pune)
* Matias Zaldarriaga (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton)
The program will consist of invited plenary talks and contributed talks as well as posters. Invited plenary speakers include:
* Xingang Chen (DAMTP, University of Cambridge)
* Asantha Cooray (University of California, Irvine)
* Amir Hajian (Princeton University)
* Mark Hindmarsh (University of Sussex)
* Shamit Kachru (KITP, Santa Barbara)
* Liam McAllister (Cornell University)
* Dipak Munshi (Cardiff University)
* Hiranya Peiris (University College, London)
* Christophe Ringeval (Louvain University)
* David Seery (University of Sussex)
* Arman Shafieloo (University of Oxford)
* Eva Silverstein (KITP, Santa Barbara)
* Kendrick Smith (Princeton University), To be confirmed
* Licia Verde (Institute of Cosmological Sciences, Barcelona)
The registration for the meeting is now open, and we welcome contributed talks and posters.
Please visit the web-site or write to us at the address <pfng[AST]hri.res.in> for further information about the meeting.
We look forward to seeing you at HRI in December 2010.
L. Sriramkumar and Sudhakar Panda.
(On behalf of the Local Organizing Committee)
=================================================================
2. Jobs
=================================================================
2.1 International Relativistic Astrophysics PhD Program 2010-2011
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/05/31/international-relativistic-astrophy…
Institution: Nice, France
Deadline: Thu, Sep 30, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.icra.it/IRAPPhD/2010/
In 2010-2011 ten positions will be available, six with fellowship support.
The application deadline is September 30th, 2010.
Application Forms:
http://www.icra.it and http://www.icranet.org
Information:
Dr. Carlo Luciano Bianco
tel. + 39 06 4991 4 397
e-mail: bianco[AT]icra.it
Following the successful scientific space missions by the European Space Agency (ESA) and the European Southern observatory (ESO) in Chile, as well as the high-energy particle activities at CERN in Genève, we have created a Ph.D. program dedicated to the formation of scientists in the field of relativistic astrophysics. The students of such a program will lead the theoretical developments of one of the most active fields of research, based on the above observational and experimental facilities. This program provides expertise in the most advanced topics of mathematical and theoretical physics, and in relativistic field theories, in the context of astronomy, astrophysics and cosmology.It provides the ability to model the observational data received from the above facilities. This activity is necessarily international, no single university can cover the broad expertises.
The proposed program of the IRAP Ph.D. enjoys the collaboration of some of the most famous European Universities with one of the youngest and most dynamical French universities, the University of Nice-Sophia Antipolis. Also it benefits from the presence of the Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur and the presence of the ICRANet Center at Villa Ratti in Nice, where the coordination of the IRAP Ph.D. will take place. The astronomical aspects of the large scale of the Universe will be illustrated by the teaching by the Tartu Observatory. The activities at ICRANet Centers, at the ETH of Zurich, at the University of Rome, at Stockholm University offer teaching programs in all the fields of relativistic astrophysics, including cosmology, the physics of gravitational collapse, gamma-ray bursts, and black hole physics.
The participation of the Freie Universität Berlin and of the Einstein Institute in Potsdam offers the possibility of teaching in relativistic field theories at the highest level. The University of Savoie offers the link to the particle physics at CERN. The University of Ferrara will be present with lectures and researches in the topics they have pioneered such as instrumentations developments and data analysis for X and Gamma ray astrophysics and observational cosmology.Through ICRANet the extra-European connections with Brazil, China and India will be guaranteed: in China, with the Shanghai Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Science, studying the formation and evolution of large-scale structure and galaxies; in India, with the Indian Centre for Space Physics (ICSP), renowned for its research on compact objects as well as on solar physics and astrochemistry; in Brazil, with ICRABR at CBPF and the Rio de Janeiro brach of ICRANet, where a successful program of research and
teaching in relativistic astrophysics has been established in recent years.
The Courses: Each student will have to follow 180 hours of courses during the three years of the Ph.D. program. There is also the possibility to follow courses from the other Physics, Mathematics, Astronomy and Astrophysics Ph.D. programs in each participating institution, after approval by the faculty.
A list of courses and faculty is available at http://www.icra.it/IRAPPhD/2010/
The Host Institution for the call of 2010-2011
is the Université de Nice
Sophia Antipolis Grand Château
28 Avenue Valrose 21 - B.P. 2135
06103 NICE CEDEX 2
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.2 Research Fellow in Fundamental Physics in the European Space Agency
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/05/20/research-fellow-in-fundamental-phys…
Institution: Noordwijk, The Netherlands
Additional Information: http://www.esa.int/act
The European Space Agency's Advanced Concepts Team (ACT) is looking for highly motivated young researchers in the area of fundamental physics, with good analytical and communicational skills and an excellent aptitude for teamwork.
The Team
The Advanced Concepts Team (ACT) is a group of research fellows (post-docs) and young graduates who originate from a broad variety of academic fields and aim at an academic career. The team's task is to monitor, perform and foster research on advanced space systems, innovative concepts and working methods. It interacts externally almost exclusively with academia and operates as a truly interdisciplinary team bound to high scientific standards. Via its research, the team acts as a cross-departmental pathfinder to explore novel, potentially promising areas for ESA and the space sector, ranging from applied to basic fundamental topics. The team is in constant evolution and attempts to lead and embrace changes and new trends. Each member is therefore encouraged and expected to contribute and suggest changes.
Internally, the Advanced Concepts Team acts as the technical think-tank within the Director General's Policy Office. Thus, an important task of the team is to communicate scientific trends and results, as input to the strategic planning of the Agency. The team has been active in the field of fundamental physics since several years and interested candidates are invited to get familiar with these projects (http://www.esa.int/gsp/ACT/phy/index.htm) while being encouraged to expand the domain to new interesting fields not yet covered.
Duties and Tasks
Successful candidates will perform research in theoretical physics and will in particular carry out the following tasks:
• Assess and investigate concepts and effects, either current of foreseen, derived from novel theoretical or experimental discoveries in physics for their potential application and use in space systems.
• Propose and perform high-level research in the field of physics together with universities of ESA member states (in particular through the Ariadna programme (http://www.esa.int/ariadna)
• Lead and assist interdisciplinary projects with other ACT Research Fellows in topics where the above-mentioned areas of physics play an important role.
• Participate, with the rest of the team, in the assessment of proposed space system concepts - these not being restricted only to the area of fundamental / theoretical physics - and propose new concepts and assessment studies.
• Perform or participate in small studies on subjects of strategic interest to provide inhouse expertise to ESA's Director General's Policy Office and its General Studies Programme.
• Follow and monitor the progress of research in areas of physics of interest to the team in order to derive and report strategic trends.
• Critically assess ideas and concepts for space systems relying on methods or phenomena of the area of fundamental physics that are brought to the attention of the ACT.
Areas of research are partly chosen by the successful candidate based on his/her own expert judgements and insight into trends and developments in fundamental physics, partly chosen by the team as to follow strategic directions of the Agency. Based on past and current assessments, ACT areas of research in fundamental physics include condensed matter physics, quantum physics and applications of Bose-Einstein condensates and gravitation, but candidates are encouraged to expand these.
Qualifications
The candidate should hold a degree in Physics, Mathematics or Aerospace Engineering. He or she should also have completed (or be about to complete) a PhD in Physics (with the subject of the thesis being relevant to the description of the tasks outlined above) and aim at an academic/research career.
The candidate is expected to bring to the team functioning links to universities and research institutes. The candidate should demonstrate an interest in space science and / or technology as well as the ability and interest to get actively involved in prospective interdisciplinary research.
Successful candidates are expected to show an aptitude to contextualise specialised areas of research and to quickly assess their potential with respect to other domains and applications. An avid, natural curiosity and a passion for new subjects and research areas are essential. As member of an interdisciplinary, multicultural team of peers, the candidate should have a natural aptitude to teamwork, while being able to set-up, follow, monitor and be responsible for his/her own personal research plans and directions. Good methodological and organisation skills are therefore a valuable asset.
Application
Information on the ESA Research Fellowship Programme and the application form are available at: http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/Careers_at_ESA/SEM19DXO4HD_0.html. Applicants should send their CV, a covering letter stating their research interests and the filled-out RF application form to: act[At]esa.int as well as temp.htr[At]esa.int. (if not possible by email, the four reference letters can also be sent via normal mail to: ESTEC HR Division, RES-HTR, ESA/ESTEC; Keplerlaan 1, PO Box 299, 2200AG Noordwijk ZH, The Netherlands).
The general eligibility criteria of the ESA Research (Internal) Fellowship Programme apply.
All applications will be considered until the available post is filled. Application deadline for this round of interviews: no later than May 31, 2010.
For more information please visit: ESA: http://www.esa.int, the Advanced Concepts Team:
http://www.esa.int/act or send us an email to: act[AT]esa.int
=================================================================
3. News
=================================================================
3.1 Death of Clive Kilmister
----------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/05/31/death-of-clive-kilmister/
Clive Kilmister
I regret to have to report that Clive Kilmister died on the second of May 2010. Clive's Ph D research was carried out at Queen Mary College where the cosmologist George McVittie was his supervisor. From 1950 until he retired in 1984 he spent his academic career in the Mathematics Department at King's College London. In 1954, Hermann Bondi, Felix Pirani and Clive formed the nucleus of the King's gravitational theory group, one of the small number of centres that initiated the renaissance of research on general relativity in the 1950's. At one time Clive was a member of the International Committee on GRG and he was heavily involved in the organisation of the GR4 conference in London.
Clive had broad interests and at various times he was the president of the British Society for the History of Mathematics, the president of the Mathematical Association, and the president of the British Society for the Philosophy of Science. He was also Gresham Professor of Geometry from 1972 until 1988. As well as his research papers Clive wrote about a dozen books, including a number on relativity and classical mechanics. His Ph D research had been related to Eddington's later work, which is opaque to most, and throughout his career he retained his interest in it. Later in life he and his long-term collaborator Ted Bastin became founding members of the Alternative Natural Philosophy Association. Together they wrote a number of books, the last of which "The Origin of Discrete Particles" was published in 2009.
Clive was noted for his willingness to undertake heavy administrative tasks. These he discharged amiably and efficiently. He was loved by the students and admired and respected by his grateful colleagues.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
David Robinson, Emeritus Professor of Mathematics,
Mathematics Department, King's College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS, UK.
Room K4U.22, Fourth floor King's Building, Strand Campus.
My office telephone: +44 (0)20 7848 2221;
Maths Department Office: +44 (0)20 7848 2828
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3.2 2010 Awards for Essays on Gravitation Winners
-------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/05/23/2010-awards-for-essays-on-gravitati…
Additional Information: http://www.gravityresearchfoundation.org/
GRAVITY RESEARCH FOUNDATION
PO BOX 81389
WELLESLEY HILLS MA 02481-0004
USA
THE TRUSTEES ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE AWARDS FOR ESSAYS FOR 2010.
1. $4,000 - Building Up Spacetime with Quantum Entanglement by Mark Van Raamsdonk, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of British Columbia, 6224 Agricultural Road, Vancouver, B.C., V6T 1W9, Canada; e-mail: mav[AT]phas.ubc.ca
2. $1,250 - Membrane Paradigm Realized? by Samir D. Mathur, Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210; e-mail: mathur[AT]mps.ohio-state.edu
3. $1,000 - The Dangers of Extremes by Donald Marolf, Physics Department, UCSB, Santa Barbara, CA 93106; e-mail: marolf[AT]physics.ucsb.edu
4. $750 - The Necessity of Torsion in Gravity by Richard T. Hammond, Department of Physics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 and ARO Research Triangle Park; e-mail: rhammond[AT]email.unc.edu
5. $500 - Conditions for Spontaneous Homogenization of the Universe by Krzysztof Bolejko (1) and William R. Stoeger (2), (1) Steward Observatory, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721 and Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center, Bartycka 18, 00-716 Warszawa, Poland; (2) Vatican Observatory Research Group, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721: e-mail: bolejko[AT]camk.edu.pl
Selected for Honorable Mention this year were (listed in alphabetical order): Antonio Accioly, Jose' Helayel- Neto, and Eslley Scatena; Giovanni Amelino-Camelia, Niccolo' Loret, Gianluca Mandanici, and Flavio Mercati; Sudarshan Ananth; R. Balbinot, I. Carusotto, A. Fabbri, and A. Recati; Rabin Banerjee; R. Brout; A. A. Coley; F. I. Cooperstock and M. J. Dupre; Aharon Davidson and Ilya Gurwich; John Bruce Davies; A. Di Virgilio, U. Schreiber, N. Beverini, and A. Tartaglia; Sourish Dutta, Robert J. Scherrer, and Stephen D. H. Hsu; Ariel Edery and Benjamin Constantineau; Shahar Hod; Craig J. Hogan; Vishnu Jejjala, Djordje Minic, Y. Jack Ng, and Chia-Hsiung Tze; Axel Kleinschmidt and Hermann Nicolai; Lance Labun and Johann Rafelski; M. D. Maia; Adam Moss, Ali Narimani, and Douglas Scott; Ishwaree P. Neupane; T. Padmanabhan; Don N. Page; Carlo Rovelli and Francesca Vidotto; Tejinder P. Singh; C. Sivaram; Martin S. Sloth; George F. Smoot; C. S. Unnikrishnan and G. T. Gillies; A
sher Yahalom.
This announcement and abstracts of award-winning and honorable mention essays will be posted when ready on our web site, http://www.gravityresearchfoundation.org/. The five award-winning essays will be published in the Journal of General Relativity and Gravitation (GRG) and subsequently, in a special issue of the International Journal of Modern Physics D (IJMPD). They will also be posted at a later date on our web site.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.3 Prizes and Honors at the GR19 Conference in Mexico City
-----------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/05/23/prizes-and-honors-at-the-gr19-confe…
AWARDS FOR BEST PRESENTATIONS DURING GR19
Session Chairs will send their nominations for the best student and post-doc presentations during GR19 to Professor Donald Marolf, the Chair of the GR19 Scientific Committee. He will send an ordered list to the Executive Committee of the Society which will make the final selection soon after GR19, taking into account the geographic, gender and thematic balance. The students prizes, the Hartle Awards are sponsored by Professor James B. Hartle. The post-doc prizes, the S. Chandrasekhar Awards are sponsored by World Scientific.
***
THE JÜRGEN EHLERS THESIS PRIZE
for an outstanding Ph.D. thesis in mathematical and numerical relativity will be awarded to
DR NICHOLAS YUNES
The selection committee consisting of David Garfinkle (Chair), Bernd Brügmann, Bala Iyer and Alan Rendall prepared the following citation:
"For pioneering work on a variety of topics involving binary black holes, gravitational radiation, and Chern-Simons gravity"
This prize is sponsored by Springer to honor the memory of Professor Jügen Ehlers. See: http://grg.maths.qmul.ac.uk/grgsoc/ehlersprize.php It carries a certificate and a check for $1,500 and will be awarded during the opening ceremony of the 19th International conference.
***
THE BERGMANN-WHEELER THESIS PRIZE
for a outstanding Ph.D. thesis in the broad area of quantum gravity will be awarded to
DR VICTOR TAVERAS
The selection committee consisting of Stephen Carlip (Chair), Gary Horowitz, Theodore Jacobson and Carlo Rovelli prepared the following citation: "For contributions to loop quantum cosmology and the development of a novel extension of loop quantum gravity."
This prize is sponsored by Classical and Quantum Gravity to honor the memory of Professors Peter Bergmann and John Wheeler, pioneers of the field of quantum gravity. It carries a certificate and a check for $1,500 and will be awarded in the opening ceremony of the 19th International conference.
***
THE GWIC THESIS PRIZE
for an outstanding Ph.D. thesis based on research in gravitational waves.
This is an annual award sponsored by the Gravitational Wave International Committee. See http://grg.maths.qmul.ac.uk/grgsoc/gwicprize.php It will be presented during the opening ceremony of the GR19 conference.
***
THE BASILIS XANTHOPOULOS INTERNATIONAL AWARD
will be presented to
DR STEFAN HOLLANDS
The committee consisting of Profs. Jorge Pullin (Chair), Piotr Chrusciel, Gary Gibbons, Nikolaos Stergioulas and Clifford Will prepared the following citation:
"For his contributions to the mathematical aspects of gravitational physics, especially concerning the theory of quantum fields in curved space-time. Dr. Hollands' work helped bring this area of research to a new level of clarity and mathematical rigor."
The prize is sponsored by the FORTH Foundation, Hellas, to honor the memory of Basilis Xanthopoulos and is given to a scientist, below 40 years of age, who has made outstanding (preferably theoretical) contributions to gravitational physics. See: http://grg.maths.qmul.ac.uk/grgsoc/xanthprize.php
It carries a certificate and a check for approximately $10,000. It will be awarded during the opening ceremony of the conference.
***
FELLOWSHIPS
The Society elected 10 Fellows in this first round. According to the rules governing this election, at least five had to be below 45 years of age. The Electors were Beverly Berger (Chair), David Blair, Misao Sasaki, and three ex-officio members Abhay Ashtekar (President), Clifford Will (Deputy president) and Malcolm MacCallum (Secretary). The new Fellows will be inducted during the Business Meeting of the Society.
* Alessandra Buonanno "For leading advances in the theory of general relativistic two-body dynamics and in the production and detection of gravitational waves''.
* Alejandro Corichi "For his significant contributions to loop quantum gravity and his leadership in numerous initiatives for the international gravity community''.
* Gabriela Gonzalez "For her outstanding contributions to the gravitational wave science and leadership in the LIGO Collaboration''.
* James Hough "For outstanding contributions in gravitational wave detection''.
* Don Marolf "For a broad range of insightful contributions to quantum gravity and quantum field theory in curved spacetime''.
* Roger Penrose "For his pioneering contributions to our understanding of global issues in general relativity which form many of the foundations of the modern era of gravitational physics''.
* Frans Pretorius "For his seminal contributions which have transformed the subject of numerical relativity".
* Carlo Rovelli "For leading contributions to the field of quantum gravity, including loop quantum gravity and spin foam models, and for leadership in creating a vibrant quantum gravity community in France".
* Madhavan Varadarajan "For his numerous insightful contributions to conceptually difficult and deep problems in classical and quantum gravity".
* David Wands "For his seminal contributions to theoretical cosmology, particularly in the areas of cosmological perturbation theory".
1
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Table of Contents
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1. Conferences
1.1 2nd Galileo-Xu Guangqi Meeting (third announcement)
1.2 New Directions in Modern Cosmology
1.3 Current and Future Challenges in Gravitational Physics
1.4 Fifth Meeting on CPT and Lorentz Symmetry (CPT'10)
1.5 Xth School of Cosmology: The Cosmic Microwave Background at High Angular Resolution
1.6 Hot topics in Modern Cosmology Spontaneous Workshop IV
2. Jobs
2.1 1+1 postdoctoral fellowships at UNAM, Mexico City
2.2 Two PhD fellowships in cosmology, University of Oslo
2.3 Postdoctoral Position in Cosmology at the University of Oslo
3. News
3.1 Abstract Submission Deadline for GR19
3.2 Living Reviews in Relativity: "Cosmic Censorship for Gowdy Spacetimes"
=================================================================
1. Conferences
=================================================================
1.1 2nd Galileo-Xu Guangqi Meeting (third announcement)
-------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/04/30/2nd-galileo-xu-guangqi-meeting-thir…
Starting Mon, Jul 12, 2010 to Sat, Jul 17, 2010
Location: Ventimiglia, Italy
Additional Information: http://www.icranet.org/2nd_galileo-xuguangqi
Dear Colleagues,
The 2nd Galileo-XuGuangqi meeting follows the 1st meeting of this series held on October 2009 in Shanghai. We plan to continue the format of this meeting addressing topics generally related to Relativistic Astrophysics and theoretical and observational topics. The aim is to enlarge the audience from the one strictly Chinese and Italian to one embracing European and western scientific interests and the Eastern ones. In this sense a broader participation from Korea and Taiwan has been encouraged, as well as a participation of scientists from Europe and the Americas. The goal is to create once a year a forum for strategic exchanges between eastern and western science at the highest level dealing with Relativistic Astrophysics and related fundamental theoretical, experimental and observational fields.
The 2nd Galileo-Xu Guanqi meeting will be limited to 70 participants and will be held on July 11 - 17, 2010. It represents a collaboration between the University of Nice Sophie Antipolis, ICRANet, University of Genova, University of Roma “La Sapienza”, Institute for the Early Universe, APCTP, ENEA, Embassy of Italy in Seoul, Stockholm University, NAOC, INFN, Korean Astronomy and Space Science Institute, Cote d’Azur Observatory, Free University of Berlin, ICTP. The lectures will take place at the splendid Hanbury Villa (http://www.giardinihanbury.com) on the border between Italy and France on the Riviera. A special visit will be planned on the 14th of July to Villa Ratti, Nice, where a new ICRANet Center is going to be inaugurated.
This 2nd Galileo-Xu Guangqi meeting will be the occasion to establish the lectures of the IRAP PhD program sponsored by the European Community, which will be delivered starting from September 2010 at the University of Nice Sophia Antipolis. Such a program sees the participation of the University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, the University of Savoie, the University of Stockholm, the University of Berlin, the University of Ferrara, the University of Roma, ICRANet, Observatoire de la Cote d'Azur, the Tartu Observatory, the Shanghai Astronomical Observatory, the Albert Einstein Institut, the Indian Centre for Space Physics and the Brazilian Centre for Physics Research.
The ten selected international students, four from Europe and six from Asia and the Americas, will participate in these lectures.
The preliminary program and list of speakers can be downloaded clicking on the following link:
http://www.icranet.org/images/stories/Meetings/XU2/program.pdf
We encourage every scientist interested in the meeting to register online using the registration form that can be found on the webpage. The conference fee will be 350 Euros and it will cover coffee breaks, proceedings and the conference banquet.
Li-Zhi Fang and Remo Ruffini,
Co-Chairs of the "2nd Galileo - Xu Guanqgi meeting"
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1.2 New Directions in Modern Cosmology
--------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/04/27/new-directions-in-modern-cosmology/
Starting Mon, Sep 27, 2010 to Fri, Oct 01, 2010
Location: Leiden, The Netherlands
Additional Information: http://www.lorentzcenter.nl/lc/web/2010/412/description.php3?wsid=412
This workshop concentrates on the discussion of recent cosmological observations which present challenges to the standard LCDM model. These observations include: the large scale flows, the sizes and amplitude of galaxy large scale structures, the systematic effects biasing the analysis of CMB data and the lack of large-angle correlations, the anisotropy of the Hubble flow, the evolution of galaxy size, and the failure to find the sub-halo building blocks left over from the primordial fluctuation spectrum. Last and not least, it is disturbing that in the LCDM model 95% of the Universe have not been observed 'directly'.
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1.3 Current and Future Challenges in Gravitational Physics
----------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/04/16/current-and-future-challenges-in-gr…
Starting Fri, May 14, 2010 to Fri, May 14, 2010
Location: London, U.K.
14th May 2010, 2pm-5pm, Phillips room, Institute of Physics, 76 Portland Place, London, UK.
A series of talks will be given on the current status of gravitational physics research, and how the subject is expected to develop during the next decade. The meeting will begin with an overview by Professor Bernard Schutz (Albert Einstein Institute, Golm). This will be followed by a series of specialist talks on gravitational waves by Dr Stephen Fairhurst (Cardiff), on cosmology and gravitation by Dr Kazuya Koyama (Portsmouth), and on the AdS/CFT correspondence and relativistic fluids by Dr Mukund Rangamani (Durham).
This meeting has been organized by the Institute of Physics Gravitational Physics Group. The talks are open to members and non-members of the Institute of Physics Gravitational Physics Group alike, and you are encouraged to advertise this meeting to your colleagues. There is no registration fee; however, space is limited so if you would like to attend the talks please could you email the Institute of Physics Gravitational Physics Group secretary (d.burton[AT]lancaster.ac.uk) to allow the number of participants to be monitored. The secretary should be emailed no later than 11th May 2010.
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1.4 Fifth Meeting on CPT and Lorentz Symmetry (CPT'10)
------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/04/15/fifth-meeting-on-cpt-and-lorentz-sy…
Starting Mon, Jun 28, 2010 to Fri, Jul 02, 2010
Location: Bloomington, IN, U.S.A.
Additional Information: http://www.indiana.edu/~lorentz/cpt10/
June 28 - July 2, 2010
Physics Department, Indiana University, Bloomington
The Fifth Meeting on CPT and Lorentz Symmetry will be held in Bloomington, Indiana, on June 28 - July 2, 2010. The meeting will focus on tests of these fundamental symmetries and on related theoretical issues, including scenarios for possible violations. You are cordially invited to attend and participate in this event. Topics to be covered include:
Searches for CPT and Lorentz violations involving
- birefringence and dispersion from cosmological sources
- clock-comparison measurements
- CMB polarization
- electromagnetic resonant cavities
- equivalence principle
- gauge and Higgs particles
- high-energy astrophysical observations
- laboratory and gravimetric tests of gravity
- matter interferometry
- neutrino oscillations
- oscillations and decays of K, B, D mesons
- particle-antiparticle comparisons
- post-newtonian gravity in the solar system and beyond
- second- and third-generation particles
- space-based missions
- spectroscopy of hydrogen and antihydrogen
- spin-polarized matter
Theoretical studies of CPT and Lorentz violation involving
- physical effects in General Relativity, the Standard Model, and beyond
- origins and mechanisms for violations
- classical/quantum issues in field theory, gravity, particle physics, and strings
Information about the meeting and online registration, including instructions on submitting a talk or poster, are available on the meeting web site.
Deadline for early registration: May 1, 2010
Deadline for block accommodations: May 21, 2010
Contact: Alan Kostelecky, kostelec[at]indiana.edu
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1.5 Xth School of Cosmology: The Cosmic Microwave Background at High Angular Resolution
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/04/14/xth-school-of-cosmology-the-cosmic-…
Starting Mon, Jul 05, 2010 to Sat, Jul 10, 2010
Location: Cargèse, France
Additional Information: http://www.cpt.univ-mrs.fr/~cosmo/EC2010/EcoleLuminy10_a.html
With the successful launch of the Planck satellite in May 2009, a new observational window opens up in cosmology. This mission is intended to finely analyze the temperature fluctuations of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), and will allow us to better study and constrain the early universe, in particular inflation. Among the scientific goals of this mission we expect :
* A better determination of the power spectra of the temperature fluctuations and E-mode polarization, and thus a more accurate measurement of the (slow-roll) parameters describing the inflaton potential
* A possible detection of the B-mode polarizationB
* A possible detection of non-gaussianity or the establishment of tighter constraints, either on primordial fluctuations or late-time induced nonlinear couplings
* Establishment of best current constraints on the total mass of neutrinos.
Faced with the emergence of these new themes, the school will allow the cosmological community to consolidate its expertise. It will not address the Planck data - which will not be public at that time - but will explore the phenomenological and theoretical advances brought by this mission
The scientific aim of this school is to show how the new generation of data will allow to look for signatures characterizing the models of the early universe. The school will cover the physics of the cosmic microwave background, with particular emphasis on new aspects which are the most relevant to the confrontation of theories with observations. In particular :
* New models of the early universe and their predictions (NGs, spectral index, gravitational waves)
* The polarization of the cosmic microwave background and what we can learn from it
* The effects of gravitational lensing
* The origin, characterization and measurement of non-Gaussianities
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1.6 Hot topics in Modern Cosmology Spontaneous Workshop IV
----------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/04/14/hot-topics-in-modern-cosmology-spon…
Starting Mon, May 10, 2010 to Sat, May 15, 2010
Location: Cargèse, France
Additional Information: http://www.cpt.univ-mrs.fr/~cosmo/SW_2010/SW4.html
Spontaneous Workshop (SW) brings together specialists on recent insights in Particle Physics, Astrophysics and Cosmology. The aim is to stimulate debates on common topics in views of providing us with innovating ideas.
The workshop’s organization is based on an optimal number of concise presentations and enough space for discussions on emergent problems in order to favour interactions among participants (see SW3).
SW4 topics includes :
* Theories beyond the Standard Model, extra dimensions
* Baryon and Lepton number violation, CP violation
* Axions and neutrinos in laboratories and Cosmology
* Baryogenesis and Leptogenesis
* Physics of primordial Universe, Models of Inflation and Dark Energy
* Dark Matter and Astroparticles Physics
* Cosmological Large Scale Structures, Magnetic Fields
* Gravitational tests and Modified theories of gravity
* Gravitational waves of Cosmological and Astrophysical origin
* New astronomical data from "Herschel" and "Planck" Cosmological models and parameters
=================================================================
2. Jobs
=================================================================
2.1 1+1 postdoctoral fellowships at UNAM, Mexico City
-----------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/04/28/11-postdocs-2010-and-2011/
Institution: Mexico City, Mexico
Deadline: Fri, May 14, 2010
The Department of Gravitation and Field Theory at the Institute for Nuclear Sciences of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), recently ranked as the leading academic institution in Latin America, invites applications for 1+1-year postdoctoral fellowships. There are two approximate starting dates for these fellowships, one beginning in August/September 2010 and another in February/March 2011.
The deadline for receiving application material for the first period, at least in electronic form, is May 14th (Friday) 2010 (hard copies should be sent in parallel). The deadline for the second period is November 19th (Friday) 2010.
Note: positions are restricted to applicants aged 35 or less at the time of application and who received their PhD in the three years prior this date.
Persons interested in these positions should indicate to which period they are applying and send a C.V., a publication list and a brief statement of their research interests to the departmental secretary:
Mrs Trinidad Ramirez
Departamento de Gravitacion y Teoria de Campos
Instituto de Ciencias Nucleares
Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
Apdo. Postal 70-543
04510 Mexico, D.F.
Mexico
tel: +(52) 55 56224690,1,2
fax: +(52) 55 56224693
e-mail: fengari[AT]nucleares.unam.mx
They should also arrange to have 3 letters of recommendation sent to this address. Renewal for a second year is contingent upon performance and further availability of funds.
The department currently consists of 12 faculty members:
M.Alcubierre, W. Bietenholz, C.Chryssomalakos, J.Guven, D.Nunez, H.Quevedo, M.Rosenbaum, M.Salgado, C.Stephens, D.Sudarsky, R.Sussman and A.Turbiner; 3 postdocs and 20 graduate students.
Computing facilities include an internal network of several Linux-PC's, and direct access to UNAM's Linux Cluster. The UNAM library system has roughly 4 million books and subscriptions to most international journals.
The main research interests of the group are:
- Classical and Quantum Gravity
- Numerical Relativity
- Mathematical Physics
- Statistical and Biological Physics, Complex Systems
- Quantum Field Theory
- The Early Universe
For further information, visit:
http://www.nucleares.unam.mx/~gravit/Gravit
or contact the department's head, Prof. C.Stephens, at stephens[AT]nucleares.unam.mx
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.2 Two PhD fellowships in cosmology, University of Oslo
--------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/04/20/two-ph-d-fellowships-in-cosmology-a…
Institution: Oslo, Norway
Deadline: Sat, May 15, 2010
Additional Information: http://uio.easycruit.com/vacancy/400983/64278?iso=no
Two fellowships for a Ph.D. student for 4 years in cosmology. The Ph.D. projects will be on structure formation within dark energy theories. The selected candidates are required to spend 25% of her/his time on teaching or other obligations. The PhD students must start her/his studies at the Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics before 1st October, 2010.
Application deadline: 15th May, 2010.
For further information and application procedure, see http://uio.easycruit.com/vacancy/400983/64278?iso=no.
For further information, contact Dr. David F. Mota, d.f.mota[AT]stro.uio.no
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.3 Postdoctoral Position in Cosmology at the University of Oslo
----------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/04/03/post-doctoral-position-in-cosmology…
Institution: Oslo, Norway
Deadline: Mon, May 31, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.astro.uio.no
A position as postdoctoral research fellow is available at the Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics of the University of Oslo. The fellowship period is 3 years. Salary NOK 438500 - 499500, depending on qualifications and seniority. The selected candidate must be able to start in the position before October 1, 2010.
The research activity of the cosmology group focus on the European flagship mission Planck and the ground based CMB polarization experiment QUIET, and a strong effort in fundamental cosmological theory.
In selection, weight will be given to the documented research potential of the candidates, and to how their research competences can interact with and complement the research activities of one of the two research groups.
For information contact: Head of Department, Professor Per B. Lilje, phone: +47 22856517, e-mail: per.lilje[AT]astro.uio.no
Application must be sent to apply-to[AT]matnat.uio.no before May 31, 2010, and MUST have 'Ref no 2010/4502' as subject. The application must include project description, CV (summarizing education, positions, pedagogical experience, administrative experience and other qualifying activity), copies of educational certificates and letters of recommendation, a complete list of publications and up to 5 academic works that the applicant wishes to be considered by the evaluation committee and names and contact details of 2-3 references (name, relation to candidate, e-mail and telephone number).
=================================================================
3. News
=================================================================
3.1 Abstract Submission Deadline for GR19
-----------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/04/22/subject-abstract-submission-deadlin…
Additional Information: http://www.gr19.com
Dear Colleagues,
I write to remind you that the deadline for submitting abstracts for the GR19 conference is April 30. After the deadline, further submissions will be accepted only on a space-available basis. While the GR19 website (http://www.gr19.com) will continue to forward newly submitted abstracts to the parallel session chairs, the likelihood of space remaining (and thus, of it being possible to accept your abstract) will decline rapidly after this date. The parallel session chairs will begin the process of assembling the final programs May 1.
Best Regards,
Don Marolf
SOC chair for GR19
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.2 Living Reviews in Relativity: "Cosmic Censorship for Gowdy Spacetimes"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/04/19/living-reviews-in-relativity-cosmic…
Additional Information: http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2010-2
Living Reviews in Relativity
http://relativity.livingreviews.org/
ISSN: 1433-8351
Living Reviews in Relativity has published a new review article on "Cosmic Censorship for Gowdy Spacetimes" by Hans Ringström on April 13, 2010.
Please find the abstract and further details below.
------------------
PUB.NO. lrr-2010-2
Ringström, Hans
"Cosmic Censorship for Gowdy Spacetimes"
FULL ARTICLE AT:
http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2010-2
ACCEPTED: 2010-03-29
PUBLISHED: 2010-04-13
(incl. 91 references and 5 figures)
ABSTRACT:
Due to the complexity of Einstein's equations, it is often natural to study a question of interest in the framework of a restricted class of solutions. One way to impose a restriction is to consider solutions satisfying a given symmetry condition. There are many possible choices, but the present article is concerned with one particular choice, which we shall refer to as Gowdy symmetry. We begin the article by explaining the origin and meaning of this symmetry type, which has been used as a simplifying assumption in various contexts, some of which we shall mention. Nevertheless, the subject of interest here is strong cosmic censorship. Consequently, after having described what the Gowdy class of spacetimes is, we describe, as seen from the perspective of a mathematician, what is meant by strong cosmic censorship. The existing results on cosmic censorship are based on a detailed analysis of the asymptotic behaviour of solutions. This analysis is in part motivated by conjecture
s, such as the BKL conjecture, which we shall therefore briefly describe. However, the emphasis of the article is on the mathematical analysis of the asymptotics, due to its central importance in the proof as well as to the hope that it might be of relevance more generally. The article ends with a description of the results that have been obtained concerning strong cosmic censorship in the class of Gowdy spacetimes.
UPCOMING ARTICLES AT:
http://relativity.livingreviews.org/Articles/upcoming.html
1
0
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Table of Contents
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1. Conferences
1.1 2nd Galileo-Xu Guangqi Meeting (second announcement)
1.2 Spanish Relativity Meeting ERE2010: Second Announcement
1.3 Petrov 2010 Anniversary Symposium on General Relativity and Gravitation
1.4 GR19: Second Announcement
1.5 Chalonge School CIAS Meudon Workshop Dark Matter 2010
1.6 GR19: Scientific Program Update
1.7 JGRG20
1.8 International Conference on Two Cosmological Models
2. Jobs
2.1 University Lecturer in Mathematical Physics at Oxford
2.2 Postdoctoral position at Monash University, School of Mathematical Sciences
2.3 One postdoc position in mathematical and/or numerical relativity in Vienna
2.4 PhD Position at Hamburg University
2.5 Two faculty positions in physics at LSU
2.6 Postdoctoral Fellowship in experimental GW research at Syracuse, USA
2.7 Faculty position in experimental gravitation at LSU
2.8 Postdoctoral position in Gravitational Theory at Washington University, St. Louis
3. News
3.1 Back Issues of GRG & CQG
3.2 Structures in the Universe by Exact Methods (book)
3.3 Death of P. C. Vaidya
=================================================================
1. Conferences
=================================================================
1.1 2nd Galileo-Xu Guangqi Meeting (second announcement)
--------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/30/2nd-galileo-xu-guangqi-meeting-2/
Starting Mon, Jul 12, 2010 to Sat, Jul 17, 2010
Location: Nice, France
Additional Information: http://www.icranet.org/2nd_galileo-xuguangqi
Dear Colleagues,
The 2nd Galileo-XuGuangqi meeting follows the 1st meeting of this series held on October 2009 in Shanghai. We plan to continue the format of this meeting addressing topics generally related to Relativistic Astrophysics and theoretical and observational topics. The aim is to enlarge the audience from the one strictly Chinese and Italian to one embracing European and western scientific interests and the Eastern ones. In this sense a broader participation from Korea and Taiwan has been encouraged, as well as a participation of scientists from Europe and the Americas. The goal is to create once a year a forum for strategic exchanges between eastern and western Science at the highest level.
The 2nd "Galileo - Xu Guanqi meeting" will be held July 12 - 17, 2010 at the University of Nice - Sophe Antipolis and at Villa Ratti, Nice (France), where a new ICRANet Center is going to be inaugurated in the month of July.
The preliminary program is:
Monday - July 12
Topics: Black Holes, Neutron Stars and Dark Matter
Chairs: David Arnett and Zhang Chengmin
The preliminary list of contributors will include:
Belinski Vladimir– ICRANet, Pescara - Italy
Bini Donato – CNR, Rome - Italy
Cherubini Christian– Campus Biomedico, Rome - Italy
Geralico Andrea– University of Rome, Italy
Han Wenbiao– University of Rome, Italy
Kerr Roy P. – ICRANet. Italy
Kim Sang Pyo - Kunsan National University, Kunsan - Korea
Kim Sung-Won - Ewha Womans University, Seoul - Korea
Lee Chul Hoon - Hanyang University, Seoul - Korea
Lee Da-Shin - Taiwan DongHwa University, Hualien - China
Lee Hyun Kyu - Hanyang University, Seoul - Korea
Ng K-W - Academia Sinica, Taipei - China
Pugliese Daniela– University of Rome, Italy
Rotondo Michael– University of Rome, Italy
Rueda Jorge A.– Universiry of Rome, Italy
Ruffini Remo - ICRANet and University of Rome, Italy
Sasaki Misao - Osaka University, Toyonaka - Japan
Vissani Francesco–Gran Sasso National Laboratories, Assergi - Italy
Xia Xiaoyang– Tianjin Normal University, Tianjin - China
Xue She-Sheng - ICRANet, Physics Department, University of Rome, Italy
Zhang Chengmin - Beijing Observatory, Beijing - China
Tuesday - July 13
Topics: Large Scale Structure and Early Universe
Chairs: Jaan Einasto and Houjun Mo
The preliminary list of contributors will include:
Aksenov Alexey - Inst. for Theoretical and Experimental Physics, Moscow - Russia
Chen Xuelei - Beijing Observatory, China
Fang Li-Zhi - University of Arizona, Tucson - USA
Feng Longlong - Purple Mountain Observatory, Nanjing - China
Funes José – Specola Vaticana, Città del Vaticano - Italy
Gao Liang - Beijing Observatory, China
Harutyunian Haik - Byurakan Astrophysical Observatory, Armenia
Lattanzi Massimiliano – University of Rome, Italy
Lee Bum-Hoon – Sogang University, Seoul - Korea
Lee Hyung Won - Inje University, Gimhae - Korea
Lee Wolung - National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei - China
Mo Houjun - University of Massachusetts, USA
Novello Mario – CBPF, Rio de Janeiro - Brazil
Siutsou Ivan – University of Rome, Italy
Song Doo Jong - Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute, Daejeon - Korea
Vereshchagin Gregory – ICRANet, Pescara - Italy
Wu Xiang-Ping - Beijing Observatoty, China
Yang Xiaohu - Shanghai Observatory, China
Yang Zhang - University of Science and Technology of China, Hofei - China
Wednesday - July 14
Topics: Gravitational theory, gravitational waves and precision tests of General Relativity
Chairs: François Mignard and Zhaozhong Wang
The preliminary list of contributors will include:
Everitt Francis – Stanford University, USA
Mester John – Stanford University, USA
Pisin Chen – National Taiwan University, Taipei - China
Sigismondi Costantino – University of Rome, Italy
Zhaozhong Wang - Institut de Physique of Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris - France
Thursday - July 15
Topics: Gamma Ray Bursts and Ultra High Energy Sources
Chairs: Michael Boer and Dai Zigao
The preliminary list of contributors will include:
Aharonian Felix - Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, Ireland and Max Planck Institut fur Kernphysis, Germany
Amati Lorenzo – INAF – IASF, Bologna - Italy
Bianco Carlo Luciano – University of Rome and ICRANet, Italy
Caito Letizia – University of Rome, Italy
Capaccioli Massimo – University of Naples, Italy
Chardonnet Pascal – University of Savoie, France
Chincarini Guido – University of Milan, Italy
Dai Zigao – Nanjing University, China
De Barros Gustavo – University of Rome, Italy
Della Valle Massimo – INAF Napoli and ICRANet, Pescara - Italy
Frontera Filippo – University of Ferrara, Italy
Guidorzi Christian – University of Ferrara, Italy
Izzo Luca – University of Rome, Italy
Patricelli Barbara – University of Rome, Italy
Piran Tsvi – Racah Institute of Physics, Jerusalem - Israel
Rangel Lemos Juracy – University of Rome, Italy
Tavani Marco – INAF-IASF Roma, Italy
Friday - July 16
Topics: Scientific Space Missions and International Cooperations (Chinese-French-Italian)
Chairs: Filippo Frontera and Shuang-Nan Zhang
The preliminary list of contributors will include:
Braga Joao – INPE, Sao Paulo - Brazil
Costa Enrico – NAF Roma, Italy
Frontera Filippo – University of Ferrara, Italy
Hu Zhan - Beijing Observatory, China
Shuang-Nan Zhang - TsingHua University, Beijing - China
Wang Lifan - Texas A and M University, USA
Yu Gao - Purple Mountain Observatory, Nanjing – China
We encourage every scientist interested in the meeting to register online using the registration form that can be found on the webpage. The conference fee will be 350 Euros and it will cover coffee breaks, proceedings and the conference banquet.
After the Meeting, the IRAP Ph.D. Erasmus Mundus program will run a summer school, the "Second Bego Rencontres", July 19 - 24, 2010 dedicated to graduate students and researchers.
See the webpages:
http://icranet.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=7&Itemid=370
and
http://www.icranet.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=504&Itemid…
For any information, don't hesitate to contact Pina Barbaro (Pina.BARBARO[AT]unice.fr) or Annapia Del Beato (annapia.delbeato[AT]icranet.org)
Li-Zhi Fang and Remo Ruffini,
Co-Chairs of the "2nd Galileo - Xu Guanqgi meeting"
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.2 Spanish Relativity Meeting ERE2010: Second Announcement
-----------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/27/spanish-relativity-meeting-ere2010-…
Starting Mon, Sep 06, 2010 to Fri, Sep 10, 2010
Location: Granada, Spain
Additional Information: http://www.iaa.es/ere2010
ERE2010: Second Announcement
“Gravity as a Crossroad in Physics”
REGISTRATION IS OPEN!
As recently announced, the 2010 edition of the Spanish Relativity Meeting (ERE2010) will be held in Granada from the 6th to 10th September 2010, hosted by the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA-CSIC). The Spanish Relativity Meeting (ERE) is an international conference organized every year with the main objective of promoting scientific discussion and interchange of knowledge in Relativity and Gravitation in a relaxed atmosphere. ERE2010 edition will have as subtitle “Gravity as a Crossroad in Physics”, aiming at discussing the potential fundamental role of Gravity as an interdisciplinary arena for debate and research in Physics.
1) ORGANIZATION ASPECTS
The webpage of the conference (www.iaa.es/ere2010) has now been updated to include information on:
- Registration (NOW OPEN!):
To register, please proceed through the “Registration” link at the “Main Menu” of the conference webpage. Click then on “Registration Form” and fill the corresponding form.
- Abstract submission: proceed through the “Registration page”.
- Conference venue and facilities.
- Accommodation.
- Travel information to Granada.
2) IMPORTANT DATES:
- 11th of June: Deadline for Abstract Submision.
- 11th of June: Deadline for Application for Financial Support.
- 25th of June: Decision about Financial Support.
- 25th of June: Decision about Contribution Presentations.
- 2nd of July: Deadline for Hotel booking.
- 16th of July: Deadline for Conference Registration.
- 16th of July: Deadline for Payment of Registration Fee.
3) INVITED SPEAKERS:
A. Achúcarro, L. Álvarez-Gaumé, M. Ansorg, A. Ashtekar, F. Barbero, T. Baumgarte, B. Carter, M. Colpi, S. Dain, J. Garriga, S. Liberati, A. Lobo, M. Longair, J.M. Martín-García, G. Mena-Marugán, R. Narayan, T. Padmanabhan, R. Parentani, R. Rebolo, C. Rovelli, A. Sintes, J. Valiente-Kroon, E. Verdaguer, M. Visser, G.E. Volovik and J. Winicour.
4) ERE2010 Advisory Board:
M. Alcubierre (ICN, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México).
A. Ashtekar (Penn State University).
R. Beig (Institute of Theoretical Physics, University of Viena).
C. Cutler (Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Inst. of Technology).
T. Damour (Institute des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques, Paris).
R. Maartens (Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, University of Portsmouth).
F. Quevedo (DAMTP, University of Cambridge).
M. Visser (Victoria University of Wellington).
As we expressed in the First Announcement, we hope that this conference will be of your interest, so that we will meet you in Granada in September.
With best regards,
The Local Organising Committee
Víctor Aldaya, Carlos Barceló (Coordinator), Luis J. Garay, José Luis Jaramillo (Coordinator), Francisco López-Ruiz
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.3 Petrov 2010 Anniversary Symposium on General Relativity and Gravitation
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/27/petrov-2010-anniversary-symposium-o…
Starting Mon, Nov 01, 2010 to Sat, Nov 06, 2010
Location: Kazan, Russia
Additional Information: http://petrov2010.ksu.ru/
Dear colleagues!
The day October 28, 2010 is the 100th anniversary of the birth of Alexey Zinovievich Petrov (1910-1972), an outstanding Soviet scientist in the field of general relativity and gravitation, the founder of the first and only one in the USSR Department of Relativity and Gravitation of Kazan State University (1960). To mark this significant event the international conference "PETROV 2010 ANNIVERSARY SYMPOSIUM ON GENERAL RELATIVITY AND GRAVITATION" (http://petrov2010.ksu.ru) will be held in Kazan, November 1-6, 2010.
TOPICS:
Classical and Quantum Gravity
String and Brane Theory
Supersymmetry and Supergravity
Black Holes and Wormholes
Cosmology and Astrophysics
Field Theory
Geometry and Topology
The registration fee of 150 EUR for participants (400 rub. for Russian participants), 60 EUR for students (including PhD students) and 40 EUR for accompanying persons should be paid in cash on arrival. On behalf of the Organizing Committee we invite you to take part in the conference. Those who wish to participate in the conference should use the electronic registration form on the conference web page (http://petrov2010.ksu.ru) The deadline for registration is May 15, 2010. Please address all technical correspondence and questions to: petrov2010[AT]ksu.ru
or by mail to:
Professor A. V. Aminova, Dr. Sci.
The Head of the Department of Relativity and Gravitation
Physical Faculty
Kazan State University
Kremlyovskaya str. 18
420008 Russia.
The Organizing Committee
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.4 GR19: Second Announcement
-----------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/22/gr19-second-announcement/
Starting Mon, Jul 05, 2010 to Fri, Jul 09, 2010
Location: Mexico City, Mexico
Additional Information: http://www.gr19.com/
This is the second announcement of the 19th International Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation (GR19) that will take place in Mexico City on July 5-9, 2010. The web page is already available at: http://www.gr19.com
Registration and abstract submission are already open. By March 15, 2010 the number of registered participants was 217 and we had received 68 abstracts. We invite you to register and submit your contributions as soon as possible.
We would like to remind you that the LOC is aware of security concerns, and is taking several steps to address this issue. The venue of GR19 is located in a touristic and business area in Mexico City. We will provide all the participants with information regarding cities and regions in Mexico that are not recommended for visitors at this time.
ISGRG-MEMBERS
Members of the International Society of General Relativity and Gravitation should consider that reduced registration fee (470 USD, or 420 USD before May 15) will be available only up to June 11, 2010. After this date the late registration fee (550 USD) will be applied.
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
Limited funds may be available to provide partial support to those who otherwise would be unable to attend GR19. Participants who can demonstrate that they require support to attend the conference should apply via e-mail to the Local Organizing Committee (LOC) at: gr19mexico[AT]nucleares.unam.mx. Partial financial aid is available in the form of reduction of registration fees, travel expenses support, or accommodation support. Applications must be received not later than April 30, and must include a brief CV, recommendation letter from the institution and, for students, copy of a valid student ID and a recommendation letter from the advisor. Applications for financial support must be well justified. Applicants should describe what other sources of funding would be available to them, since any support which can be provided by the LOC will not be sufficient by itself to cover the entire conference costs.
IMPORTANT DATES
April 30 Deadline for abstract submission
May 15 Deadline for early registration
June 11 ISGRG-members' deadline for reduced-fee registration
July 4 Arrival of participants and registration
July 5-9 Scientific and social program of GR19
We will be honored to welcome you as guests in this great country of ours.
Sincerely,
Hernando Quevedo
On behalf of the LOC
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.5 Chalonge School CIAS Meudon Workshop Dark Matter 2010
---------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/09/chalonge-school-cias-meudon-worksho…
Starting Tue, Jun 08, 2010 to Fri, Jun 11, 2010
Location: Meudon, France
Additional Information: http://chalonge.obspm.fr/Cias_Meudon2010.html
Ecole Internationale d'Astrophysique Daniel Chalonge
CIAS Meudon Workshop 2010 "Dark Matter in the Universe and Universal Properties of Galaxies: Theory and Observations"
at the Meudon campus of Observatoire de Paris, CIAS, in the historic Château building, 8-11 June 2010
The Workshop addresses the problem of Dark Matter in the Universe and the Universal properties of Galaxies, with an effort of clarification and synthesis by combining in a conceptual framework, theory, analytical, observational and numerical simulation results. The subject will be approached in a threefold way:
(I) Conceptual context: Dark Matter in cosmology and astrophysics: current status, perspective and prospective of the research in the subject: theory and observations
(II) Astronomical observations linked to the galaxy structural properties and especially to the universal properties of galaxies: high quality rotation curves, kinematics, density profiles, gravitational lensing, small and large structures.
(III) Numerical simulations, large structures, structures and substructures.
Topics: Kinetic theory and the recent progress in solving the Boltzmann-Vlasov equation to obtain the observed universal properties of galaxies. N-body numerical simulations. The dark matter surface density in galaxies. The phase-space density of dark matter.
Particle model independent analysis of astrophysical dark matter. The mass of the dark matter particle at the keV scale as determined from theory combined to observations and numerical simulations. The impact of the mass of the dark matter particle on the small scale structure formation and the choice of the initial conditions. The radial profiles and the Dark Matter distribution. Cores vs. Cusps.
The recently highlighted keV scale Dark Matter.
Sessions last for four full days in the beautiful Meudon campus of Observatoire de Paris, where CIAS "Centre International d´Ateliers Scientifiques" is located. All sessions take place in the historic Château building, (built in 1706 by great architect Jules-Hardouin Mansart in orders by King Louis XIV for his son the Grand Dauphin).
The Meeting is open to all scientists interested in the subject. The format of the Meeting is intended to allow easy and fruitful mutual contact and communication. All Informations about the meeting and registration to it are displayed at: http://chalonge.obspm.fr/Cias_Meudon2010.html
Early Registration is strongly encouraged
With compliments and kind regards,
Chalonge.Ecole[AT]obspm.fr
http://chalonge.obspm.fr/
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.6 GR19: Scientific Program Update
-----------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/08/gr19-scientific-program-update/
Starting Mon, Jul 05, 2010 to Fri, Jul 09, 2010
Location: Mexico City, Mexico
Additional Information: http://www.gr19.com/
Dear Friends and Colleagues,
I wanted to let you know that, in addition to the previously-announced plenary program, a part of the parallel session program for GR19 (July 5-9, 2010, in Mexico City) is now in place. Don't worry if you have not yet submitted your own abstract (or if you have, but it has not yet been accepted). The deadline for abstract submission is April 30, and there is plenty of space left for additional talks. Many more abstracts will be accepted once the deadline has passed. The names below are just a teaser to show you how exciting the program will be!
Looking forward to seeing you in Mexico City,
Don Marolf
SOC Chair for GR19
____________________________________
Plenary program:
Tom Abel
Star Formation Then and Now
Patrick Brady
Global network of gravitational-wave detectors: observations and implications
Mihalis Dafermos
Recent progress in mathematical relativity
Andrea Ghez
Observing the Supermassive Black Hole at the Center of Our Galaxy
Stefan Hollands
Black hole uniqueness in diverse settings
Gary Horowitz
Surprising connections btwn gravity and condensed matter physics
Veronika Hubeny
(AdS) Black hole physics as fluid dynamics
David McClelland
Quantum technologies for gravitational wave detectors
Jeffrey McClintock
Black hole spins: observations, expectations, and implications
Slava Mukhanov
Verifying Inflation and Probing Dark Energy
Frans Pretorius
Advances in numerical relativity
Carlo Rovelli
Progress in loop gravity and spin foams
Tarun Souradeep
Standard Cosmology & Beyond with CMB
Ingrid Stairs
Testing GR with binary pulsars
Rainer Weiss
Current performance and near term prospects for ground based interferometric gravitational wave detectors
____________________________________
Partial Parallel program:
(each session will accept many more talks in May (after the April 30 abstract submission deadline)
A1 Exact Solutions and their Interpretation
Chair: Harvey Reall
Partial List of speakers:
Piotr Chrusciel
Valeri Frolov
Jiri Bicak
Carlos Herdeiro
James Lucietti
Vojtech Pravda
Juan Valiente-Kroon
A2 Mathematical Relativity and Other Progress in Classical Gravity Theory
Chair: Sergio Dain
Partial List of speakers:
Robert Wald
Helmut Friedrich
Piotr T. Chrus'ciel
Jim Isenberg
A3 Modified Gravity Theories
Chair: Cedric Deffayet
Partial List of speakers:
Petr Horava
Rachael Bean
B1 Relativistic Astrophysics
Chair: Tvsi Piran
Partial List of speakers:
Pawan Kumer
William Lee
Elena Gallo
Elena Rossi.
B2 Numerical Relativity and Astrophysical Applications
Chair: Manuela Campanelli
Partial List of speakers:
Miguel Alcubierre
Harald Pfeiffer
Pablo Laguna
Christian Ott
B3 Analytic Approximations and Perturbation Methods and their Applications
Chair: Alessandra Buonanno
Partial List of speakers:
Luc Blanchet
Leor Barack
Ajith Parameswaran
Vitor Cardoso
B4 Physical Cosmology and Gravitational Lensing
Chair: Buvnesh Jain
B5 Theoretical/Mathematical Cosmology
Chair: Robert Brandenberger
C1 Current ground-based GW detectors: Experiments
Chair: Seiji Kawamura
Partial List of speakers:
Andrzej Krolak (IMPAN) Virgo
Valery Frolov (LIGO Livingston Observatory) LIGO
Jim Hough (Glasgow) GEO
Shinji Miyoki (ICRR) CLIO/TAMA
C2 Ground-based GW detectors: Data analysis and techniques
Chair: Marie Anne Bizouard
C3 Advanced ground-based GW detectors (R&D for and science from)
Chair: Nergis Mavalvala
C4 Space-based GW detectors: Theory and experiment
Chair: Stefano Vitale
Partial List of speakers:
Oliver Jennrich
Stanislav Babak
Jonathan Gair
Tomotada Akutsu
Ilya Mandel
Guido Mueller
Peter Wass
C5 Experimental gravitation
Chair: Eric Adelberger
Partial List of speakers:
Stephan Schlamminger
Stefan Baessler
D1 Loop Quantum Gravity and Spin Foams
Chair: Alejandro Corichi
Partial List of speakers:
Abhay Ashtekar
Bianca Dittrich
Laurent Freidel
Parampeet Singh
D2 Strings, branes and M-theory
Chair: Shiraz Minwalla
Partial List of speakers:
Petr Horava
Xi Yin
Wei Song
D3 Causal sets, Causal dynamical triangulations, Non-commutative geometry, and other approaches to quantum gravity
Chair: Fay Dowker
Partial List of speakers:
Renate Loll
David Rideout
Steve Carlip
Daniel Litim
D4 Quantum fields in curved space-time, semiclassical gravity, quantum gravity phenomenology, and analog models
Chair: Bill Unruh
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.7 JGRG20
----------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/04/the-20th-conference-on-general-rela…
Starting Tue, Sep 21, 2010 to Sat, Sep 25, 2010
Location: Kyoto, Japan
Additional Information: http://www2.yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~jgrg20/
The 20th conference on general relativity and gravitation in Japan (JGRG20)
About JGRG20 conference
The 20th conference on general relativity and gravitation in Japan (JGRG20) will be held from September 21 to 25, 2010, at Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kyoto University. The information is available at http://www2.yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~jgrg20/. The webpage includes (partial) information of invited speakers and a link to register and submit a possible contributed presentation. The site will be updated shortly with the final list of speakers.
Takashi Nakamura and Kei-ichi Maeda, who have been the primary organizers of the JGRGs, will be 60 years old in September and October 2010, respectively. We are going to celebrate their 60th birthday in JGRG20.
Scientific Organizing Committee
Hideki Asada (Hirosaki University)
Takeshi Chiba (Nihon University)
Tomohiro Harada (Rikkyo University)
Kunihito Ioka, Hideo Kodama (KEK)
Hideki Ishihara, Ken'ichi Nakao (Osaka City University)
Yasufumi Kojima (Hiroshima University)
Kei-ichi Maeda, Shoichi Yamada (Waseda University)
Shinji Mukohyama (IPMU)
Takashi Nakamura, Naoki Seto, Tetsuya Shiromizu, Jiro Soda (Kyoto University)
Yasusada Nambu, Naoshi Sugiyama (Nagoya University)
Ken-ichi Oohara (Niigata University)
Misao Sasaki, Masaru Shibata, Takahiro Tanaka (YITP)
Masahide Yamaguchi (Aoyama Gakuin University)
Jun'ichi Yokoyama (RESCEU)
Local Organizing Committee (Kyoto University)
Masaru Shibata, Takashi Nakamura, Misao Sasaki, Takahiro Tanaka, Jiro Soda, Tetsuya Shiromizu, Naoki Seto, Kenta Kiuchi, Koutarou Kyutoku
Contact address
Email: jgrg20[AT]yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.8 International Conference on Two Cosmological Models
-------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/02/international-conference-on-two-cos…
Starting Wed, Nov 17, 2010 to Fri, Nov 19, 2010
Location: Mexico City, Mexico
Additional Information: http://www.uia.mx/cosmo/
The objective of the international conference is to gather experts in the field of cosmology in order to explain and discuss the different cosmological models used to interpret the same cosmological data. The first day, spiral galaxy rotational velocity curves are analyzed; the second day, galaxy cluster gravitational dynamics; and the third day, the acceleration of the expansion of the universe. The principal cosmological models used to interpret these data, are the standard Lambda-CDM, on the one hand, and on the other hand, alternative relativistic models that have been proposed in recent years by different astrophysicists. If it were the case that radically different models could explain the data, and if no observable difference in the predictions would exist, then one would face the problem of how to decide which model is to be preferred. This question belongs to the realms of the philosophy of science, and a possible answer can be found from the point of view of Karl Po
pper's representation of that discipline.
Dates: November 17th, 18th and 19th, 2010
Place: Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico City
Hotel: Hotel Camino Real, Santa Fe, Mexico City
=================================================================
2. Jobs
=================================================================
2.1 University Lecturer in Mathematical Physics at Oxford
---------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/30/university-lecturer-in-mathematical…
Institution: Oxford, UK
Deadline: Fri, Apr 23, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.maths.ox.ac.uk/node/12341
The Mathematical Institute proposes to appoint a University Lecturer in Mathematical Physics with effect from 1 October 2010 or as soon as possible thereafter. The successful candidate will be offered a Tutorial Fellowship by Hertford College, under arrangements described in the further particulars. The salary will be on a scale up to £57,201 per annum with substantial additional benefits.
The successful candidate will be expected to have a PhD in Mathematics and must have a record of outstanding research in some branch of Mathematical Physics. The field will be interpreted broadly, with particular emphasis on its links with partial differential equations and geometry.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.2 Postdoctoral position at Monash University, School of Mathematical Sciences
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/22/postdoctoral-position-at-monash-uni…
Institution: Melbourne, Australia
Deadline: Mon, May 31, 2010
Additional Information: http://monash.turborecruit.com.au/job/job_details.cfm?id=452147
Applicants are invited to apply for a two-year fixed term postdoctoral position (Level A) in the School of Mathematical Sciences at Monash University with an anticipated start date of September 1, 2010. The position is funded by an ARC grant to develop a mathematical foundation for the Newtonian limit and post-Newtonian expansions in general relativity.
It is expected that the successful application will spend part of their time on research outlined in the grant. Preference will be given to candidates who have experience with one or more of the following research areas: geometric optics and singular limits of hyperbolic PDE’s, wave equations, mathematical relativity, and/or numerical relativity.
The closing date for the position is Monday May 31, 2010.
For more information see
http://monash.turborecruit.com.au/job/job_details.cfm?id=452147
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.3 One postdoc position in mathematical and/or numerical relativity in Vienna
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/12/a-postdoc-position-in-mathematical-…
Institution: Vienna, Austria
Deadline: Mon, May 31, 2010
Additional Information: http://personalwesen.univie.ac.at/for-applicants/?L=2
The Gravitational Physics group of the Department of Physics of University of Vienna (see http://gravity.univie.ac.at/) is seeking to fill a post-doctoral position (Universitätsassistent/in) in the field of mathematical general relativity and/or numerical general relativity; in the latter case candidates with strong interest in rigorous aspects of numerical analysis will be sought. The initial appointment will be for two years, with a possibility of extension. The employment could start as early as mid June 2010, and we wish to fill the position before October 2010 in any case.
The list of members of the group, including scientifically active retired members, includes Peter Aichelburg, Robert Beig, Piotr Chrusciel, Mark Hannam, Mark Heinzle, Helmut Rumpf and Helmut Urbantke.
The gross salary is EUR 3248,70.- fourteen times a year. The teaching load is four hours/week, in English or in German.
Applications should be done online before May 31, 2010 at URL
http://personalwesen.univie.ac.at/for-applicants/?L=2
(position numbered "Kennzahl 1039")
The candidates should arrange to have three letters of recommendation to be sent to
Mrs Karin Picek,
Mathematical Physics,
Faculty of Physics,
Boltzmanngasse 5/5/3521,
A-1090
Vienna, Austria
before end May 2010. Further enquiries can be directed to karin.picek[AT]univie.ac.at
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.4 PhD Position at Hamburg University
--------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/10/phd-position-at-hamburg-university/
Institution: Hamburg, Germany
Deadline: Sun, Apr 11, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.math.uni-hamburg.de/home/meusburger/positions.html
A PhD position in the subjects mathematical physics / quantum gravity will be available at the Department of Mathematics at Hamburg University. The successful applicant will be part of the Emmy Noether Junior Research Group "Conceptual Questions of Quantum Gravity and Mathematical Structures in Three-Dimensional Gravity" funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG).
The research group currently consists of Dr. Catherine Meusburger, Dr. Winston Fairbairn and Dipl. Phys. Torsten Schoenfeld. It interacts closely with research groups at Hamburg University's Mathematics and Physics department as well as DESY. It also partipates in the Center for Mathematical Physics and the Collaborative Research Center "Particles, Strings and the Early Universe" (SFB 676).
The starting date of the position is from June 2010. Applicants must have a Master (or equivalent) in either mathematics or physics, excellent background knowledge in both of these subjects and should be interested in working at their interface.
They should email the following application documents to catherine.meusburger[AT]uni-hamburg.de :
1. Detailed Curriculum Vitae
2. List of courses taken, with brief description of content, transcript of degree
3. Summary of master project or thesis (1- 2 pages)
4. Names and contact information of two referees which have agreed to be contacted and to provide an opinion about the applicant.
The application deadline is April 11 2010.
Further information about the positions and the research group can be found at
http://www.math.uni-hamburg.de/home/meusburger/positions.html
For questions or informal enquiries please contact catherine.meusburger[AT]uni-hamburg.de.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.5 Two faculty positions in physics at LSU
-------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/09/two-faculty-positions-in-physics/
Institution: Baton Rouge, LA, U.S.A.
Deadline: Mon, Apr 05, 2010
Additional Information: https://lsusystemcareers.lsu.edu/applicants/Central?quickFind=51804
The Department of Physics and Astronomy at Louisiana State University invites applications for two faculty positions in physics starting in the fall of 2010. Preference will be given to candidates working in loop quantum gravity.
The faculty in the gravity theory group at LSU consists of Gabrielle Allen, Peter Diener, Robert O'Connell, Jorge Pullin, Erik Schnetter and Edward Seidel (on leave at the National Science Foundation). There is also a quantum information technology group at LSU led by Jonathan Dowling, a theoretical astrophysics group led by Juhan Frank and Joel Tohline, and an experimental gravity group led by Joe Giaime, Gabriela Gonzalez and Warren Johnson. The Department has strong research efforts in particle physics, including nuclear and neutrino physics, space physics, condensed matter physics, medical physics, and astronomy and astrophysics.
Deadline for applications is April 5, 2010. See the full ad at:
https://lsusystemcareers.lsu.edu/applicants/Central?quickFind=51804
THE LSU SYSTEM IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/EQUAL ACCESS EMPLOYER
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.6 Postdoctoral Fellowship in experimental GW research at Syracuse, USA
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/05/postdoctoral-fellowship-in-experime…
Institution: Syracuse, NY, U.S.A.
Deadline: Sat, May 15, 2010
The Syracuse University Gravitational-Wave Group invites application for a postdoctoral research position in experimental gravitational-wave advanced detector research, starting in September 1, 2010 or possibly earlier. The initial appointment will be for one year, renewable up to three years contingent on continued funding and satisfactory performance.
The successful candidate's research will be focused on quantum noise limited opto-mechanical sensing and control of macroscopic mirrors, sub-Standard-Quantum-Limit sensing techniques, low noise optics suspensions and optical trapping.
The Syracuse Gravitational-Wave Group currently consists of faculty members Stefan Ballmer, Duncan Brown and Peter Saulson, one senior scientist, 2 postdocs and 6 graduate students. The group has a broad range of research interests including gravitational-wave advanced detector research, gravitational-wave detector commissioning and characterization, gravitational-wave phenomenology and data analysis, and relativity theory. The group is a member of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration and collaborates with the Caltech-Cornell and CITA numerical relativity groups. The Syracuse group has excellent computing facilities, including a 320 CPU core Intel Xeon cluster for gravitational wave data analysis and modeling.
For full consideration qualified candidates must complete an online management application at www.sujobopps.com (job #026061) and attach their curriculum vitae, list of publications, a statement describing their qualifications, and arrange for three letters of reference to be sent to Prof. Peter Saulson at saulson[AT]physics.syr.edu or
Prof. Peter Saulson
Department of Physics 201 Physics Building
Syracuse University
Syracuse, NY 13244, USA
Application materials should be submitted by May 15, 2010 for full consideration, but the screening process will continue until the position is filled. Syracuse University is an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer. Members of minority groups and women are especially encouraged to apply.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.7 Faculty position in experimental gravitation at LSU
-------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/04/faculty-position-in-experimenal-gra…
Institution: Baton Rouge, LA, U.S.A.
Deadline: Mon, Apr 05, 2010
Additional Information: https://lsusystemcareers.lsu.edu/applicants/Central?quickFind=51843
The Department of Physics & Astronomy at Louisiana State University invites applications for a faculty position starting in the fall of 2010. The rank of the position is that of Assistant Professor but consideration at a higher rank will be possible for exceptional candidates. The Assistant/Associate/Full Professor teaches at the undergraduate and graduate levels; supervises graduate students' research and dissertations; establishes a vigorous research program in experimental gravitational physics. Preference will be given to candidates working on novel technologies for future gravitational wave detectors.
The faculty in LSU's experimental gravity group include Joe Giaime, Gabriela Gonzalez, William Hamilton (emeritus), and Warren Johnson. The group carries out an active research program, largely as part of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, with an extensive presence at the LIGO Livingston Observatory situated 24 miles from campus. LSU also hosts a theoretical gravity group consisting of Gabrielle Allen, Peter Diener, Robert O'Connell, Jorge Pullin, Erik Schnetter, and Edward Seidel (on leave at the National Science Foundation). Two new faculty will be added to the theoretical gravity group soon. There is also a quantum information technology group at LSU led by Jonathan Dowling, and a theoretical astrophysics group led by Juhan Frak and Joel Tohline. The Department of Physics and Astronomy at LSU has strong research efforts in particle physics, including nuclear and neutrino physics, space physics, condensed matter physics, medical physics and astronomy and astrophysics.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.8 Postdoctoral position in Gravitational Theory at Washington University, St. Louis
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/03/postdoctoral-position-in-gravitatio…
Institution: St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.
Deadline: Mon, May 31, 2010
WUGRAV POSTDOCTORAL POSITION
McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences
Department of Physics
Washington University, St. Louis
A postdoctoral position will be available in the Gravitation Group WUGRAV of the McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences and the Department of Physics beginning in the fall of 2010, although a later starting time is negotiable. Applications are invited from theorists with research interests in the area of general relativity, with specific emphasis on theoretical aspects of gravitational radiation, post-Newtonian theory, strong-field tests of GR, or numerical relativity. The appointment is for one year, with renewal possible, subject to satisfactory performance and continued funding.
At present, the WUGRAV group consists of Professors Clifford Will and Wai-Mo Suen, post-doctoral fellow Hui-Min Zhang, and four graduate students. The main foci of the group are the post-Newtonian study of inspiralling binary systems, issues in gravitational-wave data analysis, numerical simulations of coalescing and collapsing compact bodies, the interface between post-Newtonian theory and numerical relativity, and theoretical aspects of test of GR.
Send curriculum vita, statement of research interests, and three letters of reference via email, to cmw[AT]wuphys.wustl.edu. Because of the lateness of this notice, applications will be reviewed immediately.
If regular mail or FAX is the only means available, send to the St. Louis address below.
Professor Clifford M. Will
Department of Physics, Campus Box 1105
Washington University
One Brookings Drive
St. Louis, MO 63130-4899
Fax: 314 935 6219
=================================================================
3. News
=================================================================
3.1 Back Issues of GRG & CQG
--------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/31/back-issues-of-grg-cqg/
I have more or less complete journal runs of
Classical & Quantum Gravity (1984-present)
General Relativity & Gravitation 1972, 1975, 1978-84 & 1993-Jun 2005
Quarterly J. Roy. Astr. Soc. 1971-1996
which I want to get rid of due to my impending retirement and lack of office space. The journals would be free to any institution or deserving individual prepared to collect them from Birmingham (or who is prepared to pay for packing & carriage).
Alan Barnes
Aston University
Birmingham UK
Email: barnesa[AT]aston.ac.uk
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.2 Structures in the Universe by Exact Methods (book)
------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/16/structures-in-the-universe-by-exact…
Additional Information: http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521769143
Authors: Krzysztof Bolejko, Andrzej Krasiński, Charles Hellaby, Marie-Noëlle Célérier
As the structures in our Universe are mapped out on ever larger scales, and with increasing detail, the use of inhomogeneous models is becoming an essential tool for analyzing and understanding them. This book reviews a number of important developments in the application of inhomogeneous solutions of Einstein's field equations to cosmology. It shows how inhomogeneous models can be employed to study the evolution of structures such as galaxy clusters and galaxies with central black holes, and to account for cosmological observations like supernovae dimming, the cosmic microwave background, baryon acoustic oscillations or the dependence of the Hubble parameter on redshift within classical general relativity. Whatever `dark matter' and `dark energy' turn out to be, inhomogeneities exist on many scales and need to be investigated with all appropriate methods. This book is of great value to all astrophysicists and researchers working in cosmology, from graduate students to academi
c researchers.
The book presents inhomogeneous cosmological models, allowing readers to familiarise themselves with basic properties of these models. It shows how inhomogeneous models can be used to analyse cosmological observations such as supernovae, cosmic microwave background, and baryon acoustic oscillations. The book reviews important developments in the application of inhomogeneous solutions of Einstein's field equations to cosmology.
For details, see:
http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521769143
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.3 Death of P. C. Vaidya
-------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/12/death-of-pc-vaidya/
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 2010 09:57:16 +0530
From: aragam prasanna <...>
To: hyperspace[AT]aei.mpg.de
Subject: PC Vaidya
Dear Malcolm,
I am deeply sad to inform you and the international General Relativity Community of the passing away of Professor P C Vaidya, this morning. He was ailing for sometime in the last year and it finally ended with the cardiac arrest. Kindly put this information in a special bulletin if possible to the GR community.
Yours sincerely
Prasanna.A.R.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Indian Association for General Relativity and Gravitation
Date: Fri, Mar 12, 2010 at 2:39 PM
To: iagrg[AT]imsc.res.in
Subject: PC Vaidya (March 23, 1918 - March 12, 2010)
Dear IAGRG Member,
It saddens me to convey the news that Professor Prahalad Chunnilal Vaidya passed away on March 12, 2010 in the early hours. He was 92.
Prof Vaidya holds a very special place for the IAGRG community. It was his proposal that lead to the founding of the IAGRG in 1969. He was instrumental in nurturing the IAGRG.
An obituary will be displayed on the IAGRG site: http://meghnad.iucaa.ernet.in
Ghanashyam Date,
Secretary, IAGRG
Link to the news item:
http://deshgujarat.com/2010/03/12/veteran-gandhian-mathematician-p-c-vaidya…
1
0
#################################################################
Table of Contents
#################################################################
1. Conferences
1.1 XIVth Brazilian School of Cosmology and Gravitation
1.2 CAPRA and NRDA 2010 (2nd announcement)
1.3 Workshop on Relativistic Positioning Systems and Gravimetry
1.4 Eastern Gravity Meeting (2nd announcement)
1.5 Chandra Centennial Symposium
1.6 Quantum Field Theory and Gravity (QFTG10)
2. Jobs
2.1 Erasmus Mundus Relativistic Astrophysics Ph.D. Deadline Postponed to March 15, 2010
2.2 Postdoc + PhD positions in Gravitational Wave (Astro)physics at Radboud University Nijmegen
2.3 Chair School of Physics at Georgia Tech
2.4 Temporary Lectureship in Theoretical Cosmology at University of Cambridge
2.5 Two VESF Fellowships for theoretical research on GW detection
3. News
3.1 Living Reviews in Relativity: "Interferometer Techniques for Gravitational-Wave Detection"
3.2 Bids for GR20 and GR21
=================================================================
1. Conferences
=================================================================
1.1 XIVth Brazilian School of Cosmology and Gravitation
-------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/25/xivth-brazilian-school-of-cosmology…
Starting Mon, Aug 30, 2010 to Sat, Sep 11, 2010
Location: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
The 14th edition of the BSCG will take place from August 30 to September 11, 2010 in Rio de Janeiro. The goal of the School is to put together lecturers, young researchers and students from different countries in an environment that enables discussion and exchange of ideas. The list of plenary speakers (which will deliver a set of 5 lectures each) for this edition includes B. Mashhoon, A. Helfer, F. Mirabel, V. Belinski, C. Hellaby, and N. Berkovits. There will be also advanced seminars. More information will be available soon.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.2 CAPRA and NRDA 2010 (2nd announcement)
------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/24/theory-meets-data-analysis-at-compa…
Starting Sun, Jun 20, 2010 to Sat, Jun 26, 2010
Location: Waterloo, ON, Canada
Additional Information: https://www.perimeterinstitute.ca/Events/Theory_Meets_Data_Analysis/Theory_…
CAPRA & NRDA 2010: Theory Meets Data Analysis at Comparable and Extreme Mass Ratios
(Second Circular)
Please note registration is now open at:
https://www.perimeterinstitute.ca/Events/Theory_Meets_Data_Analysis/Theory_…
The webpage includes (partial) information of speakers and a link to register and submit a possible contributed talk. The site will be updated shortly with the final list of speakers together with accommodations info.
Please register as soon as possible so as to have an approximate head-count and to firm up the schedule of contributed talks. Notice that the deadline for submission of abstracts is Saturday, March 20, 2010. After this date, approval will depend on availability. Last, note this conference joins two traditionally distinct but related ones: CAPRA and NRDA. The schedule will be such that June 20, 21, 22 will concentrate on the CAPRA theme. June 23rd a "bridge'' date between the two communities and June 24, 25, 26 will focus on the NRDA side.
Sincerely,
Stephen Fairhurst, Cardiff University
Gabriela Gonzalez, Louisiana State University
Luis Lehner, Perimeter Institute/University of Guelph
Yuk Tung Liu, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
Harald Pfeiffer, CITA, University of Toronto
Eric Poisson, University of Guelph
Bernard Whiting, University of Florida
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.3 Workshop on Relativistic Positioning Systems and Gravimetry
---------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/24/workshop-relativistic-positioning-s…
Starting Mon, Apr 26, 2010 to Mon, Apr 26, 2010
Location: Noordwijk, The Netherlands
Additional Information: http://www.esa.int/gsp/ACT/events/workshops/Apr10_RPS_Workshop.htm
Relativistic Positioning Systems and Gravimetry: From a Paradigm Shift to Practical Applications
The Advanced Concepts Team of the European Space Agency organizes a one-day workshop on relativistic positioning systems and relativistic gravimetry. Researchers are welcome to present their latest research in this field. The list of topics can include (but is not limited to):
* Time transfer in General Relativity
* Properties of emission coordinates
* Relativistic positioning systems
* Relativistic reference frames
* Relativistic gravimetry
Here is a list of Preliminary speakers:
* Angelo Tartaglia (Politecnico di Torino)
* J.-Fernando Pascual-Sanchez (University of Valladolid)
* Serge Reynaud (Kastler Brossel laboratory)
* Andrej Čadež and Uros Kostić (University of Ljubljana)
* Marc Lachièze-Rey (CEA, Saclay) (tbc)
* Clovis de Matos (ESA)
Some time will be devoted to discussion. The workshop will be followed by a diner. No fee is asked for the registration.
Dates and location
April, 26th 2010
Conference room Einstein
ESTEC, Noordwijk, Netherlands.
Registration (deadline April 17th)
The registration for the workshop is open until April 17th. To register please send an email to fairouz.nasr[AT]esa.int or pacome.delva[AT]esa.int . If you want to give a presentation, put in this email the title of your talk and a short abstract.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.4 Eastern Gravity Meeting (2nd announcement)
----------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/18/eastern-gravity-meeting/
Starting Fri, May 21, 2010 to Sat, May 22, 2010
Location: Raleigh, NC, U.S.A.
Additional Information: http://www.physics.ncsu.edu/EGM13/
EGM13 SECOND ANNOUNCEMENT
The 13th Eastern Gravity Meeting will be hosted by the Department of Physics at North Carolina State University. The meeting will take place in Riddick Hall on the NCSU campus on May 21-22, 2010. Participation is encouraged by researchers, especially students, in all areas of gravitational physics. Since this is a regional meeting, most participants are expected to come from the east coast of North America, but all are welcome.
TALKS
The meeting will follow the format of previous Eastern Gravity Meetings. All presentations will be the same length, approximately 10-15 minutes. Every effort will be made to accommodate all submissions.
REGISTRATION
No registration fee will be charged, and no financial support will be provided. All attendees are encouraged to register at http://www.physics.ncsu.edu/EGM13/ . Attendees who would like to present a talk must register for the conference.
HOTEL ACCOMODATIONS
A block of rooms has been set aside at the Holiday Inn/Brownstone Hotel. The conference rate is $80/night. The deadline for this special rate is Thursday, April 29, 2010. You should reference "EGM13 Physics Conference" or "PHY" when making your reservation. The Holiday Inn/Brownstone is essentially the only hotel within walking distance of the NCSU campus. It is approximately 1/2 mile from Riddick Hall.
STUDENT PRIZE
A $200 prize for the best talk by a student will be sponsored by the APS Topical Group on Gravitation (GGR).
CONTACT INFORMATION
Further questions can be directed to david_brown[AT]ncsu.edu. Up-to-date information can be found at the conference website: http://www.physics.ncsu.edu/EGM13/
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.5 Chandra Centennial Symposium
---------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/13/chandra-centennial-symposium/
Starting Sat, Oct 16, 2010 to Sun, Oct 17, 2010
Location: Chicago, USA
October 19, 2010 will be the 100th anniversary of the birth of S. Chandrasekhar (Chandra). Kamesh Wali and I are co-chairs of an international organizing committee for the planning of a Chandra Centennial Symposium, to be held on the University of Chicago campus on the weekend of October 16-17, 2010. The confirmed speakers and talk titles are as follows:
Freeman Dyson (IAS) "Chandra's Role in 20th Century Science"
Valeria Ferrari (Rome) "Gravitational Waves from Perturbed Stars"
John Friedman (Milwaukee) "Instabilities of Rotating Stars"
Gordon Garmire (Penn State) "The Chandra X-ray Telescope"
Jayant Narlikar (IUCAA)"Chandra's Impact on Indian Astronomy"
Priyamvada Natarajan (Yale) "The Formation and Growth of Super-Massive Black Holes"
Jerry Ostriker (Princeton) (title TBA)
Roger Penrose (Oxford) "Mathematical Properties of Black Holes and Colliding Plane Waves"
Martin Rees (Cambridge) "Chandra's Scientific Legacy"
G. Srinivasen (Raman Institute) "Chandra and Ramanujan;
Chandra's Other Connections with India"
Rashid Sunyaev (MPA, Garching) (title TBA)
James Stone (Princeton) "Magnetohydrodynamics in Astrophysical Contexts"
Kip Thorne (Caltech) "Black Holes"
Clifford M. Will (Washington Univ.) "The Post-Newtonian Approximation"
In addition, October 15, 2010 will be the 100th birthday of Chandra's widow, Lalitha, so we will hold a special celebration for her at the opening reception that evening. We will set up a website soon, which will provide further information and details, but please mark your calendars now.
Bob Wald
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.6 Quantum Field Theory and Gravity (QFTG10)
---------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/10/quantum-field-theory-and-gravity-qf…
Starting Mon, Jul 05, 2010 to Fri, Jul 09, 2010
Location: Tomsk, Russia
Additional Information: http://qftg2010.tspu.edu.ru/
TOMSK STATE PEDAGOGICAL UNIVERSITY CENTRE OF THEORETICAL РHYSICS
International Conference
"Quantum Field Theory and Gravity (QFTG10)"
(Tomsk, July 5 – July 9, 2009)
International Advisory Board:
M. Asorey (University of Zaragoza), I. Arefeva (Steklov Mathematical Institute), P. Argyres (University of Cincinnati), M. Chaichian (University of Helsinki), M. Cvetic (University of Pennsylvania), E. Elizalde (Institute for Cosmic Study, Barcelona),D. Galtsov (Moscow State University), S.J. Gates (University of Maryland), E. Ivanov (JINR, Dubna), D. Kazakov (JINR, Dubna), O. Lechtenfeld (Hanover University),V. Melnikov (Center for Gravitation and Fundamental Metrology, Moscow), L. Mezincescu (University of Miami), V. Mukhanov (Munich University), S. Nojiri (Nagoya University), H. Osborn (University of Cambridge), B. Ovrut (University of Pennsylvania), V. Rubakov (Institute for Nuclear Research,Moscow), A. Sagnotti (Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa), M. Sasaki (Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kyoto), D. Sorokin (INFN, Padova Section), A. Tseytlin (Imperial College, London), I. Tyutin (Lebedev Physical Institute), M. Vasiliev (Lebedev Physical Institute), I. V
olovich (Steklov Mathematical Institute), R. Woodard (University of Florida), G. Zoupanos (National Technical University, Athens)
The main topics:
Supersymmetric Field Theory,
String/Brane Theory
Higher Spin Field Theory
Classical and Quantum Gravity
Cosmology
Field Theory and Mathematical Physics
=================================================================
2. Jobs
=================================================================
2.1 Erasmus Mundus Relativistic Astrophysics Ph.D. Deadline Postponed to March 15, 2010
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/28/erasmus-mundus-relativistic-astroph…
Institution: Europe
Deadline: Mon, Mar 15, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.irap-phd.org
The International Relativistic Astrophysics PhD is a newly established international doctorate program in astrophysics that has been selected by the European Commission as an Erasmus Mundus Joint Doctorate
http://eacea.ec.europa.eu/erasmus_mundus/results_compendia/selected_project… .
This PhD program has a duration of 3 years and is developed within a consortium:
- UNIVERSITE DE NICE - SOPHIA ANTIPOLIS, France (Coordinating institution)
- SHANGHAI ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORY, China
- FREE UNIVERSITY OF BERLIN, Germany
- AEI - POTSDAM, Germany
- TARTU OBSERVATORY, Estonia
- STOCKHOLM UNIVERSTIY, Sweden
- UNIVERSITY OF FERRARA, Italy
- UNIVERSITY OF ROME - LA SAPIENZA, Italy
- BRAZILIAN CENTRE FOR PHYSICS RESEARCH, Brazil
- OBSERVATORY OF THE CÔTE D'AZUR, France
- INDIAN CENTRE FOR SPACE PHYSICS, India
- INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR RELATIVISTIC ASTROPHYSICS NETWORK, Italy
- UNIVERSITY OF SAVOIE, France
Applications are now solicited for the course starting in September 2010.
*Deadline for Application: March 15, 2010*
We invite applications from top-ranked students that either hold or are expected to obtain before August 2010 a Masters Degree or the equivalent in Theoretical Physics, Astronomy, Astrophysics, Mathematics or closely related fields. A certified good knowledge of the English language is required. The selection of students is primarily based on excellence.
10 Erasmus Mundus Doctorate Fellowships will be made available by the European Commission, with a monthly stipend of 2800 € plus travel allowance*
Full information about the IRAP PhD program, the application form, the current poster, and detailed instructions on how to apply can be found at the web-site:
http://www.irap-phd.org/
The contact e-mail for inquiries is Pascal Chardonnet: chardonnet[AT]lapp.in2p3.fr
Please bring this announcement to the attention of interested and capable candidates.
Prof. Remo Ruffini
Director of Erasmus Mundus IRAP PhD
ICRANet and University of ROMA La Sapienza
ruffini[AT]icra.it
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.2 Postdoc + PhD positions in Gravitational Wave (Astro)physics at Radboud University Nijmegen
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/15/post-doc-phd-positions-gravitationa…
Institution: Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Deadline: Thu, Apr 01, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.astro.ru.nl/wiki/news/vacancies
Applications are invited for a 3 yr(+) postdoctoral research position and two (4 yr) PhD positions in the exciting new field of complementarity of electro-magnetic and gravitational-wave (GW) observations.
The positions are funded through a large national program focusing on direct detection of GWs, fundamental physics and preparation for the GW observatories LISA and Einstein Telescope (ET). In Nijmegen a GW data analysis group will focus on enhancing the (astro)physics of GW detection using electro-magnetic data.
The postdoctoral researcher must have a PhD in Physics or Astronomy and preferably have experience with GW data analysis. The post-doc will play an important role in the supervision of the PhD students and the planning of the project. Part of the time can be spend on own research projects. The PhD projects will focus on electro-magnetic signals for LISA (including verification binaries) and possible LISA - ET synergies. Gross salaries are on the standard university scales for post-docs and PhD students (between 2750-3750 and 2050 to 2600 €/month)
Applications, consisting of a letter of interest, a CV and list of publications should be submitted by e-mail, as well as details of three possible references. Review of applications will begin on April 1, 2010 and continue until all positions have been filled.
The department of Astrophysics is a young, vibrant group (~15 faculty/postdocs, ~10 PhD students, ~10 Master students). It has a leading role in radio detection of cosmic rays, ultra-compact binary stars and Galactic surveys. Recent grants have doubled it in size, with another 15 PhDs and postdocs arriving in 2010. It is located in the student town Nijmegen, and old (Roman) city, within easy reach of other places in the Netherlands.
University positions (including PhD positions) in the Netherlands include good medical and social benefits (including maternity and paternity leave and child care) plus holiday and end-of-year bonuses.
Futher information concerning this positions can be obtained from Gijs Nelemans (nelemans at astro.ru.nl; tel. +31-24-3652983).
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.3 Chair School of Physics at Georgia Tech
-------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/12/chair-school-of-physics-at-georgia-…
Institution: Atlanta, GA, U.S.A.
Deadline: Tue, Aug 31, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.physics.gatech.edu/school/faculty_search.html
The Georgia Institute of Technology invites nominations and applications for the position of Chair and Professor of Physics. We are seeking a person with an outstanding record of scholarly and educational achievement to provide creative leadership in physics and in the continuous development of education and research.
The School of Physics is one of the strongest components in the College of Sciences at Georgia Tech, with an excellent and expanding program of research and teaching at both the graduate and undergraduate levels. Georgia Tech’s commitment to interdisciplinary collaboration is also a major asset that has led to frequent and fruitful interactions of faculty in the School with other strong programs in science and engineering at the Institute. School strengths include astrophysics, atomic and molecular physics, biophysics, computational physics, condensed matter physics, nonlinear dynamics, optical physics, and statistical physics. The School of Physics has about 130 undergraduate physics majors and 105 graduate students. Our present faculty stands at 35, and we have a commitment to increase this number over the next five years. Georgia Tech is situated on an attractive campus in the heart of Atlanta, a large and vibrant city with great economic and cultural strengths.
Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. Applications should include a curriculum vitae including research, teaching, administrative experience, and a list of publications. Applications and nominations should be sent preferably by e-mail to: science [at] cos.gatech.edu. Georgia Tech, a unit of the University System of Georgia, is an equal education and employment opportunity institution.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.4 Temporary Lectureship in Theoretical Cosmology at University of Cambridge
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/09/temporary-lectureship-in-theoretica…
Institution: Cambridge, U.K.
Deadline: Fri, Mar 12, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/vacancy/Cosmology.pdf
University of Cambridge, Centre for Theoretical Cosmology, Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics (DAMTP)
Four year Temporary Lectureship
Salary: £36,715--£46,510 p.a.
Applications are invited for a Temporary University Lectureship in Theoretical Cosmology to commence on 1 September 2010 or thereabouts, which will be known as the "CTC Lectureship". The appointee will be expected to contribute significantly to an ongoing research programme in theoretical cosmology described in the Further Particulars and there will be a lighter teaching load than expected for a standard academic post. The appointment will be made at an appropriate point on the scale for University Lecturers and the limit of tenure for this post is four years.
Further information regarding the Department can be found at http://www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/. Informal enquiries may be made to Professor Paul Shellard, email: E.P.S.Shellard[AT]damtp.cam.ac.uk
Further particulars of this position can be found at http://www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/vacancy/Cosmology.pdf.
Applications should be sent by email to the Secretary to the Head of Department, email: HoDSec[AT]damtp.cam.ac.uk, and should include a full curriculum vitae, list of publications, a one page statement of research interests and future plans and the contact details of three academic referees, and should be accompanied by a completed application form PD18 Parts I and III (downloadable from: http://www.admin.cam.ac.uk/offices/hr/forms/pd18/)
Applicants should ask their referees to email references directly to the Secretary to the Head of Department (email as above) to reach her by the closing date.
Please quote Reference: LE 06259
Closing Date: 12 March 2010
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.5 Two VESF Fellowships for theoretical research on GW detection
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/02/two-vesf-fellowships-for-theoretica…
Institution: Europe
Deadline: Sun, Mar 07, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.roma1.infn.it/teongrav/VESF/FELLOWSHIPS_2010.html
A call for proposals for two VESF Fellowships for theoretical research on Gravitational Wave Detection is now open. Further information and application forms can be found on the VESF website: http://www.roma1.infn.it/teongrav/VESF/
The deadline for application is March 7th, 2010
Valeria Ferrari
VESF Coordinator
=================================================================
3. News
=================================================================
3.1 Living Reviews in Relativity: "Interferometer Techniques for Gravitational-Wave Detection"
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/25/living-reviews-in-relativity-interf…
Additional Information: http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2010-1
Living Reviews in Relativity
http://relativity.livingreviews.org/
ISSN: 1433-8351
Today, Living Reviews in Relativity has published a new review article on "Interferometer Techniques for Gravitational-Wave Detection" by Andreas Freise and Kenneth A. Strain.
Find the abstract and further details below.
Please, note also the latest revision of the review on "Critical Phenomena in Gravitational Collapse" by Carsten Gundlach and José M. Martín-García (http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2007-5)
------------------
PUB.NO. lrr-2010-1
Strain, Kenneth A. and Freise, Andreas
"Interferometer Techniques for Gravitational-Wave Detection"
ACCEPTED: 2010-02-15
PUBLISHED: 2010-02-25
FULL ARTICLE AT:
http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2010-1
ABSTRACT:
Several km-scale gravitational wave detectors have been constructed world wide. These instruments combine a number of advanced technologies to push the limits of precision length measurement. The core devices are laser interferometers of a new kind; developed from the classical Michelson topology these interferometers integrate additional optical elements which significantly change the properties of the optical system. Much of the design and analysis of these laser interferometers can be performed using well-known classical optical techniques, however, the complex optical layouts provide a new challenge. In this review we give a textbook style introduction to the optical science required for the understanding of modern gravitational wave detectors, as well as other high-precision laser interferometers. In addition, we provide a number of examples for a freely available interferometer simulation software and encourage the reader to use these examples to gain hands-on experienc
e with the discussed optical methods.
UPCOMING ARTICLES AT:
http://relativity.livingreviews.org/Articles/upcoming.html
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.2 Bids for GR20 and GR21
--------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/02/22/bids-for-gr20-and-gr21/
Additional Information: http://grg.maths.qmul.ac.uk/grgsoc/bidsguide.php
The International Society on General Relativity and Gravitation will hold its triennial conferences GR20 and GR21 in 2013 and 2016. Please consider seriously whether you or your group could host either of them. Normally only bids for the next conference would be considered, but because of the possible link with centenary celebrations for general relativity we will also be willing to consider preliminary bids for GR21. Bids should be presented at the GR19 meeting in July 2010 in Mexico City.
Guidelines on what is needed are posted on the Society's Web site at http://grg.maths.qmul.ac.uk/grgsoc/bidsguide.php, and institutions or groups considering making a bid are encouraged to contact the Secretary, Prof. Malcolm MacCallum, at m.a.h.maccallum[AT]qmul.ac.uk, for further guidance if required. Past conferences have to some extent cycled between Europe, North America and the rest of the world but there has been no definite rule (e.g. there were successive meetings in India and South Africa) so no site is ruled out at this stage (although preference would probably be given to those which did not host the meeting in the last decade or so). Please also let the Secretary know at least a couple of weeks before GR19 if you do eventually decide to present a bid, so that he can schedule presentations.
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02 Feb '10
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Table of Contents
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1. Conferences
1.1 Long-term Workshop on Gravity and Cosmology (GC2010)
1.2 Yukawa International Seminar (YKIS2010)
1.3 BritGrav 10 (Second Announcement)
1.4 2nd Galileo-Xu Guangqi Meeting
1.5 Workshop on Unstructured Meshes in Dynamical Spacetimes
1.6 Quantum Gravity and the Foundations of Physics
1.7 Quantum Gravity in the Southern Cone V
1.8 Spanish Relativity Meeting ERE2010: First Announcement
1.9 COSPAR 2010 Event H02: 2nd announcement
2. Jobs
2.1 Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Cosmology, Gravitation or String Theory
2.2 Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Astrophysics, Cosmology or Gravitation
2.3 ERASMUS Mundus relativistic astrophysics Ph.D. fellowships
2.4 Lecturer/Senior Lecturer (level B/C) in pure mathematics at Monash
2.5 Professorship in Gravitational Theory at University of Jena
3. News
3.1 IRAP Ph.D. lectures - Nice
3.2 Solitons, Instantons and Twistors, M. Dunajski (book)
=================================================================
1. Conferences
=================================================================
1.1 Long-term Workshop on Gravity and Cosmology (GC2010)
--------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/31/long-term-workshop-on-gravity-and-c…
Starting Mon, May 24, 2010 to Fri, Jul 16, 2010
Location: Kyoto, Japan
Additional Information: http://www2.yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~ykis2010/index.html
First circular of a long-term workshop on `Gravity and Cosmology' (GC2010).
About GC2010 workshop
The aim of this workshop is parallel to YKIS2010, but with a strong emphasis on stimulating informal and intensive discussions among the participants and initiating possible collaborations. Every participant is asked to interact actively with the others.
We plan to arrange 3-4 seminars per week, and to have a one-day or two-day mini-workshop during the program. Participants are encouraged to organize additional informal seminars by themselves.
Due to the limited capacity of office space, we have to restrict the number of participants to about 20 at a time. We apologize in case we are unable to accept your application.
Financial support
For YKIS2010 Symposium, limited amount of financial support may be available. Please contact LOC by e-mail.
Accommodation and logistics
Information of accommodation and logistics are given at the conference website.
Local Organizing Committee (Kyoto University)
Shunichiro Kinoshita, Norichika Sago, Misao Sasaki (chair), Tetsuya Shiromizu, Jiro Soda, Takahiro Tanaka (scientific secretary)
Scientific Organizing Committee
Nathalie Deruelle (APC, France), Georgi Dvali (NYU, USA), Renata Kallosh (Stanford, USA), Hideo Kodama (KEK), Andrei Linde (Stanford, USA), David H. Lyth (Lancaster, UK), Viatcheslav Mukhanov (Munich, Germany), Takashi Nakamura (Kyoto), Valery Rubakov (INR, Russia), Masaru Shibata (YITP), Jiro Soda (Kyoto), Ewan D. Stewart (KAIST), Naoshi Sugiyama (Nagoya), Alexander Vilenkin (Tufts, USA), Masahiro Yamaguchi (Tohoku), Jun'ichi Yokoyama (RESCEU), Jiro Soda (Kyoto), Takahiro Tanaka* (YITP), Misao Sasaki** (YITP)
** Chair, * Scientific Secretary
Contact address
FAX: +81-75-753-7071
Email: gc2010[AT]yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.2 Yukawa International Seminar (YKIS2010)
-------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/31/yukawa-international-seminar-ykis-2…
Starting Mon, Jun 28, 2010 to Fri, Jul 02, 2010
Location: Kyoto, Japan
Additional Information: http://www2.yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~ykis2010/index.html
First circular of YKIS2010 Symposium on `Cosmology --The Next Generation--'
Agenda for YKIS2010
The basic concept of the workshop as well as the symposium is to develop concrete foundations for further expansion of the frontiers of gravity and cosmology. With the increase of precise observational data and of our knowledge about the universe, various new aspects of cosmology have been added. Rapidly expanding frontiers of cosmology make it difficult particularly for young generation to capture the concrete foundations and to take a step further.
At YKIS2010 Symposium, we would like to survey various ideas in gravity and cosmology which have some relevance to the current and future observations, and re-examine them to be able to announce a clear message to the next generation.
Invited speakers (*:to be confirmed)
Bruce Allen
Nathalie Deruelle
Georgi Dvali
George Efstathiou
Roberto Emparan
Kari Enqvist
Josh Frieman
Alan Guth*
Masashi Hazumi*
Renata Kallosh
David Langlois
Andrei Linde
Viatcheslav Mukhanov
Valery Rubakov
Paul Shellard
Masaru Shibata
Eva Silverstein
Ewan D. Stewart
Rashid A. Sunyaev
Registration fee
The registration fee for YKIS2010 Symposium is 15,000 yen (10,000 yen for students), which includes a copy of the proceedings, conference bag, coffee breaks, and conference dinner. A reduced registration fee for early online payment (by 30 April 2010) is available; 12,000 yen for regular participants and 8,000 yen for students.
Proceedings
Proceedings will be published as a volume of Progress of Theoretical Physics, Supplement.
Financial support
Basic support for local expenses will be provided on request for participants of GC2010 workshop.
Please contact LOC by e-mail.
Accommodation and logistics
Information of accommodation and logistics are given at the conference website.
Local Organizing Committee (Kyoto University)
Shunichiro Kinoshita, Norichika Sago, Misao Sasaki (chair),
Tetsuya Shiromizu, Jiro Soda, Takahiro Tanaka (scientific secretary)
Scientific Organizing Committee
Nathalie Deruelle (APC, France), Georgi Dvali (NYU, USA), Renata Kallosh (Stanford, USA), Hideo Kodama (KEK), Andrei Linde (Stanford, USA), David H. Lyth (Lancaster, UK), Viatcheslav Mukhanov (Munich, Germany), Takashi Nakamura (Kyoto), Valery Rubakov (INR, Russia), Masaru Shibata (YITP), Jiro Soda (Kyoto), Ewan D. Stewart (KAIST), Naoshi Sugiyama (Nagoya), Alexander Vilenkin (Tufts, USA), Masahiro Yamaguchi (Tohoku), Jun'ichi Yokoyama (RESCEU), Jiro Soda (Kyoto), Takahiro Tanaka* (YITP), Misao Sasaki** (YITP)
** Chair, * Scientific Secretary
Contact address
FAX: +81-75-753-7071
Email: ykis2010[AT]yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.3 BritGrav 10 (Second Announcement)
-------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/30/britgrav-10-second-announcement/
Starting Tue, Apr 06, 2010 to Wed, Apr 07, 2010
Location: Dublin, Ireland
Additional Information: http://www.dcu.ie/conferences/britgrav10/
BritGrav 10 will take place in Dublin on April 6th and 7th, 2010. The conference is jointly hosted by the School of Mathematical Sciences, Dublin City University and the School of Mathematical Sciences, University College Dublin. It will take place in the Gallery at the Helix on the DCU campus.
The BritGrav conference series is dedicated to bringing together the gravitational research community of the UK, Ireland and beyond, and to providing a forum for the exchange of ideas. It aims to cover all aspects of gravitational physics ? both theoretical and experimental ? and related areas of mathematics. In particular, the series provides an opportunity for young researchers, both students and post-docs, to present their work to the regional gravitational research community.
The conference will open at 10.30am (registration and coffee) on Tuesday 6th April, with the scientific programme commencing at 11.10am. The conference will close at 4.30pm on Wednesday 7th.
Information regarding registration, abstract submission, travel and accommodation can be found at
http://www.dcu.ie/conferences/britgrav10/
In selecting the programme, preference will be given to junior researchers (postgraduate students and post-doctoral researchers). There will be a prize, sponsored by Classical and Quantum Gravity, for the best student presentation.
A limited amount of funding will be available from the Gravitational Physics Group of the Institute of Physics to assist with travel and accommodation costs for research students. See the conference registration webpage for details.
Registration will open in the first week of February; please check the website for updates.
Contact: britgrav10[AT]dcu.ie
We look forward to seeing you in Dublin.
Marc Casals (DCU)
Brien Nolan (DCU)
Adrian Ottewill (UCD)
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.4 2nd Galileo-Xu Guangqi Meeting
----------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/28/2nd-galileo-xu-guangqi-meeting/
Starting Mon, Jul 12, 2010 to Sat, Jul 17, 2010
Location: Nice, France
Additional Information: http://www.icranet.org/2nd_galileo-xuguangqi
Dear Colleagues,
We are continuing with another installment of the successful 1st "Galileo - Xu Guanqi Meeting"
(http://www.icranet.org/galileo-xuguangqi)
held in Shanghai October 26 - 30, 2009 as a celebration of the 400th anniversary of the use of the telescope by Galileo Galilei to study the structure of our universe. In addition to scientists from Italy and China who first started the conference, the meeting saw the participation of many scientists originating from a variety of Western and Eastern countries. The meeting was particularly dedicated to recalling the roots of modern scientific research in China and to foster East-West exchanges in Relativistic Astrophysics, one of the most lively fields of research today. We have decided to hold this meeting every year, alternatively in the West and in the East.
We are pleased to announce that the 2nd "Galileo - Xu Guanqi meeting" will be held July 12 - 17, 2010 at the University of Nice - Sophe Antipolis and at Villa Ratti, Nice (France), where a new ICRANet Center is going to be inaugurated in the month of June.
We will review as usual current progress in General Relativity made possible by astronomical observations of the Sun, of the Stars and of the Universe. These results have been achieved on the basis of the theory of Albert Einstein and thanks to unprecedented numbers of observational techniques: in X-ray, gamma-ray and optical wave-lengths from space-based observatories, in radio telescope wavelengths from telescopes on the ground, as well as through particle physics experiments in underground observatories.
The conference fee will be 350 Euros and it will cover coffee breaks, proceedings and the conference banquet.
After the Meeting, the IRAP Ph.D. Erasmus Mundus program will run a summer school, the "Second Bego Rencontres", July 19 - 24, 2010 dedicated to graduate students and researchers.
See websites:
http://icranet.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=7&Itemid=370
and
http://www.icranet.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=504&Itemid…
For any information, don't hesitate to contact Pina Barbaro (Pina.BARBARO[AT]unice.fr) or Annapia Del Beato (annapia.delbeato[AT]icranet.org)
Li-Zhi Fang and Remo Ruffini,
Co-Chairs of the "2nd Galileo - Xu Guanqgi meeting"
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.5 Workshop on Unstructured Meshes in Dynamical Spacetimes
-----------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/26/workshop-on-unstructured-meshes-in-…
Starting Wed, Aug 25, 2010 to Fri, Aug 27, 2010
Location: Jena, Germany
Additional Information: http://cse.mathe.uni-jena.de/wumds/
We are pleased to announce the Workshop on Unstructured Meshes in Dynamical Spacetimes in Jena, Germany on 25-27 August 2010.
This workshop on the use of unstructured meshes in numerical relativity has been devised as a means to bring together experts in numerical relativity, finite elements, finite volumes, discrete differential forms, and Regge calculus to encourage discussion between the communities and identify areas in which new progress can be made.
Topics for talks and discussions will be aimed at
-Finite element methods in numerical relativity
-Dynamical space-time meshing
-Applications for finite-volume methods
-Higher order geometric discretizations of Einstein's equations
-Numerical methods based on Regge calculus
-Advances in discrete differential forms.
Registration is currently open, and we are accepting contributed talks. The deadline for submission of abstracts is 2 July 2010.
http://cse.mathe.uni-jena.de/wumds/
Sincerely,
Snorre H. Christiansen (University of Oslo)
Jonathan R. McDonald (Friedrich Schiller University, Jena)
Warner A. Miller (Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton)
Gerhard Zumbusch (Friedrich Schiller University, Jena)
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.6 Quantum Gravity and the Foundations of Physics
--------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/18/quantum-gravity-and-the-foundations…
Starting Wed, Mar 17, 2010 to Fri, Mar 19, 2010
Location: Rosario, Argentina
Additional Information: http://www.iafe.uba.ar/Homenaje_Castagnino/
It is a pleasure to announce the conference Quantum Gravity and the Foundations of Physics for celebrating Mario Castagnino’s 75th birthday. The meeting will be held on March 17-19th, 2010, in Mario’s home city of Rosario (Argentina).
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.7 Quantum Gravity in the Southern Cone V
------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/17/quantum-gravity-in-the-southern-con…
Starting Wed, Jul 28, 2010 to Sat, Jul 31, 2010
Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina
Preliminary Announcement
Quantum Gravity in the Southern Cone V,
Buenos Aires (Argentina)
28-31 July, 2010
The fifth meeting of the Quantum Gravity in the Southern Cone series will be held in Buenos Aires, Argentina, July 28 - 31, 2010. The purpose of the meeting is to gather world specialists on quantum gravity, geometry, string theory and field theory, and scientists and students from the southern region of Latin America. Previous meetings in the series took place in Punta del Este, Uruguay in 2007, Valdivia, Chile in 2002, Bariloche, Argentina in 1998 and Punta del Este, Uruguay in 1996.
There will be a series of talks by invited speakers and also short communications by the participants, with ample time for discussions. A preliminary list of speakers includes:
• Abhay Ashtekar (PennState),
• Nathan Berkovits (Sao Paulo)
• Henriette Elvang (Michigan)
• Sebastián Franco (KAVLI),
• Rodolfo Gambini (U. de la República, Uruguay)
• Steve Giddings (UC, Santa Barbara) *
• Mariana Graña (Saclay) *
• Tom Hartman (Harvard),
• Sean Hartnoll (Harvard),
• Diego Hofman (Harvard)
• Martin Kruczenski (Purdue),
• Juan Maldacena (IAS Princeton),
• Carlos Núñez (Swansea)
• Joe Polchinski (UC, Santa Barbara)
• Rafael Porto (UC, Santa Barbara),
• Jorge Pullin (Louisiana State),
• Fernando Quevedo (ASICTP, Trieste) *
• Seif Randjbar Daemi (ASICTP, Trieste) *
• Fabio Rocha (Princeton)
• Jorge Russo (Barcelona)*
• Thomas Thiemman (Potsdam, Max Planck Inst.) *
• George Thompson (ASICTP, Trieste)
• Jorge Zanelli (CECS, Valdivia, Chile)
Local organizers: Gerardo Aldazabal, Gustavo Dotti, José Edelstein, Gastón Giribet, Nicolás Grandi, Carmen Núñez, Martin Schvellinger , Guillermo Silva
A first circular and call for contributed abstracts and registration will be coming out in March.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.8 Spanish Relativity Meeting ERE2010: First Announcement
----------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/15/spanish-relativity-meeting-ere2010-…
Starting Mon, Sep 06, 2010 to Fri, Sep 10, 2010
Location: Granada, Spain
Additional Information: http://www.iaa.es/ere2010
ERE2010: First Announcement
“Gravity as a Crossroad in Physics”
The 2010 edition of the Spanish Relativity Meeting (ERE2010) will be held in Granada from the 6th to 10th September 2010. The Spanish Relativity Meeting (ERE) is an international conference devoted to Relativity and Gravitation which is organized every year by one of the Spanish groups working in this area. This year, it will be hosted by the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA-CSIC) in Granada, Spain. ERE2010 is scientifically supported by the Spanish Society of Gravitation and Relativity (SEGRE) and the International Society on General Relativity and Gravitation.
The EREs started in 1977 with the main objective of promoting scientific discussion and interchange of knowledge in relativity and gravitation in a relaxed atmosphere. Over the years, the conference has gained international recognition and has attracted an increasing number of worldwide participants. EREs are nowadays established as relevant international events in the field, maintaining substantially their original relaxed character. A list of previous meetings and a short history of the EREs can be found in http://www.segre.es/en/historia.shtml.
1) SCIENTIFIC CONTENT
ERE2010 will have as subtitle “Gravity as a Crossroad in Physics”. The underlying rationale is to present Gravity physics as a scientific “locus” for the interbreeding between (separate) communities in Physics. We aim at reflecting this interdisciplinary perspective in the scientific program. In this sense, each Day along the week will be devoted to a particular “dialogue” between two communities sharing some of their ultimate goals, but differing in their conceptual background, methodology or technical approach. These ”dialogues” are envisaged as opportunities to compare alternative viewpoints, keeping a focus on their complementary nature.
The following “Day Titles” aim at capturing the scientific spirit of each Day (brief descriptions can be found at http://www.iaa.es/ere2010/)
Day 1: Fundamental vs. Effective Approaches in Theoretical Gravity
Day 2: Geometric vs. Quantum Field/String Theory Approaches to Quantum Gravity
Day 3: Theoretical Cosmology vs. Physical Cosmology
Day 4: Relativity vs. Astrophysics
Day 5: Mathematical Relativity vs. Numerical Relativity
2) INVITED SPEAKERS
The interdisciplinary character of the meeting is reflected in the provisional list of invited speakers:
A. Achúcarro, L. Álvarez-Gaumé, A. Ashtekar, F. Barbero, B. Carter, M. Colpi, S. Dain, J. Garriga, E. Gourgoulhon, B. Krishnan*, S. Liberati, A. Lobo, J.M. Martín-García, G. Mena-Marugán, R. Narayan, T. Padmanabhan, R. Parentani, R. Rebolo, L. Rezzolla*, C. Rovelli, J. Valiente-Kroon, E. Verdaguer and M. Visser, G.E. Volovik.
(* to be confirmed)
3) COMMITTEES
ERE2010 Advisory Board:
M. Alcubierre (ICN, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México).
A. Ashtekar (Penn State University).
R. Beig (Institute of Theoretical Physics, University of Viena).
C. Cutler (Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Inst. of Technology).
T. Damour (Institute des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques, Paris).
R. Maartens (Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, University of Portsmouth).
F. Quevedo (DAMTP, University of Cambridge).
M. Visser (Victoria University of Wellington).
ERE2010 Local Organising Committee:
Víctor Aldaya
Carlos Barceló (Coordinator)
Luis J. Garay
José Luis Jaramillo (Coordinator)
Francisco López-Ruiz
4) ORGANIZATION ASPECTS
Information regarding registration, abstract submission, accommodation and travel issues will be posted soon at the web page of the conference http://www.iaa.es/ere2010 .
We hope that this conference will be of your interest, so that we will meet you in Granada in September.
With best regards,
The Local Organising Committee
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.9 COSPAR 2010 Event H02: 2nd announcement
-------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/06/cospar-2010-event-h02-2nd-announcem…
Starting Sun, Jul 18, 2010 to Sun, Jul 25, 2010
Location: Bremen, Germany
Additional Information: http://www.brera.inaf.it/gravity2010/index.html
Probing Strong Gravity with Gravitational and Electromagnetic Waves
Second announcement for an event (H02) at the
38th COSPAR Scientific Assembly - Bremen (Germany), 2010 July 18-25
Duration: 4 half-days
Commissions E (Research in Astrophysics from Space) and H (Fundamental Physics in Space)
Sub-commissions: E1 (Galactic and Extragalactic Astrophysics)
Scientific rationale:
Neutron stars and black holes probe the strongest gravitational fields found in the present-day Universe. A large number of such objects is continuously monitored with high-energy satellites. In parallel, the recent discovery of a binary radio pulsar allows precise measurements of GR parameters at a larger distance from compact objects. Soon, these objects will be detected with upcoming gravitational-wave observatories, which will open another avenue for the study of strong gravity and the test of GR predictions. The scope of this two-day COSPAR session is to bring together experimentalists, observers, and theorists in these separate by complementary fields and discuss the strategies and aims of testing general relativity in the strong-field regime in the near future.
Scientific Organizing Committee
T.M. Belloni (Main Scientific Organizer, Italy), S.A. Hughes (Deputy Organizer, USA), D. Barret (France), M. Gilfanov (Germany/Russia), V. Kaspi (Canada), M. Kramer (UK), M. Mendez (Netherlands), R. Narayan (USA), G. Nelemans (Netherlands), D. Psaltis (USA), L. Rezzolla (Germany), M. Volonteri (USA),A. Watts (Netherlands), C. Will (USA)
Invited speakers
B. Allen (to be confirmed)
N. Andersson
J. Centrella
K. Danzmann
J. Lazio
C.M. Miller
K. Nandra
F. Özel
D. Psaltis
C. Reynolds
B. Schutz
J. Steiner
T. Strohmayer
C. Will
The precise dates of the Event will be announced as soon as they are fixed.
We remind you that
**** ABSTRACT SUBMISSION DEADLINE IS 2010 FEBRUARY 19 ****
This is also the deadline for asking COSPAR for financial support.
Information on the 38th COSPAR Scientific Assembly can be found at
http://www.cospar2010.org/index.html
and http://www.cospar-assembly.org/
Information on Event H02 is available on the COSPAR page
http://www.cospar-assembly.org/admin/congress_overview.php?sessionid=216
and will soon be available at
http://www.brera.inaf.it/gravity2010/index.html
Conference email: gravity2010_AT_brera.inaf.it
=================================================================
2. Jobs
=================================================================
2.1 Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Cosmology, Gravitation or String Theory
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/30/postdoctoral-research-fellowships-i…
Institution: Cape Town, South Africa
Deadline: Sun, Feb 28, 2010
Additional Information: http://cosmology.uct.ac.za/GroupGrantAdvert-2010.pdf
Cosmology and Gravity Group at the University of Cape Town
1+1 year position(s)
Deadline: 28 February (but will remain open until filled)
http://cosmology.uct.ac.za/GroupGrantAdvert-2010.pdf
Up to three Post-doctoral research fellowships are available in the Cosmology and Gravity Group at the University of Cape Town. The fields of research are open, but preference will be given to candidates whose research interests are aligned with those of members of the group.
Positions are available for a period of up to two years, subject to satisfactory performance and renewed funding. The stipend will afford a good standard of living and access to travel and equipment grants.
The fellowship is awarded as part of the South African National Research Foundation Blue Skies Initiative. To be eligible for a Fellowship, the candidate must have received his or her PhD within 5 calendar years preceding that in which the Fellowship would begin.
If you require further details please email any member of the group.
To apply, please email your CV, publication list, a statement of research interests and three letters of recommendation to
Ms Rushana du Toit ( CO Ms Nicky Walker) nassp[AT]saao.ac.za
Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics
University of Cape Town
Rondebosch 7701
South Africa
Phone: +27 21 460 9346
Fax: +27 21 447 3639
UCT is committed to equity in its employment practices.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.2 Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Astrophysics, Cosmology or Gravitation
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/30/postdoctoral-research-fellowship-in…
Institution: Cape Town, South Africa
Deadline: Sun, Feb 28, 2010
Additional Information: http://cosmology.uct.ac.za/ACGCpostdocAdvert-2010.pdf
Centre for Astrophysics, Cosmology and Gravity (ACGC) at the University of Cape Town
1+1 year position
Deadline: 28 February (but will remain open until filled)
http://cosmology.uct.ac.za/ACGCpostdocAdvert-2010.pdf
The newly launched Centre for Astrophysics, Cosmology and Gravity (ACGC) at the University of Cape Town is offering its inaugural Post- doctoral research fellowship. The Centre includes members from the Astronomy Department as well as the Cosmology & Gravity Group in the Mathematics and Applied Mathematics department. The fields of research are open, but preference will be given to candidates whose research interests are aligned with members of the Centre.
Positions are available for a period of up to two years, subject to satisfactory performance and renewed funding. The stipend will afford a good standard of living, and access to travel and equipment grants.
The fellowship is awarded as part of the South African National Research Foundation Blue Skies Initiative. To be eligible for a Fellowship, the candidate must have received his or her PhD within 5 calendar years preceding that in which the Fellowship would begin.
If you require further details please email any member of the Centre.
To apply, please email your CV, publication list, a statement of research interests and three letters of recommendation to
Ms Carol Marsh
Department of Astronomy
University of Cape Town
Rondebosch 7700
South Africa
admin[AT]ast.uct.ac.za
Phone: +27 21 650 5830
Fax: +27 21 650 4547
UCT is committed to equity in its employment practices.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.3 ERASMUS Mundus relativistic astrophysics Ph.D. fellowships
--------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/28/erasmus-mundus-relativistic-astroph…
Institution: Europe
Deadline: Sun, Feb 28, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.irap-phd.org
The International Relativistic Astrophysics PhD is a newly established international doctorate program in astrophysics that has been selected by the European Commission as an Erasmus Mundus Joint Doctorate
http://eacea.ec.europa.eu/erasmus_mundus/results_compendia/selected_project… .
This PhD program has a duration of 3 years and is developed within a consortium:
- UNIVERSITE DE NICE - SOPHIA ANTIPOLIS, France
(Coordinating institution)
- SHANGHAI ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORY, China
- FREE UNIVERSITY OF BERLIN, Germany
- AEI - POTSDAM, Germany
- TARTU OBSERVATORY, Estonia
- STOCKHOLM UNIVERSTIY, Sweden
- UNIVERSITY OF FERRARA, Italy
- UNIVERSITY OF ROME - LA SAPIENZA, Italy
- BRAZILIAN CENTRE FOR PHYSICS RESEARCH, Brazil
- OBSERVATORY OF THE CÔTE D'AZUR, France
- INDIAN CENTRE FOR SPACE PHYSICS, India
- INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR RELATIVISTIC ASTROPHYSICS NETWORK, Italy
- UNIVERSITY OF SAVOIE, France
Applications are now solicited for the course starting in September 2010.
*Deadline for Application: February 28, 2010*
We invite applications from top-ranked students that either hold or are expected to obtain before August 2010 a Masters Degree or the equivalent in Theoretical Physics, Astronomy, Astrophysics, Mathematics or closely related fields. A certified good knowledge of the English language is required. The selection of students is primarily based on excellence.
10 Erasmus Mundus Doctorate Fellowships will be made available by the European Commission, with a monthly stipend of 2800 € plus travel allowance*
Full information about the IRAP PhD program, the application form, the current poster, and detailed instructions on how to apply can be found at the web-site:
http://www.irap-phd.org/
The contact e-mail for inquiries is Pascal Chardonnet:
chardonnet[AT]lapp.in2p3.fr
Please bring this announcement to the attention of interested and capable candidates.
Prof. Remo Ruffini
Director of Erasmus Mundus IRAP PhD
ICRANet and University of ROMA La Sapienza
ruffini[AT]icra.it
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.4 Lecturer/Senior Lecturer (level B/C) in pure mathematics at Monash
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/28/lecturersenior-lecturer-level-bc-in…
Institution: Clayton (Melbourne), Australia
Deadline: Fri, Mar 26, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.maths.monash.edu.au/news/positions-vacant.html
Monash University,
two positions:
Lecturer/Senior Lecturer, Pure Mathematics
Job Reference Number:
A1010541
Outstanding mathematicians are invited to apply for continuing full-time Lectureships at Level B or C as appropriate. We seek applications in any area of pure mathematics which enhances the School's research profile. This in particular covers the activities of the Geometric Analysis and General Relativity group, including Robert Bartnik, Todd Oliynyk, Pengzi Miao, Michael Eichmair, Tony Lun, Leo Brewin, Andrew Norton and various postgraduate students. Applicants should have a PhD, an outstanding research record and proven teaching ability.
Appointment will be made at a level appropriate to the successful applicant's qualifications, experience and in accordance with classification standards for each level. All applications should address the selection criteria.
Applications close on Friday, 26 March 2010.
For further information please use the following links
http://monash.turborecruit.com.au/job/job_details.cfm?id=436920
http://www.maths.monash.edu.au/news/positions-vacant.html
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2.5 Professorship in Gravitational Theory at University of Jena
---------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/15/professorship-in-gravitational-theo…
Institution: Jena, Germany
Deadline: Mon, Mar 01, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.tpi.uni-jena.de/gravity/Jobs
Professor (W2) in Theoretical Physics in the area of Gravitational Theory
Focus area of the position is the classical theory of general relativity and its modern applications, for example gravitational wave astronomy.
(A W2 position is roughly comparable to associate professor with tenure.)
=================================================================
3. News
=================================================================
3.1 IRAP Ph.D. lectures - Nice
------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/28/irap-ph-d-lectures-nice/
Additional Information: http://www.icranet.org/nice
Lectures in Nice – February 2010
Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur
We announce a 3-weeks course of the IRAP Ph D at the University of Nice - Sophia Antipolis. The lectures will be held at the Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur starting on February 1st at 9 a.m. Interested graduate students can participate and register free of charge.
If you need further information please contact: Pina Barbaro (Pina.BARBARO[AT]unice.fr) in Nice and/or Annapia Del Beato (annapia.delbeato[AT]icranet.org) Federica Di Berardino (federica.diberardino[AT]icranet.org)
The preliminary program and the list of speakers, together with their CVs, title and abstract of each lecture, can be found at http://www.icranet.org/nice.
The lecturers include:
--------------------------------
**** 1-7 February
Einasto Jaan
Tartu Observatory and ICRANet
Large Scale Structure of the Universe
Chakrabarti Sandip
S.N. Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences and ICRANet
Black holes accretion
Vereshchagin Gregory
ICRANet
Relativistic kinetic theory
Morbidelli Alessandro
Cote D’Azur Observatory
Planetary systems
Manchester Richard
CSIRO
Pulsars and Gravitational Wave Detection
Melchiorri Alessandro
University of Rome
New Results on Cosmic Microwave Anisotropies
Regimbau Tania
Cote D’Azur Observatory
The astrophysical SB: source and detection
Boer Michael
Haute Provence Observatory
Observations of GRBs
Pandolfi Stefania
University of Rome
Inflationary Constraints and reionization
Menegoni Eloisa
University of Rome
Cosmological constraints on variations of fundamental constants
Rabbia Yves
Cote d’Azur Observatory
Stellar interferometry
**** 8-13 February
Mignard Francois
Cote d’Azur Observatory
GAIA mission
Rabbia Yves
Cote d’Azur Observatory
Stellar interferometry
Guillot Tristan
Cote d’Azur Observatory
Exoplanets
Damour Thibault
IHES and ICRANet
Two-body problem in General Relativity
Vinet Jean-Yves
Cote d’Azur Observatory
GR ground based and space missions
Chaibi Oualid
Cote d’Azur Observatory
The Art of GW Detection: Instrumentation & Practice
Benoît Cristophe
Cote d’Azur Observatory
Dark energy and Cosmology
**** 15-19 February
Della Valle Massimo
INAF and ICRANet
Observational properties
Rosati Piero
ESO and ICRANet
Baryonic and Dark matter in clusters ofgalaxies
Minazzoli Olivier
Cote d’Azur Observatory
Laser ranging and time transfer experimentsin the solar system
Ferrari Chiara
Cote d’Azur Observatory
Non-thermal component of galaxy clusters
Frontera Filippo
University of Ferrara
GRBs observations
Caito Letizia
University of Rome “La Sapienza”
Izzo Luca
University of Rome “La Sapienza”
--------------------------------
The Program will end with a 2 day-night stay at the Telescopes of Calern with a program of observations.
Remo Ruffini
Director of the IRAP Ph.D. program
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
3.2 Solitons, Instantons and Twistors, M. Dunajski (book)
---------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/01/17/solitons-instantons-and-twistors-m-…
Additional Information: http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780198570639.do
Solitons, Instantons and Twistors, M. Dunajski (2009),
Oxford University Press
http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780198570639.do
Preface
1: Integrability in classical mechanics
2: Soliton equations and the Inverse Scattering Transform
3: The Hamiltonian formalism and the zero-curvature representation
4: Lie symmetries and reductions
5: The Lagrangian formalism and field theory
6: Gauge field theory
7: Integrability of ASDYM and twistor theory
8: Symmetry reductions and the integrable chiral model
9: Gravitational instantons
10: Anti-self-dual conformal structures
Appendix A: Manifolds and Topology
Appendix B: Complex analysis
Appendix C: Overdetermined PDEs
Index
1
0

02 Jan '10
#################################################################
Table of Contents
#################################################################
1. Conferences
1.1 14th Paris Cosmology Colloquium 2010
1.2 Pacific Coast Gravity Meeting 26
1.3 Binary Star Evolution: Mass Loss, Accretion, and Mergers
1.4 Gravitation and Cosmology, 8th Int. Conference of Num. Analysis and Applied Maths
2. Jobs
2.1 International Relativistic Astrophysics PhD: 2010 Announcement
2.2 MULTIDARK postdoctoral research positions
2.3 Postdoctoral research scientist at Barnard College, Columbia University
2.4 Two PhD Positions in Astrophysics (Neutron starquakes)
2.5 Postdoctoral position in GW data analysis and phenomenology at NIKHEF
2.6 Postdoctoral Researcher position in Theoretical Astrophysics at RIT
2.7 Postdoctoral Fellow in Mathematical/Numerical Relativity at Otago
2.8 Research Associates in Gravitational Wave Theory and Data Analysis at Cardiff
3. News
=================================================================
1. Conferences
=================================================================
1.1 14th Paris Cosmology Colloquium 2010
----------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/13/14th-paris-cosmology-colloquium-201…
Starting Thu, Jul 22, 2010 to Sat, Jul 24, 2010
Location: Paris, France
Additional Information: http://chalonge.obspm.fr/colloque2010.html
Ecole Internationale d'Astrophysique Daniel Chalonge
The 14th Paris Cosmology Colloquium 2010
The Standard Model of the Universe: Theory and Observations
George Smoot Nobel Prize of Physics and Daniel Chalonge Medal
Thursday 22, Friday 23 and Saturday 24 July 2010
at the parisian campus of Paris Observatory (HQ), in the historic Perrault building.
The Conference is within the astrofundamental physics spirit of the Chalonge School, on recent observational and theoretical progress on the CMB, Inflation, astrophysical dark matter, dark ages, dark energy, and the theory of the early universe with predictive power.
In summary, the aim of the meeting is to put together real cosmological data and hard theory predictive approach connected to them in the framework of the Standard Model of the Universe.
Topics: Observational and theoretical progress in the CMB, astrophysical dark matter, dark energy, dark ages. Large and small scale structure formation. Inflation in connection with the CMB and LSS data, slow roll and fast roll inflation, quadrupole suppression and initial conditions, low CMB multipoles. CMB polarization. Neutrinos in cosmology.
The Meeting is open to all scientists interested in the subject. All Informations about the meeting and registration to it are displayed at:
http://chalonge.obspm.fr/colloque2010.html
Early Registration is strongly encouraged
The format of the Meeting is intended to allow easy and fruitful mutual contact and communication.
Sessions last for full three days in the beautiful parisian campus of Observatoire de Paris (built on orders from Colbert and to plans by Claude Perrault from 1667 to 1672). All sessions take place in the historic Perrault building ("Bâtiment Perrault") of Observatoire de Paris HQ, under the portraits of Laplace, Le Verrier, Lalande, Arago, Delambre and Louis XIV.
An exhibition will retrace the 19 years of activity of the Chalonge School and George Smoot participation to the School along these 19 years.
Informations on the previous Paris Cosmology Colloquia and of the school events are available at http://chalonge.obspm.fr (lecturers, lists of participants, lecture pdf files and photos during the Colloquia).
With compliments and kind regards
Chalonge.Ecole[AT]obspm.fr
http://chalonge.obspm.fr/
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.2 Pacific Coast Gravity Meeting 26
------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/12/pacific-coast-gravity-meeting-26/
Starting Fri, Mar 26, 2010 to Sat, Mar 27, 2010
Additional Information: http://ccom.ucsd.edu/~pcgm26/
26th Pacific Coast Gravity Meeting
The 26th Pacific Coast Gravity Meeting will be held at the University of California at San Diego, on March 26 and 27, 2010. In keeping with its tradition, this will be an open, relaxed, and informal conference. We are inviting researchers and students interested in all areas of gravitational physics: classical and quantum gravity, general relativistic astrophysics and cosmology, quantum cosmology, gravitational waves, and experimental gravity. Because this is a regional meeting, many attendees will be from the western United States, but all are welcome.
Talks
Following the usual tradition all participants, and especially postdocs and graduate students, are encouraged to contribute short, introductory talks on their current research, with the aim of fostering communication and understanding among gravitational physicists with different backgrounds. Everyone who requests to speak will be given equal time (plausibly between 10 and 15 minutes, including a question period). A prize (sponsored by the APS Topical Group on Gravity) will be awarded for the best talk given by a student at the meeting.
Program
The 26th PCGM will begin at 9am, on March 26, in Ledden Hall, University of California at San Diego (see the Practical Information page of the meeting web site for directions). The Scientific Program will be posted on this website shortly before the meeting, and will be distributed to participants on March 26. The deadline for registration is March 21.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1.3 Binary Star Evolution: Mass Loss, Accretion, and Mergers
------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/08/binary-star-evolution-mass-loss-acc…
Starting Tue, Jun 22, 2010 to Fri, Jun 25, 2010
Location: Mykonos, Greece
Additional Information: http://ciera.northwestern.edu/Ron-fest2010/
Following an enthusiastic response to our preliminary announcement of the conference on binary evolution, we are even more looking forward to our gathering honoring Ron Webbink and further celebrating Peter Eggleton's and Ed van den Heuvel's birthdays!
We have now compiled our Scientific Organizing Committee and organization plans are advancing rapidly. Please check out the conference web site:
http://ciera.northwestern.edu/Ron-fest2010/.
The conference organizing supporters are the Center for Interdisciplinary Exploration and Research in Astrophysics (CIERA) at Northwestern University and the "Associazione Cefalù and Astronomy". In this official announcement, we are contacting you with information on important deadlines, and with a request for submission of brief suggestions for potential presentations.
PLEASE CIRCULATE THIS ANNOUNCEMENT AS BROADLY AS YOU WISH!
IMPORTANT DEADLINES:
January 4, 2010 - submission of breif suggestions for presentations (to w-finney[AT]northwestern.edu;
e-mail subject: Presentation Suggestion by <your name here>)
February 15, 2010 - submission of presentation titles and abstracts
March 1, 2010 - early registration; announcement of tentative scientific program
March 15, 2010 - announcement of final scientific program
April 19, 2010 - room reservations at conference hotel & late registration
SCIENCE TOPICS & REQUEST FOR TALK PROPOSALS
We invite all interested, potential participants to send us brief suggestion(s) (a couple of sentences) for presentations they would like to give on results that generally connect to any of the prospective topics from the following list:
* Mass and Angular Momentum Transfer & Loss
* Physics of Common Envelope Evolution
* Contact Binaries
* Collisions/Mergers
* Binaries in Clusters
* Cataclysmic Variables & Symbiotic Stars
* X-ray Binaries
* Binary and Millisecond Pulsars
* Binary Supernova Progenitors
* Gravitational Wave Sources
We particularly invite presentations of recent, exciting results or suggestions for reviews of specific (sub-)areas of interest. The scientific program will comprise 10 sessions (two morning and one late afternoon) over 4 days with a half day free for excursions.
Please send your suggestions to: w-finney[AT]northwestern.edu by January 4, 2010.
CONFERENCE HOTEL AND ACCOMMODATIONS
Mykonos is one of the most beautiful islands in Greece. It has preserved its unique architectural character, crystal clear waters, iconic bays and sandy beaches, despite its popularity. The end of June is one of the best times to visit Greece, before the high traffic of mid-July to August. Our conference will be held at one of the best resort hotels on Mykonos, Greece:
Saint John Hotel, http://www.saintjohn.gr/ -
It is located in the bay of Agios Ioannis, one of the best beaches on the island, and just across from the island of Delos. A set of rooms has been reserved at the hotel (see http://www.saintjohn.gr/mykonos-accommodation-rooms.php) for conference participants at rates much lower than their regular prices for the time of the conference.
Rates are per room (2 occupants) per night and include breakfast and all taxes:
Garden View: 160 euros
Executive Sea View: 195 euros
You will be able to submit your room reservations directly to the hotel by faxing a reservation form. Well before the deadline for the room reservations we will set up a system through which participants interested in finding room-mates can pair up. In the coming months we will also provide a list of nearby hotels with lower room rates. More information on all these issues will appear on the conference web site and will be circulated in our next circular some time in the middle of January.
CONFERENCE REGISTRATION
The deadline for early registration is March 1, 2010. The early-registration fee is equal to 250 euros (300 euros for late registration). This fee will cover the conference room, all coffee breaks, the registration reception on the evening of June 21, the conference dinner, and the proceedings book to be published in the AIP Conference Series.
Information about how to register will appear on the conference web site and in our next circular.
SCIENTIFIC ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Matthew Bailes - Swinburne University of Technology
Luciano Burderi - University of Cagliari
Tiziana di Salvo - University of Palermo
Peter Eggleton - Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Zhanwen Han - Chinese Academy of Sciences
Vicky Kalogera - Northwestern University
Andrew King - University of Leicester
Gijs Nelemans - Radboud University
Fred Rasio - Northwestern University
Hans Ritter - MPA Garching
Mike Shara - American Museum of Natural History
Chris Tout - University of Cambridge
Ed van den Heuvel - University of Amsterdam
Ron Webbink - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Dayal Wickramasinghe - Australian National University
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1.4 Gravitation and Cosmology, 8th Int. Conference of Num. Analysis and Applied Maths
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/06/symposium-on-gravitation-and-cosmol…
Starting Sun, Sep 19, 2010 to Sat, Sep 25, 2010
Location: Island of Rhodes, Greece
Additional Information: http://www.icnaam.org/Sessions_Minisymposia.htm
Dear colleagues,
the "Second Big Challenge Symposium - The Big Challenge of Cosmological Understanding: Gravitation, Dark Matter and Dark Energy. Towards New Scenarios" will be held within the 8th International Conference of Numerical Analysis and Applied Mathematics, see
http://www.icnaam.org/Sessions_Minisymposia.htm, Symposium no. 13.
The dates are: 19-25/09/2010. Location: Island of Rhodes, Greece - Hotel and Conference Center: Rodos Palace: http://www.rodos-palace.com/.
This year we will celebrate the 65th birthday of Prof. Dr. Peter Deuflhard.
For full information kindly contact: cordac.galilei[AT]gmail.com. I will be grateful to you if you forward this <span>invitation</span> to other colleagues.
Thanks for your kind attention.
Best regards, Ch.
--
Dr. Christian Corda, PhD
Chairman of the "Second Big Challenge Symposium - The Big Challenge of Cosmological Understanding: Gravitation, Dark Matter and Dark Energy. Towards New Scenarios"
Editor in Chief of "The Open Astronomy Journal" (ISSN 1874-3811 http://bentham.org/open/toaaj/EBM.htm )
Editor of "The International Journal of Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences" http://www.hindawi.com/83262693.html
Scientific Director of the Associazione Scientifica Galileo Galilei, Via Pier Cironi 16, I-59100 Prato ITALY
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2. Jobs
=================================================================
2.1 International Relativistic Astrophysics PhD: 2010 Announcement
------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/24/the-international-relativistic-astr…
Institution: Europe
Deadline: Sun, Feb 28, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.irap-phd.org/
The International Relativistic Astrophysics PhD is a newly established international Doctorate Program in Astrophysics that has been selected by the European Commission as an Erasmus Mundus Joint Doctorate
http://eacea.ec.europa.eu/erasmus_mundus/results_compendia/selected_project…
This PhD program has a duration of 3 years and is developed within a consortium:
- UNIVERSITE DE NICE - SOPHIA ANTIPOLIS, France (Coordinating institution)
- SHANGHAI ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORY, China
- FREE UNIVERSITY OF BERLIN, Germany
- AEI - POTSDAM, Germany
- TARTU OBSERVATORY, Estonia
- STOCKHOLM UNIVERSTIY, Sweden
- UNIVERSITY OF FERRARA, Italy
- UNIVERSITY OF ROME - LA SAPIENZA, Italy
- BRAZILIAN CENTRE FOR PHYSICS RESEARCH, Brazil
- OBSERVATORY OF THE CÔTE D'AZUR, France
- INDIAN CENTRE FOR SPACE PHYSICS, India
- INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR RELATIVISTIC ASTROPHYSICS NETWORK, Italy
- UNIVERSITY OF SAVOIE, France
Applications are now solicited for the course starting in September 2010.
Deadline for Application: February 28, 2010
We invite applications from top-ranked students that either hold or are expected to obtain before August 2010 a Masters Degree in Theoretical Physics, Astronomy, Astrophysics, Mathematics or closely related fields. A certified good knowledge of the English language is required. The selection of students is primarily based on excellence.
10 Erasmus Mundus Doctorate Fellowships will be made available by the European Commission.
Full information about the IRAP PhD program, the application form, the current poster, and detailed instructions on how to apply can be found on the web-site:
http://www.irap-phd.org/
The contact e-mail for inquiries is:
chardonnet[AT]lapp.in2p3.fr [Pascal Chardonnet]
Thank you for your support.
Prof. Remo Ruffini
Director of Erasmus Mundus IRAP PhD,
ICRANet and University of ROMA La Sapienza
ruffini[AT]icra.it
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2.2 MULTIDARK postdoctoral research positions
---------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/17/multidark-postdoctoral-research-pos…
Institution: Spain
Deadline: Fri, Jan 15, 2010
Additional Information: http://projects.ift.uam.es/multidark/offerspost.php
Multimessenger Approach for Dark Matter Detection (MULTIDARK) is a project supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation's Consolider-Ingenio 2010 Programme, involving most of the Spanish Institutions active on Dark Matter research, and covering all aspects of the subject, theoretical and experimental. It comprises 17 Spanish Research Groups, as well as several foreign members engaged in theoretical, astrophysical, cosmological and experimental aspects of dark matter research. The latter include theoretical and experimental analyses of direct and indirect detection experiments as varied as ANAIS, ROSEBUD, EURECA, GAW, MAGIC, CTA, Fermi-GLAST, PAMELA, ANTARES, KM3NeT, AUGER, JEM-EUSO, LISA. The postdoctoral scholars are expected to work with the existing group members.
We encourage applicants in all areas of dark matter research. Selection by the MULTIDARK steering committee will be on the basis of demonstrated excellence.
The appointment will be for two years, although in special cases 2+1 years can also be offered (third year contingent on successful performance). The position includes some travel funds.
Candidates should apply online at:
http://projects.ift.uam.es/multidark/offerspost.php
indicating the preferred name(s) of the host group(s) and including a CV, publication list, statement of research interests, and arrange for three letters of recommendation.
Applications received by January 15th, 2010, will receive full consideration for positions starting in 2010. Later applications may also be considered.
Informal inquiries and requests for additional information may also be made to Prof. Carlos Muñoz at carlos.munnoz[AT]uam.es
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2.3 Postdoctoral research scientist at Barnard College, Columbia University
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/15/postdoctoral-research-scientist-at-…
Institution: New York, U.S.A.
Additional Information: http://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/BCCU
We invite applications for a postdoctoral research scientist to work in the area of black holes and gravitational wave astrophysics at Barnard College, Columbia University, to begin in September 2010 for a 2 year appointment. The successful applicant would work with Prof. Janna Levin on theoretical aspects of astrophysical sources such as black hole dynamics. The successful applicant would also join The Institute for Strings, Cosmology, and Astroparticle Physics (ISCAP) at Columbia. Other research areas in which ISCAP members are active include cosmology, string theory, particle astrophysics, and gravitational physics.
Applicants are encouraged to apply online at
http://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/BCCU
The candidate must have a PhD or the equivalent and will be asked to supply a letter of interest; a complete *curriculum vitae *and publication list; and 3 letters of recommendation. Barnard College is an Equal Opportunity Employer and encourages applications from women and individuals from underrepresented groups.
Review of applications will begin December 21, 2009 and will continue until the position is filled.
Contact Information
Professor Janna Levin
Department of Physics and Astronomy
Barnard College/Columbia University
3009 Broadway
New York, NY 10027
janna[AT]astro.columbia.edu
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2.4 Two PhD Positions in Astrophysics (Neutron starquakes)
----------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/09/two-phd-positions-in-astrophysics-n…
Institution: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Deadline: Mon, Feb 15, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.astro.uva.nl/~awatts
Applications are invited for two 4-year PhD positions to begin in Fall 2010 or as soon as possible thereafter. The successful candidates will work with Dr. Anna Watts on the physics of neutron starquakes. They will join a team exploring how and where stress builds up in a neutron star, and what happens when a starquake is triggered. One project will focus on the development and release of magnetic stresses in the solid crusts of neutron stars, while the other will explore the role of the nuclear fluids that penetrate the crust. Although both projects are primarily theoretical, ample opportunities exist for involvement in new missions such as the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope, and upcoming radio telescopes including LOFAR. The successful candidates will interact with a wide network of international collaborators, and the positions come with funds for travel and computers.
Applicants must have a Masters degree or equivalent in Physics or Astronomy, and be reasonably fluent in English. The gross salary is on the Dutch university scale (2042€/month in the 1st year, increasing to 2612€/month by the 4th year), with good social and medical benefits plus holiday and end-of-year bonuses. PhD students are expected to spend about 20% of their time assisting with undergraduate courses.
Interested candidates should submit via email (to the address below) a concise letter of interest, a CV, an official list of courses taken and grades, and a publication list (if appropriate). They should also arrange for two letters of recommendation to be sent to the same address. Review of applications will begin on February 15th 2010 and continue until the positions are filled. Women and minorities are especially encouraged to apply. Receipt of applications will be acknowledged.
The Astronomical Institute ‘Anton Pannekoek’ is a lively international research institute with about 20 faculty/postdocs, 20-25 PhD students and a similar number of Masters students. English is the working language. The institute is only 20 minutes from the heart of Amsterdam, in a new building on the Amsterdam Science Park.
Further information/applications: By email to Dr. Anna Watts, A.L.Watts[AT]uva.nl
Institute webpage http://www.astro.uva.nl
Group webpage http://www.astro.uva.nl/~awatts
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2.5 Postdoctoral position in GW data analysis and phenomenology at NIKHEF
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/07/postdoctoral-position-in-gw-data-an…
Institution: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Deadline: Mon, Feb 01, 2010
The gravitational physics group at Nikhef in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, invites applications for a postdoctoral research position in gravitational wave data analysis and phenomenology.
Nikhef is the national institute for subatomic physics in the Netherlands with about 240 employees: 145 physicists, 75 engineers / technicians and 20 employees for general support. Based in Amsterdam, it is a collaboration between four universities and the funding agency FOM. It coordinates and supports major Dutch activities in experimental subatomic physics, with strong involvement in projects at CERN as well as various astroparticle physics observatories, and gravitational-wave physics. In addition it has a theory department.
The gravitational physics group is a member of the Virgo Collaboration, is active in the LISA effort, and plays an important role in the Einstein Telescope design study. It is led by prof.dr. J.F.J. van den Brand. Other than 6 staff instrumentalists, the Nikhef group and its collaborators in the Netherlands consists of data analysts (C. Van Den Broeck and H.J. Bulten), astronomers and astrophysicists (J. Kuijpers, G. Nelemans), and theorists (J.W. van Holten and M. Postma), together with a number of students and postdocs. There is also vibrant collaboration with individuals and groups around the world. The Nikhef group itself will expand significantly over the next several years. More information about our activities can be found at http://www.nikhef.nl/en/for-nikhef-users/departments/scientific-departments….
The successful candidate will (i) participate in analysis of S6/VSR2 data, in the context of compact binary coalescence, and/or (ii) help prepare for scientific opportunities with Advanced LIGO and Virgo as well as third generation instruments on the ground and in space (Einstein Telescope and LISA). The position is for 2 years initially and extendable by an additional year.
Applicants should expect to have their PhD by September 2010. They should send a C.V., list of publications, and a brief statement of research interests, preferably by e-mail before February 1st, 2010 to dr. C. Van Den Broeck (vdbroeck[At]nikhef.nl), with a c.c. to T. van Egdom (pz[AT]nikhef.nl). Please also arrange to have three letters of recommendation sent to these addresses. Applications may also be sent by regular mail to: Nikhef Personnel Department, P.O. Box 41882, NL-1009 DB Amsterdam. Please quote vacancy nr: 091139.
Informal inquiries can be made with dr. C. Van Den Broeck (vdbroeck[AT]nikhef.nl).
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2.6 Postdoctoral Researcher position in Theoretical Astrophysics at RIT
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/03/postdoctoral-researcher-position-in…
Institution: Rochester, New York, USA
Deadline: Sun, Jan 31, 2010
Additional Information: http://ccrg.rit.edu/
The astrophysics group at the Rochester Institute of Technology is seeking one or more outstanding postdoctoral researchers in theoretical astrophysics. We are particularly interested in candidates with computational experience, to make use of the superb facilities at RIT for gravitational simulations. These include a 32-node GRAPE cluster with a speed of 4 Tflops; three, GRAPE-6 computers; and a 110 node high-performance cluster. The successful applicant will work with David Merritt and Joshua Faber on one or more topics of current research interest at RIT, which include evolution of galactic nuclei, calculation of event rates for gravitational wave detectors, interaction of supermassive black holes with their stellar and gaseous environments, and stellar collisions. Outstanding candidates in related fields will also be considered.
To apply, please send a CV and statement of research interest to David Merritt at merritt_at_astro.rit.edu. In addition, please arrange for 2-3 letters of recommendation to be sent to the same address before January 31 2010.
Postal address for resume submission (e-mail submission is preferred):
ATTN David Merritt
Rochester Institute of Technology
Department of Physics
85 Lomb Memorial Drive
Rochester, NY 14623
USA
Included Benefits:
http://finweb.rit.edu/humanresources/benefits/
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2.7 Postdoctoral Fellow in Mathematical/Numerical Relativity at Otago
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/03/postdoctoral-fellow-in-mathematical…
Institution: Dunedin, New Zealand
Deadline: Fri, Jan 29, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.otago.ac.nz/jobs
Applications are invited from suitably qualified candidates for a fixed-term Postdoctoral Fellow in Applied Mathematics in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics. The position is for up to three years. It is attached to the Marsden funded project “Global simulation of gravitational waves from isolated systems”. Applicants with a strong background in general relativity and/or numerical methods for PDEs are particularly encouraged to apply.
Specific enquiries may be directed to Professor J. Frauendiener, Chair of Applied Mathematics, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Tel 03 479 7770, Email joergf_at_maths.otago.ac.nz
Specific information about the Department can be obtained from the Departmental web page www.maths.otago.ac.nz
Applications quoting reference number A09/170 close on Friday 29 January 2010.
Application Information
Send applications to the Human Resources Division, Email job.applications_at_otago.ac.nz, Fax 03 479 8279. With each application, please include an application form, an EEO information form, a covering letter and your curriculum vitae. The forms and a full job description are available at www.otago.ac.nz/jobs Alternatively, contact the Human Resources Division, Tel 03 479 8269, Email job.applications_at_otago.ac.nz
Equal opportunity in employment is University policy.
E tautoko ana Te Whare Wananga o Otago i te kaupapa whakaorite whiwhinga mahi.
www.otago.ac.nz/jobs
DO NOT send original documents in support of your application - copies are adequate and preferred. Documents will not be returned. Please complete a separate application form and include a separate copy of your curriculum vitae and supporting documents for each vacancy you wish to apply for. For ease of processing and to avoid cost and waste, we ask that applications are not presented in folders.
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2.8 Research Associates in Gravitational Wave Theory and Data Analysis at Cardiff
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/12/02/research-associates-2-posts-gravita…
Institution: Cardiff, U.K.
Deadline: Fri, Jan 08, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.cf.ac.uk/jobs/academic/20090622-080110.html
Cardiff Gravitational Physics (http://www.astro.cardiff.ac.uk/research/gravity/) is seeking applications to fill one or more STFC- and EC-funded research positions. You will have the opportunity to take part in the exciting search for gravitational waves in data from the most sensitive interferometers built to date using state-of-the-art computational infrastructure. Group members play leading roles in efforts to detect signals from the coalescence of neutron star and black hole binaries, and from gamma-ray bursts. They model astrophysical sources of gravitational waves and develop search algorithms for their detection and interpretation with current and future detectors. You will also have the opportunity to participate in the design study of the Einstein Telescope, a third generation gravitational wave antenna with an anticipated sensitivity a factor of 10 better than the advanced LIGO detectors.
The positions are available initially for a period of two years, and are at the Research Associate (Grade 6) level. The nominal starting date is October 2010, but the precise starting dates are negotiable.
Salary: £29704 - £35469 per annum. (Grade 6).
Closing date: 08 January 2010.
Informal enquiries can be made to Dr Patrick Sutton by email at Patrick.Sutton[AT]astro.cf.ac.uk. Instructions for applying may be found here:
<http://www.cf.ac.uk/jobs/academic/20090622-080110.html>
Completed applications should be sent directly to vacancies[At]cardiff.ac.uk and cc'ed to Patrick.Sutton[AT]astro.cf.ac.uk.
=================================================================
3. News
=================================================================
1
0

02 Dec '09
#################################################################
Table of Contents
#################################################################
1. Conferences
1.1 Pan-American Advanced Studies Institute on Quantum Gravity
1.2 13th Eastern Gravity Meeting
1.3 1st VESF School on Gravitational-Wave Data Analysis
1.4 CompStar2010 School and Workshop on Computational Astrophysics
1.5 AIGO Conference: Project Plan and Science Benefits
2. Jobs
2.1 Assistant Professor position in GR/Astrophysics at Florida Atlantic University
2.2 Scientific IT Specialist at the Albert Einstein Institute
2.3 Postdoctoral positions in gravitational-wave and electromagnetic astronomy at UW-Milwaukee
2.4 Simons Postdoctoral Fellowship at The University of Texas at Austin
2.5 Postdoc position in quantum gravity/cosmology at New Brunswick
2.6 PhD position in Relativistic Astrophysics at University of Valencia
2.7 Two postdoctoral positions in Quantum Gravity in Marseille and Lyon
2.8 VESF fellowship for theoretical research on gravitational wave detection
2.9 Two postdoc positions in cosmology at University of Portsmouth
2.10 Postdoctoral position in General Relativity at Lisbon
2.11 Postdoctoral position in gravitational-wave data analysis for LIGO
2.12 Postdoctoral Positions in Cosmology at ASU
2.13 Scientific IT Specialist at Perimeter Institute
2.14 Postdoc Position(s) in Quantum Gravity at Utrecht University
2.15 Postdoctoral Positions in Theoretical Gravitational-Wave Science at Caltech
2.16 PhD positions in gravitational physics at Ole Miss
2.17 Postdoc in gravitational-wave physics at Carnegie Mellon University
2.18 Postdoc in Theoretical Cosmology at UC Davis
3. News
3.1 Mock LISA Data Challenge round 4 released
3.2 2010 Awards for Essays on Gravitation (reminder)
3.3 Free access to all papers published in "Gravitation and Cosmology"
3.4 GWIC Thesis Prize: Call for Nominations
3.5 GW Notes: New issue and highlight on EMRI waveforms
=================================================================
1. Conferences
=================================================================
1.1 Pan-American Advanced Studies Institute on Quantum Gravity
--------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/28/pan-american-advanced-studies-insti…
Starting Wed, Jun 23, 2010 to Sat, Jul 03, 2010
Location: Morelia, Mexico
Additional Information: http://www.physics.ucsb.edu/~pasi/
Summer School Second Announcement: Pan-American Advanced Studies Institute (PASI) on Quantum Gravity
Dear Colleagues,
Arrangements are now being finalized for a Quantum Gravity summer school (Pan-American Advanced Studies Institute on Quantum Gravity) to be hosted by the Institute for Mathematics of the National Autonomous University Of Mexico (UNAM) in Morelia, Mexico, June 23-July 3, 2010.
Please see http://www.physics.ucsb.edu/~pasi/ for up to date information and the application/financial aid form. Applications should be received by
Jan 31, 2009
to receive full consideration. Please note: We expect to be able to cover all local expenses as well as to provide significant (and, in some cases, full) travel support for participants from the Americas. Unfortuantely, our funding cannot support the expenses of participants based outside the Americas.
Lectures at the school will describe current research in several approaches to quantum gravity, including string theory, loop gravity, and causal dynamical triangulations. Anticipated lecturers include:
Abhay Ashtekar (Penn State U.)
Máximo Bañados (Universidad Católica)
Alejandro Corichi (UNAM-Morelia)
Scott Dodelson (Fermilab)
Laurent Freidel (Perimeter Institute)
Alberto Güijosa (ICN-UNAM)
Veronika Hubeny (Durham U.)
Clifford Johnson (USC)
Per Kraus (UCLA)
Renate Loll (Utrecht U.)
Carlo Rovelli (U. Marseille)
Robert Wald (U. Chicago)
Lectures will be appropriate for advanced Ph.D students and beginning postdocs. The goal of the school is to bring together researchers from these different approaches from throughout the americas.
Logistics and Funding:
The location and timing of our school have been chosen to synergize with the 19th International Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation (GR19), to be held July 5-9, 2010 in Mexico City (see http://www.gr19.com/) We have funding from the U.S. National Science Foundation to support travel and local expenses for participants from throughout the americas. We expect to be able to cover all local expenses as well as to provide significant (and, in some cases, full) travel support for participants from the Americas. Nevertheless, we urge the student's home institutions to support the students to the maximum possible extent as this will increase the number of students who can participate in our school. Unfortunately, our funding cannot support the expenses of participants based outside the Americas.
Please distribute this announcement to interested students and postdocs.
We look forward to an exciting school!
Sincerely,
Donald Marolf
Alejandro Corichi
Abhay Ashtekar
Maximo Banados
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1.2 13th Eastern Gravity Meeting
--------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/23/13th-eastern-gravity-meeting/
Starting Fri, May 21, 2010 to Sat, May 22, 2010
Location: Raleigh, NC, U.S.A.
Additional Information: http://www.physics.ncsu.edu/EGM13/
The 13th Eastern Gravity Meeting will be hosted by the Department of Physics at North Carolina State University. The meeting will take place in Riddick Hall on the NCSU campus. Participation is encouraged by researchers -- especially students -- in all areas of gravitational physics, including classical, quantum, theory, observation, computation and experiment. Since this is a regional meeting, most participants are expected to come from the east coast of North America, but all are welcome.
The meeting will follow the format of previous Eastern Gravity Meetings (and other regional gravity meetings such as the Pacific Coast Gravity Meetings and Midwest Relativity Meetings). All presentations will be the same length (approximately 10-15 minutes), and every effort will be made to accommodate all submissions.
No registration fee will be charged, and no financial support will be provided. All attendees are encouraged to register. This will help the organizers in their planning. Attendees who would like to present a talk must register for the conference.
Further information can be found at the conference website, http://www.physics.ncsu.edu/EGM13/
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1.3 1st VESF School on Gravitational-Wave Data Analysis
-------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/22/1st-vesf-school-on-data-analysis/
Starting Wed, Feb 10, 2010 to Sat, Feb 13, 2010
Location: Cascina (PISA), Italy
Additional Information: http://www.roma1.infn.it/teongrav/VESF/SCHOOL.html
The Virgo EGO Scientific Forum (VESF) is glad to announce the 1st edition of the VESF School on Gravitational Waves Data Analysis, which will take place from February 10th to February 13th, 2010 at the site of EGO in Cascina (Italy).
The purpose of this VESF school is to complement the traditional VESF School on Gravitational Waves, which will take place in the Summer of 2010, providing a practical, hands-on introduction to the methodologies and techniques for data analysis.
The school welcomes young physicists and engineers; they will be introduced to the main characteristics of the data produced by interferometric detectors like Virgo, and will learn about basics of signal processing and GW data analysis. The school comprises short theoretical lessons and long training sessions, allowing the students to apply Virgo analysis software to real data with embedded test signals.
The deadline for applications is Jan. 15th, 2010 and further information can be found on the VESF website
http://www.roma1.infn.it/teongrav/VESF/
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1.4 CompStar2010 School and Workshop on Computational Astrophysics
------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/15/compstar2010-school-and-workshop-on…
Starting Mon, Feb 08, 2010 to Tue, Feb 16, 2010
Location: Ganil, France
Additional Information: http://ipnweb.in2p3.fr/compstar2010
We are glad to inform you that the CompStar2010 School and Workshop on Computational Astrophysics will be held in GANIL, Caen, February 8-16, 2010
This event is founded by the European Science Foundation. It will consist of a School on computational astrophysics (February 8-13) and a workshop covering different aspects of the physics of compact stars (February 14-16) including a session dedicated to the nuclear physics experiments relevant for neutron star physics.
The deadline for registration is december the 20th.
For registration and more information, see http://ipnweb.in2p3.fr/compstar2010
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1.5 AIGO Conference: Project Plan and Science Benefits
------------------------------------------------------
Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/05/aigo-conference-project-plan-and-sc…
Starting Mon, Feb 22, 2010 to Wed, Feb 24, 2010
Location: Perth, Australia
Additional Information: http://www.aigo.org.au/
The Australian International Gravitational Observatory: Project Plan and Science Benefits
An International Conference to be held at the University of Western Australia and the Gingin Gravity Centre
Members of the LSC, Virgo and LCGT collaborations are invited to a special conference on the AIGO project on 22-24 February 2010.
The meeting follows the GWIC Roadmap recommendation #2:
“Recommendation - We recommend that GWIC organize a workshop to elucidate the scientific benefits of interferometers in Japan, Australia and possibly India, as a way to encourage further international support and recognition of the potential scientific contributions of these facilities as part of the global network of ground-based gravitational wave detectors”.
It was suggested at the July GWIC Meeting that the Australia-India Collaboration meeting already planned for February 2010 be extended to realise the above recommendation, particularly in regard to the AIGO Project.
With help and advice from those listed as the Organising Committee below, we have proceeded to plan this meeting. It will be held in our late summer, 22-24 Feb, followed by a 3-day excursion to explore the spectacular Wild Beaches of South Western Australia. Afterwards there will be a residential seminar on gravitational wave detector technology mainly for the benefit of our Indian colleagues and others who are new to the field.
Please see the draft program at AIGO web site http://www.aigo.org.au/
<em>Registration details:</em>
A registration fee of AUD$250.00 payable on arrival will include lunches, dinners and transport for the three day scientific program.
<em>Organizing Committee:</em>
Chair: Jesper Munch, Secretary: Pablo Barriga.
Members: Ju Li, Chunnong Zhao, David Coward, Jackie Davidson, Jean-Charles Dumas, Karsten Danzmann, Bala Iyer, Sanjeev Dhurandhar, C. S. Unnikrishnan, Jay Marx, David G. Blair, David E. McClelland, Susan M. Scott, Andrew Melatos, Catherine Nary Man, Zong-Hong Zhu
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2. Jobs
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2.1 Assistant Professor position in GR/Astrophysics at Florida Atlantic University
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/30/assistant-prof-position-in-grastrop…
Institution: Boca Raton, FL, U.S.A.
Deadline: Sun, Jan 10, 2010
Additional Information: http://jobs.fau.edu/
The Department of Physics at FAU invites applications for a tenure track position at the Assistant Professor level, (Position # 981470), to begin in Aug 2010. The Department supports over 30 PhD students and has active research groups in the fields of general relativity, astrophysics, biophysics, neuroscience and quantum optics. In this search, we are seeking highly qualified candidates committed to a career in teaching and research in general relativity or astrophysics. Our FAU Spacetime (FAUST) group has four faculty members and conducts research in numerical astrophysics and in the foundations of classical and quantum gravity. The Department offers BS, MS, MST and Ph.D. degrees. The successful candidates will be expected to teach, conduct a vigorous research program, and contribute to the development of the current research initiatives within the Physics Department.
To be considered for this position, applicants must complete the online Faculty, Administrative, Managerial & Professional application and apply at http://jobs.fau.edu/. Please attach a cover letter, curriculum vitae and a statement of teaching and research interests along with your application. In addition, the candidate must submit three letters of recommendations, list of publications, a statement of teaching and research interests by email (preferably) to grfs[AT]physics.fau.edu. The address for the letters of recommendation is Chair of the GR Search Committee, Department of Physics, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL 33431-0991. Material received by January 10, 2010 will receive full consideration.
A background check will be required for the candidate selected for this position. For further details visit our Web page (http://www.physics.fau.edu) Positions are subject to anticipated availability of funds.
Women and minorities are especially encouraged to apply. Florida Atlantic University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access Institution.
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2.2 Scientific IT Specialist at the Albert Einstein Institute
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/26/scientific-it-specialist-at-the-alb…
Institution: Potsdam, Germany
Deadline: Thu, Dec 31, 2009
Additional Information: http://numrel.aei.mpg.de/Jobs/index.html
The Astrophysical Relativity Division of the Albert Einstein Institute (Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics) in Potsdam (Germany) seeks a creative individual with experience in both scientific research and information technology (IT) to fill a new hybrid research/IT position within the institute. While great flexibility is left in the vision of the position, which the candidate will also help define, the successful applicant is expected to assist the scientists in their computational efforts to model sources of gravitational waves. On a case-by-case basis, the successful applicant may also negotiate a fraction of his/her time for use in independent research.
The initial mandate of the position is threefold. First, assisting the scientists in the development of their numerical codes and in their optimization to best exploit new supercomputing infrastructures and architectures (e.g. MPI, openMP, etc). Second, investigating the best and most effective computational solutions that could be relevant for the scientific research carried out by the scientists. Third, as changing scientific conditions and computational resources dictate (e.g. cloud computing, GPUs, etc), develop new strategies that exploit them at best and train the scientists in their use.
The position is initially for 5 years, but it could be extended to longer periods and may eventually become permanent. The salary will be a very competitive one within the German scientific system and could include additional allowances if the candidate also manages a small group.
Applications should be sent electronically to Prof. L. Rezzolla (rezzolla_at_aei.mpg.de) as a single PDF file containing a CV, a publication list, a research summary and proposal. Applicants should also arrange for at least 2 letters of reference. All material should arrive by Dec. 31st, 2009 and the search will continue until a suitable candidate is found.
CANDIDATE PROFILE:
EDUCATION:
* A PhD or PhD-level experience in Physics, Math, Computer Science or closely related discipline.
* A proficient knowledge of written and spoken English
EXPERIENCE:
* Familiarity and previous exposure to scientific culture and operating procedures.
* Expert-level computing skills particularly with respect to HPC on massively parallel platforms, proficiency in several programming languages (C, C++, Fortran, Python, etc.).
* Experience conducting research in physics with preference to relativity, astrophysics and hydrodynamics.
* Previous exposure to the computational infrastructure developed and used at the institute (e.g. Cactus Computational Toolkit, Carpet AMR driver, Whisky HD and MHD code).
The last two intems are important additional values but not pre-requisites.
LEADERSHIP SKILLS, KNOWLEDGE AND ATTRIBUTES
* A positive, outgoing personality with a genuine interest in engaging scientists and assisting them to improve their research.
* A teamwork-oriented, problem-solving attitude and the ability to coordinate and lead a dedicated research group.
* Strong verbal and written skills. The candidate must be able to demonstrate and communicate his visions and suggestions and to train the scientists in the use of new computational strategies.
* The ability to build strong relationships within the local and the global scientific community and become a trusted, expert advisor.
* A flexible working schedule adapted to the equally flexible working schedule of the scientists.
* Reseach-planning and proposal writing abilities: the candidate is expected to assist the scientists in their requests of new computational facilities and to actively attract external funding to promote and support the research of his/her group.
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2.3 Postdoctoral positions in gravitational-wave and electromagnetic astronomy at UW-Milwaukee
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/24/postdoctoral-positions-in-gravitati…
Institution: Milwaukee, WI, U.S.A
Deadline: Sun, Feb 28, 2010
The Center for Gravitation and Cosmology at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM) invites applications for up to five postdoctoral research positions. The initial appointments are for one year, with renewal for a second (and, in some cases, a third) year contingent on continued funding and satisfactory performance.
The Center for Gravitation and Cosmology at UWM is one of the nation's largest and most active research groups in gravity, cosmology, astronomy, and astrophysics with nine faculty members, Luis Anchordoqui, Patrick Brady, Jolien Creighton, Dawn Erb, John Friedman, David Kaplan, Leonard Parker, Xavier Siemens, and Alan Wiseman, senior scientist Scott Koranda, visiting professor Warren Anderson, and several postdoctoral fellows and graduate students. The group also maintains a close relationship with the Albert Einstein Institutes in Hannover and Golm through Bruce Allen and Maria Alessandra Papa who hold Adjunct appointments at UWM and visit regularly. More information about the people and the research can be found at http://gravity.phys.uwm.edu.
The group performs research that spans most aspects of LIGO Scientific Collaboration (LSC) gravitational-wave data analysis activities, including searches for binary neutron star and black hole inspirals, continuous waves from isolated neutron stars, development and support of Einstein@Home, bursts, and stochastic background. The group is also active in several grid computing collaborations including the Open Science Grid (OSG). The group is recruiting up to three postdoctoral research associates to work in these areas. Applicants with a backgrounds in gravitational-wave physics, theoretical relativity, numerical relativity, cosmology, high energy physics (theory and experiment), and other areas of astronomy are welcome to apply.
In addition, the CGC is recruiting up to two postdocs in the area of observational astronomy. The first position is for research in the area of evolution and characterization of high redshift galaxies under the supervision of Dawn Erb. Applicants should have a PhD in astrophysics and experience with optical and/or infrared spectra of galaxies. A second position is available to develop and conduct radio transient searches under the supervision of David Kaplan. Applicants should have a PhD in observational astronomy -- experience in radio interferometry or multi-wavelength observations of transients is desirable. Kaplan is a member of the Murchison Widefield Array collaboration, the ASKAP VAST collaboration, and is developing other projects, with particular interest in compact objects. Erb and Kaplan also hold adjunct positions at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and there will be opportunities to collaborate there as well.
Applicants whose work overlaps any of the research interests of the group should send a C.V., publication list, and a brief statement of their research interests by email to cgcpd[AT]gravity.phys.uwm.edu or by ordinary mail to
Ms. Kate Valerius, CGC Postdoc Search Committee
Department of Physics
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
PO Box 413
Milwaukee, WI 53201, USA
(Phone 414-229-4474 Fax: 414-229-5589.)
Applicants should also arrange to have three letters of recommendation sent to this address. Screening of applications will begin December 1st 2009 and will continue until all positions are filled.
The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee is an Equal Opportunity,
Affirmative Action Employer.
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2.4 Simons Postdoctoral Fellowship at The University of Texas at Austin
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/24/simons-postdoctoral-fellowship-at-t…
Institution: Austin, TX, U.S.A.
Deadline: Sun, Jan 31, 2010
Additional Information: http://zippy.ph.utexas.edu/postdoc.html
The Physics Department of The University of Texas at Austin is pleased to announce that it will host a Simons Postdoctoral Fellowship in the field of theoretical physics. This Fellowship, sponsored by the Simons Foundation, will offer a three-year position to highly qualified recent PhD graduates in all areas of physical theory.
The University of Texas at Austin pursues theoretical physics over a wide range of research arenas, including biophysics, condensed matter physics, cosmology, elementary particles, general relativity, nonlinear dynamics and plasma physics. The goal of the Simons Postdoctoral Fellowship program is to provide the best possible postdoctoral training to the strongest graduating PhD's.
The Simons Postdoctoral Fellowship will begin in September, 2010. The first-year salary will be $65000, with 3% increases each subsequent year. Additional support for travel and fringe benefits will be available. To be eligible for a Fellowship, the candidate must have received his or her PhD during the academic year immediately preceding that in which the Fellowship would begin. There are no other restrictions.
The deadline for applications is January 31, 2010. Applications should include three letters of recommendation, a Curriculum Vitae and a short statement of purpose, describing the goals of the proposed research, including University collaborators where appropriate. Applications can be submitted through surface mail, or through a link at the web site of the Physics Department of The University of Texas at Austin.
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2.5 Postdoc position in quantum gravity/cosmology at New Brunswick
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/17/postdoc-position-in-quantum-gravity…
Institution: Fredericton, Canada
Deadline: Tue, Dec 15, 2009
Additional Information: http://aarms.math.ca/pdf/
The Gravity group at the University of New Brunswick expects to have a post-doctoral position available beginning in Fall 2010. The group has three faculty (Jack Gegenberg, Viqar Husain and Sanjeev Seahra), and typically two postdocs, and a few graduate students. Our research interests are in general relativity, cosmology, quantum gravity, geometric flows and related areas.
To apply please send a cover letter and CV, and have at least two letters of reference sent by email to Ms. M. Hetherington at mhetheri[AT]unb.ca
Candidates wishing to apply for an AARMS post-doctoral fellowship should submit applications by Dec. 15 2009. Information on these fellowships is available at http://aarms.math.ca/pdf/
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2.6 PhD position in Relativistic Astrophysics at University of Valencia
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/16/phd-position-in-relativistic-astrop…
Institution: Valencia, Spain
Deadline: Thu, Jan 07, 2010
The Relativistic Astrophysics Group of the University of Valencia (Spain) seeks candidates for a PhD position. The application deadline is January 7, 2010. The PhD position is opened through the "Prometeo/2009 Santiago Grisolia" program of the Generalitat Valenciana. Eligible candidates must have obtained their degree in a non-Spanish university after January 1st 2008, and are expected to enroll in the Master "Advanced Physics" of the University of Valencia.
The group carries research in the fields of numerical relativistic hydrodynamics and magneto-hydrodynamics, numerical relativity, and numerical cosmology. The group is actively investigating astrophysical scenarios such as stellar collapse, accretion onto compact objecs, dynamics and evolution of (magnetized) neutron stars, relativistic jets (in active galaxies and microquasars), gamma-ray bursts, galaxy formation, galaxy clusters, and gravitational radiation. The focus of the PhD position will be related to any of the above topics.
Economic conditions:
The salary of the position is of 1200 euros per month, which includes health insurance through the Spanish public system (Seguridad Social). In addition, the selected candidate will receive 1600 euros as a contribution to the settlement fees, and 1200 euros to cover the registration taxes in the Master "Advanced Physics" of the University of Valencia. The duration of the position can be extended up to a total of three years.
Documentation to be provided by the candidates:
1.- Photocopy of the passport (non-EU citizens) or of the Identification card (EU citizens).
2.- Official certification of degree and marks (official translation to Spanish is requested).
3.- Photocopy of the academic degree (official translation to Spanish is requested).
4.- CV
5.- Rationale of the research project to be done (in coordination with the group).
6.- Two reference letters.
7.- Accreditation of the knowledge of English or Spanish.
For more information, please visit
http://www.edu.gva.es/poci/es/10_GRISOLIA.htm
or contact Jose Maria Ibanez at jose.m.ibanez_at_uv.es
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2.7 Two postdoctoral positions in Quantum Gravity in Marseille and Lyon
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/13/two-postdoctoral-positions-in-quant…
Institution: Marseille and Lyon, France
Deadline: Thu, Dec 10, 2009
Additional Information: http://www.cpt.univ-mrs.fr/~quantumgravity/
Two postdoctoral positions in Quantum Gravity will be opened this year in France, one in Marseille and one in Lyon. We expect to fill the two positions anytime between now and fall 2010. The postions are for two years, have a competitive salary and access to travel grants. The successful candidate is expected to have contributed to the field of quantum gravity, and to be interested in collaborating with the research groups in Marseille or Lyon.
The Marseille and Lyon groups are presently formed by four faculties (Livine, Speziale, Perez, Rovelli), several postdocs and numerous students.
We expect applications to include a CV, a brief summary of previous research, and a research proposal up to four pages, mentioning also the reason for the interest in our group. Please send applications to: <perez_at_cpt.univ-mrs.fr>.
Two or three recommandation letters can be sent to the same address.
We expect to begin evaluating applications by December 10th.
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2.8 VESF fellowship for theoretical research on gravitational wave detection
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/11/vesf-fellowship-for-theoretical-res…
Institution: TBD
Deadline: Sun, Jan 10, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.roma1.infn.it/teongrav/VESF
The Virgo Ego Scientific Forum (VESF) is glad to announce the call for applications for one fellowship at postdoctoral level for up to two years, to work on theoretical research relevant to the physics of the Virgo experiment: potentially detectable gravitational wave sources, emitted waveforms, rates, data analysis algorithms and strategies and any other topic of interest for Virgo.
A direct impact on data analysis will be considered as an additional credit in the evaluation of proposed researches. The present call is open to groups that are member of VESF, as well as to individuals. In this latter case, the proposed research must take place at one of the groups which are members of VESF and the application will have to contain a letter of endorsement of the hosting Institution, assuring hospitality as well as logistic and scientific support for the proposed research activity. Applications from individuals are encouraged.
The application forms and the list of eligible groups can be found on the VESF webpage: http://www.roma1.infn.it/teongrav/VESF
Applications should be sent electronically to: severine.perus_at_ego-gw.it
The deadline for submitting applications is January 10th 2010, and the selection will take place by January 30th, 2010. The position should be filled by the end of June 2010 and the extension to a second year will be subject to positive evaluation of the scientific activity by the Executive Board
VESF encourages applications from individuals with disabilities, minorities, and women.
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2.9 Two postdoc positions in cosmology at University of Portsmouth
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/11/two-postdoc-positions-in-cosmology-…
Institution: Portsmouth, U.K.
Deadline: Fri, Jan 08, 2010
Additional Information: http:// http://www.port.ac.uk/vacancies/research/
The Institute of Cosmology & Gravitation (ICG) at the University of Portsmouth intends to appoint two postdoctoral researchers in theoretical and observational cosmology. A PhD degree and relevant research experience are required for both positions.
One researcher will work on linking observations and theories of dark energy. Informal queries can be made to will.percival[AT]port.ac.uk. The post, reference RTEC0091, is for three years, starting 1st OCTOBER 2010 (or earlier by agreement).
For the other post, reference RTEC0092, applications in all areas of theoretical cosmology are welcomed. This position is for two years, starting 1st OCTOBER 2010 (or earlier by agreement). A one year extension may be possible depending on funding availability. Informal enquiries about this post can be made to kazuya.koyama[AT]port.ac.uk.
The ICG consists of 10 academic staff, 13 postdoctoral researchers and 18 PhD students, and is involved in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-III including BOSS), the Dark Energy Survey (DES), the UK Low Frequency Array Consortium (UK-LOFAR), the VIMOS Public Extragalactic Redshift Survey (VIPERS) and the UK National Cosmology Supercomputer Consortium (COSMOS). More information is available at http://www.icg.port.ac.uk/
An online application form is available at http://www.port.ac.uk/vacancies/downloads/applicationform.doc
Please quote the appropriate post reference number (RTEC0091, RTEC0092) on all correspondence. Applications for both positions will be considered.
Applications (Application Form, CV, research statement, names of 3 referees) should be sent by email to jobs[AT]port.ac.uk and copied to icg-admin[AT]port.ac.uk. Applicants should also arrange for three letters of reference to be sent by email to icg-admin[AT]port.ac.uk, to arrive by the closing date, 8 JANUARY 2010. Late applications may be considered until the post has been filled.
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2.10 Postdoctoral position in General Relativity at Lisbon
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/10/postdoctoral-position-in-general-re…
Institution: Lisbon, Portugal
Deadline: Mon, Mar 01, 2010
The Centro Multidisciplinar de Astrofísica (CENTRA) invites applications for a postdoctoral position in the area of General Relativity and black hole physics, including numerical relativity. The appointment is for two years, subject to funding renewal and satisfactory performance.
A tentative date for the appointment is September 1, 2010 (with possible variations to be agreed upon with the successful applicant). The appointment is for two years. All candidates must hold a Ph.D. in Physics.
The Centro Multidisciplinar de Astrofísica (CENTRA) is a research centre which is part of the Physics Department of the Instituto Superior Técnico in Lisbon, a leading research Institution in Portugal. More information on the Center can be found at
http://centra.ist.utl.pt/
The gravity group is currently focusing on phenomenology of black hole physics and numerical relativity, and is composed of Vitor Cardoso, José Lemos, Andrea Nerozzi and Jorge Rocha. There is a dedicated collaboration with Leonardo Gualtieri (Rome "La Sapienza"), Carlos Herdeiro (Porto) and Ulrich Sperhake (Caltech), for the understanding of higher dimensional black objects and how to implement these and different theories numerically. The applicant is expected to contribute to the efforts of the group and to the training of students.
Applicants should send a curriculum vitae, a list of publications, a statement of research interests (explaining how their background relates to black hole physics) and three letters of recommendation to the following e-mail address:
jobs_gravity_at_ist.utl.pt
Please use the subject "Black hole physics".
Applications should be received by March 1, 2010. Incomplete applications shall not be considered. Screening of applicants will begin on March 1, 2010 and will continue until the position is filled. For more information please contact Vitor Cardoso (vitor.cardoso_at_ist.utl.pt). These positions are supported by Fundação para a Ciencia e Tecnologia (FCT).
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2.11 Postdoctoral position in gravitational-wave data analysis for LIGO
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/10/postdoctoral-position-in-gravitatio…
Institution: MS (USA), Lisbon (PT)
Deadline: Mon, Mar 01, 2010
The Centro Multidisciplinar de Astrofísica (CENTRA, Instituto Superior Técnico), in collaboration with the University of Mississippi, invites applications for one postdoctoral position in the area of gravitational waves and data analysis, in the context of the LIGO detector. The appointment is for two years, subject to funding renewal and satisfactory performance.
A tentative date for the appointment is September 1, 2010 (with possible variations to be agreed upon with the successful applicant). The appointment is for two years. All candidates must hold a Ph.D. in Physics.
The position is a joint position between CENTRA and the LIGO group of the university of Mississippi. CENTRA is a research centre located in Instituto Superior Técnico in Lisbon, a leading research Institution in Portugal. More information on the Center can be found at
http://centra.ist.utl.pt/
The applicant will be part of, and expected to participate in the activities of the LIGO group of the University of Mississippi,
http://www.phy.olemiss.edu/GR/ligoteam/
Applicants should send a curriculum vitae, a list of publications, a statement of research interests and three letters of recommendation to the following e-mail address:
jobs_gravity_at_ist.utl.pt
Please use the subject "gravitational waves".
Applications should be received by March 1, 2010. Incomplete applications shall not be considered. Screening of applicants will begin on March 1, 2010 and will continue until the position is filled. For more information please contact Vitor Cardoso (vitor.cardoso_at_ist.utl.pt) or Marco Cavaglià (cavaglia_at_phy.olemiss.edu) This position is supported by Fundação para a Ciencia e Tecnologia (FCT) and by the university of Mississippi.
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2.12 Postdoctoral Positions in Cosmology at ASU
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/10/postdoctoral-positions-in-cosmology…
Institution: Phoenix, AZ, U.S.A.
Deadline: Tue, Dec 15, 2009
Additional Information: http://www.cosmology.asu.edu
The Department of Physics at Arizona State University invites applications for a postdoctoral fellowship in theoretical cosmology. The initial appointment will be for two years beginning in the Fall of 2010 with the possibility of an extension to a third year upon mutual agreement and availability of funding.
The successful candidate will work with Professor Damien Easson and his colleagues on topics at the interface of fundamental particle physics and cosmology. Applicants must possess a doctorate in physics and a strong research record in early universe cosmology, string theory and inflation, CMB physics, modified gravity, dark energy or gravitational physics. The successful candidate will have opportunities to pursue independent research projects and to work with members of the Cosmology Initiative at ASU. Please visit http://www.cosmology.asu.edu/ for more information.
ASU has an active, growing program in cosmology that includes members from the Department of Physics, the School of Earth and Space Exploration and the Beyond Center. Current members include Professors Andrei Belitsky, Roman Buniy, Paul Davies, Damien Easson, Lawrence Krauss, Richard Lebed, Cecilia Lunardini, Sangeeta Malhotra, James Rhoads, Evan Scannapieco and Rogier Windhorst.
Complete applications will include a cover letter, curriculum vitae, statement of research and teaching plans, and contact information for three references (postal and email address and phone number). Materials should be submitted electronically at http://physics.asu.edu/employment.php or by clicking the APPLY HERE button below (Job #EAS1).
Applications will be considered beginning December 15, 2009, with further review of completed files every two weeks until the search is closed. A background check is required for employment.
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2.13 Scientific IT Specialist at Perimeter Institute
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/10/scientific-it-specialist/
Institution: Waterloo, ON, Canada
Deadline: Fri, Dec 11, 2009
Additional Information: http://www.perimeterinstitute.ca/Scientific/Applications/Scientific_IT_Spec…
The Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics (PI) seeks a creative individual with experience in both scientific research and information technology (IT) to fill a new hybrid research / IT position within the Institute. The successful applicant will bring his / her own vision to the position and help define it. A key aspect of the position is to assist PI’s scientific staff in making effective use of IT resources. We expect this position’s activities to evolve over time as needs and opportunities arise.
The initial mandate of the position is twofold. First, directly assisting Researchers in their use of IT resources and improving their ability to use currently known and available tools. Second, provide leadership by introducing Researchers to the best new IT resources that are available to them. This would include defining and sharing knowledge regarding these practices with the rest of the worldwide theoretical physics community, furthering PI’s role as a community resource. This includes but is not limited to: the use of end-user software, software coding, collaboration technologies, and social networking tools. On a case-by-case basis, the successful applicant may also negotiate a fraction of his / her time for use in independent research.
Major Duties and Responsibilities:
• Act as a knowledge broker among Researchers. That is, find and test new programs and practices, advertise them, and be prepared to train others in their use
• Research and follow up on suggestions made by others regarding new software packages, equipment, etc. and their applicability to PI's research;
• Participate in the creation of a "standard", yet highly productive, Researcher IT environment (desktop hardware, software set-up), maximizing the use of open source software and/or popular commercial packages;
• As demand dictates, be a liaison with SHARCNET (or other HPC) resources. Be ready to help researchers to gain the expertise available at these facilities. Assist with the deployment and management of any PI large scale computing clusters.
• Work with other IT staff to refine standard IT service and support to better suit PI’s scientific community
• Bring or quickly develop an expert level knowledge in the use of the main packages used by Researchers, including Mathematica, Maple, LaTeX, etc.;
• Bring in depth knowledge of Linux and to a lesser extent Windows/Mac to assist Researchers with technical problems; participate in architectural planning for efficient use of IT throughout a research program
Candidate Profile:
Education:
A PhD or PhD-level experience in Physics, Math, Computer Science or closely related discipline which necessitated the in depth use of IT resources
Experience
• Familiarity and comfort with scientific / scientist culture and operating procedures
• Extensive experience conducting research in Physics (preferred) or a closely related discipline; i.e., direct familiarity with research processes
• Expert level IT skills, particularly with respect to Researcher end user applications
• Experience working in a team environment in a support role
• Ideally, operational experience in IT systems
Leadership Skills, Knowledge and Attributes
• A positive, outgoing personality with a genuine interest in engaging Researchers and assisting them to improve their use of IT
• Dynamic, quick-learner who can deal easily with the rapidly changing demands and possibilities of IT technology and researcher needs
• Able to build strong relationships within the Research community and become a trusted, expert advisor
• Strong verbal and written skills. The candidate must be able to demonstrate and communicate improved ways of using IT through a variety of media and presentation methods
• Ability to advocate for the effective use of technology within the research community both within PI and externally
• Teamwork-oriented problem solving attitude
Qualified and interested applicants are invited to apply online at http://www.perimeterinstitute.ca/ under the “Careers” section by Friday, December 11, 2009.
All qualified candidates are encouraged to apply; however Canadians and permanent residents will be given priority
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2.14 Postdoc Position(s) in Quantum Gravity at Utrecht University
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/09/postdoc-positions-in-quantum-gravit…
Institution: Utrecht, NL
Deadline: Thu, Dec 17, 2009
Additional Information: http://www.phys.uu.nl/~loll/Web/jobs/jobs.html
There will be at least one opening for a post-doctoral position in quantum gravity in the group headed by Renate Loll at the Institute for Theoretical Physics of Utrecht University, starting in autumn of 2010 or earlier. Applicants should have a background in quantum gravity or related areas, and an active interest in contributing to the group's research in nonperturbative quantum gravity, and particularly the approach of Causal Dynamical Triangulations. See http://www.phys.uu.nl/~loll/Web/jobs/jobs.html for more information and how to apply. Deadline is 17 Dec 2009.
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2.15 Postdoctoral Positions in Theoretical Gravitational-Wave Science at Caltech
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/09/postdoctoral-senior-postdoctoral-po…
Institution: Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Additional Information: http://www.tapir.caltech.edu/
The California Institute of Technology invites applications for postdoctoral and senior postdoctoral appointments in theoretical aspects of gravitational-wave science.
These positions are for researchers in any of the three focus areas of our group:
1) NUMERICAL RELATIVITY and COMPUTATIONAL RELATIVISTIC ASTROPHYSICS (Lee Lindblom, Christian Ott, Mark Scheel, Jeandrew Brink, Ulrich Sperhake, Bela Szilagyi, and grad students), including a strong collaboration with the Cornell group led by Saul Teukolsky, Larry Kidder and involving Matt Duez. Systems and phenomena studied include compact binaries (BH/BH, NS/BH, NS/NS) as well as stellar collapse and supernova explosions.
2) GRAVITATIONAL-WAVE SOURCE ANALYSIS, DATA ANALYSIS, AND ASTROPHYSICS [Yanbei Chen, Christian Ott, Sterl Phinney, Kip Thorne, Tanja Hinderer, Michael Kesden, Ajith Parameswaran and grad students]. This effort has close ties to the Caltech theoretical astrophysics and observational astronomy programs, to the Caltech numerical relativity group, to the LIGO Laboratory, and to the JPL gravitational-wave group of Curt Cutler, Tom Prince, Massimo Tinto, Michele Vallisneri, John Armstrong, Frank Estabrook and postdocs Marc Favata and Samaya Nissanke.
3) GRAVITATIONAL-WAVE DETECTORS [Yanbei Chen, Kip Thorne and grad students.] This involves the application of quantum measurement and quantum control theory to advanced gravitational-wave detectors, as well as the formulation of experimental tests of quantum mechanics that can be performed on these detectors. This research is carried out in collaboration or interaction with members of the LIGO Lab, and other Caltech research groups, including those led by H. Jeff Kimble and Michael Roukes, and the Caltech Institute for Quantum Information, http://www.iqi.caltech.edu, and the Moscow University research group of Vladimir Braginsky, Farid Khalili, Sergei Vyatchanin, Stefan Danilishin and Sergey Strigin.
These three research programs are embedded in Caltech's TAPIR group (Theoretical Astrophysics Including Relativity), http://www.tapir.caltech.edu and are associated with the Caltech/JPL Association for Gravitational WaveResearch, http://www.its.caltech.edu/~cajagwr/ which includes the Caltech portion of LIGO and the Caltech/JPL portion of LISA.
By a single application one can be considered for Caltech's Prize Postdoctoral Fellowships in Theoretical Physics and Astrophysics, including Relativity [see http://www.pma.caltech.edu/GSR/fellowtheory.html] and for regular postdoctoral and senior postdoctoral positions.
The application deadline is December 1, though late applications will continue to be considered until all positions are filled.
PLEASE SUBMIT APPLICATIONS VIA THE WEB at the following website, until that website closes:
http://www.beatricia.caltech.edu/astro-theoretical/apply.html
Under Research Interests, please choose the button "Relativity and Gravitational Waves"
Later applications should be sent to JoAnn Boyd, joann[AT]tapir.caltech.edu.
Application materials should include curriculum vitae with email address and with citizenship indicated, bibliography of publications (with refereed articles identified), web locations of manuscripts not yet published, and a description of the desired research directions. Please ensure that at least three letters of recommendation are provided by the writers via the web at http://www.eas.caltech.edu/search/theo-astro/references before the website closes, or to joann[AT]tapir.caltech.edu afterwards.
Caltech is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer. Women, Minorities, Veterans, and Disabled Persons are encouraged to apply.
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2.16 PhD positions in gravitational physics at Ole Miss
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/07/phd-positions-in-gravitational-phys…
Institution: Oxford, MS, U.S.A.
Deadline: Mon, Mar 01, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.phy.olemiss.edu/GR/
The University of Mississippi invites students interested in Gravitational Physics and Astrophysics to join our graduate program.
The Gravitational and High-Energy Theory Group at the University of Mississippi is active in various areas of theoretical and experimental gravity and is part of the LIGO collaboration. Members of the group include Emanuele Berti, Luca Bombelli, Marco Cavaglia, Alakabha Datta, Tibor Torma, adjunct professor Vitor Cardoso, visiting professor Mihai Bondarescu and several graduate students.
Our research interests include both classical and quantum gravity. Present research focuses on the theory, phenomenology and detection of gravitational waves, the structure and dynamics of black holes and neutron stars, relativistic astrophysics, theoretical and phenomenological aspects of quantum gravity, astroparticle physics and cosmology.
More information on the group is available at the following URL:
http://www.phy.olemiss.edu/GR/
and information on the application process is available at:
http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/physics_and_astronomy/graduate/grad_info_admis…
A curriculum vitae (including a statement of research interests) should be sent to the following e-mail address:
gradmis_at_phy.olemiss.edu
Applicants should also arrange to have at least three recommendation letters to be sent to the same email address.
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2.17 Postdoc in gravitational-wave physics at Carnegie Mellon University
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/07/postdoc-in-gravitational-wave-physi…
Institution: Pittsburgh, PA, U.S.A.
Deadline: Tue, Dec 15, 2009
Additional Information: http://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/CMU/Department%20of%20Physics/258
The Dept. of Physics at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) invites applications for a three year post-doctoral position in gravitational-wave physics. The applicant would spend two years at CMU (w/ Ira Rothstein) and the final year at JPL (w/ Michele Vallisneri). Greater consideration will be given to applicants whose interests lie in producing gravitational-wave templates for inspiralling binaries in the Post-Newtonian expansion, using tools including the effective-field theory techniques developed by Rothstein and Goldberger. Applications should be submitted to http://www.academicjobsonline.org and should include a CV, a list of publications, a statement of research interests, and three letters of recommendation. All materials, including all letters of recommendation, must be received by December 15, 2009.
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2.18 Postdoc in Theoretical Cosmology at UC Davis
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/02/theoretical-cosmology-postdoc/
Institution: Davis, CA, U.S.A.
Deadline: Mon, Jan 04, 2010
Additional Information: http://www.physics.ucdavis.edu/Cosmology/Cosmology_Group.html
We invite applications for one or more postdoctoral research positions in theoretical cosmology beginning in the Fall 2010, to work with A. Albrecht and N. Kaloper. Our research interests include theoretical cosmology, astroparticle physics, and model building with applications such as early universe theory, inflation, quantum cosmology, braneworlds, dark energy, dark matter, and other applications of fundamental physics to the universe. Our close ties with other members of the UCD Cosmology group, in particular with L. Knox, and with the UCD High Energy Theory group present an exciting intellectual environment with broad opportunities for interaction and collaboration for our postdocs.
For more information see
http://www.physics.ucdavis.edu/Cosmology/Cosmology_Group.html
http://particle.physics.ucdavis.edu/hefti/index.php
The appointment will be for two years, with a possible renewal for the third year, contingent upon performance and availability of funds. Applicants should send a CV, statement of research interests and publication list, and arrange for at least three letters of recommendation to be sent, either through
http://academicjobsonline.org/
or directly to
Mr. Bill Tuck
(for Theoretical Cosmology Search)
Department of Physics
University of California
One Shields Avenue
Davis, CA 95616
USA
To ensure full consideration, completed applications should be received by January 4, 2010.
The University of California, Davis, is an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer with a strong institutional commitment to the achievement of diversity among its faculty and staff.
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3. News
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3.1 Mock LISA Data Challenge round 4 released
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/23/mock-lisa-data-challenge-round-4-re…
Additional Information: http://astrogravs.nasa.gov/docs/mldc/
Dear Colleagues:
The Mock LISA Data Challenges (MLDCs) are a program to demonstrate LISA data-analysis capabilities and to encourage their development. Each round of challenges consists of one or more datasets containing simulated instrument noise and gravitational waves from sources of undisclosed parameters. Participants analyze the datasets and report best-fit solutions for the source parameters. Almost four years after the program began, we are proud to announce the release of the fourth challenge, MLDC 4. To obtain the datasets, go to http://astrogravs.nasa.gov/docs/mldc and follow the "Round 4" link. The authoritative description of MLDC 4 will appear in the Amaldi-8 proceedings; in the meantime please refer to http://lisatools.googlecode.com/svn/Docs/2009-amaldi-challenge3/mldc3procee… .
Challenge content --- While the third round of the MLDCs was focused on increasing the complexity and variety of GW sources, we are devoting the next iteration to the global-fit problem of detecting and analyzing sources of different types superposed in the LISA data. Thus, MDLC 4 consists of a single, "whole enchilada" challenge that includes all the sources of MLDCs 3.1-3.5 in the same dataset, albeit with larger source numbers (for EMRIs and cosmic-string bursts) and parameter ranges (for MBH binaries and EMRIs). You can find a graphic representation of a typical dataset at http://www.tapir.caltech.edu/dokuwiki/_media/listwg1b:mldc4.pdf ;
this particular realization includes 60+ million chirping Galactic binaries, 4 MBH binaries, 9 EMRIs, 15 cosmic-string bursts, an isotropic stochastic background, and of course instrument noise (the graphic reflects a previous test run that is not available for download).
Participating --- The deadline for Round 4 entries will be December 3, 2010, at midnight, U.S. Pacific time, with preliminary results to be presented at the 15th GWDAW meeting. (However: the GWDAW-15 date and place will be decided in Jan 2010; if GWDAW-15 is in early December 2010, we will bring forward the MLDC 4 deadline accordingly to have enough time to evaluate entries.) The global-fit character of this challenge encourages collaborative endeavors between group that have developed searches for different sources. We invite you to use the lisatools-challenge(a)gravity.psu.edu list as a forum to set up such collaborations (subscribe at http://www.gravity.psu.edu/mailman/listinfo/lisatools-challenge) please let us know how we may help you on this.
More information --- To obtain more details and to participate in the MLDCs, see the official MLDC website, http://astrogravs.nasa.gov/docs/mldc , the Task Force wiki, http://www.tapir.caltech.edu/listwg1b/ , and the lisatools software repository, http://lisatools.googlecode.com .
Best regards,
the MLDC task force
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3.2 2010 Awards for Essays on Gravitation (reminder)
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/14/2010-awards-for-essays-on-gravitati…
Additional Information: http://www.gravityresearchfoundation.org/competition.html
Gravity Research Foundation
In 2010 for our sixty-first competition, the trustees are offering five Awards for short Essays for the purpose of stimulating thought and encouraging work on Gravitation. We will make these Awards on May 15, 2010 for the best essays on the subject of Gravitation, its theory, applications, or effects.
Essays must be in English and e-mailed in a single PDF file before April 1, 2010. Early submission is greatly encouraged. One essay only will be accepted from each author.
Submission e-mail address: George M. Rideout, Jr., President (grideoutjr_at_aol.com)
First full announcement on hyperspace:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/08/13/awards-for-essays-on-gravitation/
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3.3 Free access to all papers published in "Gravitation and Cosmology"
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/14/free-full-text-versions-of-all-pape…
Free full text versions of all papers published in the international journal "Gravitation and Cosmology" (Grav. Cosmol.) during 1995-2007 are now at the site of the Russian Gravitational Society http://www.rgs.da.ru (or http://www.rgs.vniims.ru) Click "welcome", then "Gravitation and Cosmology", then "old issues", then issue (volume, number), then title of the paper, then in the last line "here".
As from 2008 the journal "Gravitation and Cosmology" is distributed by Springer, contents of all issues and abstracts of papers published in 2008-2009 in the journal may be found at the site:
http://www.springerlink.com/content/120954/
All other info and subscription details are at the site:
http://www.springer.com/astronomy/general+relativity/journal/12267
Please, recommend the subscription to this journal of your institute or university library for 2010.
Best regards,
Prof. Vitaly Melnikov,
Editor-in-Chief
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3.4 GWIC Thesis Prize: Call for Nominations
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/10/gwic-thesis-prize-call-for-nominati…
Additional Information: https://gwic.ligo.org/thesisprize/
GWIC Thesis Prize: Call for Nominations
The Gravitational Wave International Committee (GWIC) was formed to promote international collaboration and cooperation in the construction, operation and use of gravitational wave detection facilities world-wide. To this end, GWIC has established an annual prize for the outstanding Ph.D. thesis based on research in gravitational waves (http://gwic.ligo.org/thesisprize/)
Nominations for the 2009 GWIC Thesis Prize are now open. Members of the broader gravitational wave community are invited to nominate students who have performed notable research on any aspect of gravitational waves science. Theses will be judged on 1) originality and creativity of the research, 2) importance to the field of gravitational waves and gravitational wave detection, broadly interpreted, and 3) clarity of presentation in the thesis.
Eligibility: The award is made on a calendar year basis. Theses should have been accepted by their institutions between January 1, 2009 and December 31, 2009 to qualify for consideration. It is expected that many of the nominations will come from the member projects of GWIC, but this is not a requirement. A committee representing the GWIC member projects will evaluate the nominations and select the winner. Nominated theses may be in any language. The selection committee will make the final determinations about eligibility.
Nominations: Nominations should be submitted to the selection committee chair (Martin Hewitson, martin.hewitson_at_aei.mpg.de) by January 15, 2010. The nomination package consists of (i) the thesis, (ii) a letter of nomination, preferably from the thesis advisor, and (iii) an optional supporting letter from another scientist familiar with the work. The nomination letter (and supporting letter if applicable) should describe the importance of the research and how it supports GWIC’s goals to promote construction and exploitation of gravitational-wave detectors, foster development of new or enhanced gravitational-wave detectors, and to support the development of gravitational-wave detection as an astronomical tool generally. The thesis and letters may be submitted in electronic form (preferred) or in hard-copy (five copies).
The GWIC Thesis Prize will be presented at the 19th International Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation (GR19) (http://www.gr19.com/) in Mexico City, from 5-9 July 2010. The recipient will receive a certificate of recognition and a prize of $1,000. The nominator is responsible to ensure that travel funds will be made available to send the winner to the GR19 Conference to receive the prize.
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3.5 GW Notes: New issue and highlight on EMRI waveforms
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Announcement on Hyperspace@AEI:
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2009/11/05/gw-notes-new-issue-and-highlight-on…
It is a pleasure for us to announce the third issue of <em>GW Notes</em>. This issue's invited article by Nicolas Yunes is focussing on "Gravitational Wave Modelling of Extreme Mass Ratio Inspirals and the Effective-One-Body Approach".
The electronic journal "GW Notes" <http://brownbag.lisascience.org/lisa-gw-notes/> and its blog "The LISA Brownbag" <http://brownbag.lisascience.org/> , both produced by the AEI, propose to offer scientists of the Gravitational Wave community the opportunity to more easily follow advances in the areas of astrophysics, general relativity and data analysis. We hope to achieve this by selecting the most significant e-prints and listing them in abstract form with a link to the full paper in both a single e-journal (GW Notes) and a blog (The LISA Brownbag).
Of course, this also implies that the paper will have increased impact, since it will reach a broader public, and so we encourage you to not forget submitting your own work.
Best regards,
Bernard Schutz and Pau Amaro-Seoane
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