Stand up for space-weather research and services !
Space weather research, monitoring and forecasting are essential for the safe, robust and sustainable development of transport, communication and energy infrastructures on the ground and in space. Space weather services are the result of global, transparent and open scientific collaborations, and severe budget cuts in one country inherently affect the quality and can disrupt these space weather services that are essential to humanity.
NOAA and NASA provide data and models that are critical to space weather services worldwide, and the loss of their support would threaten global efforts to monitor and forecast solar activity and its effects on our societies.
OFRAME stands in solidarity with our colleagues who may face funding cuts and will use its voice and the expertise of its committee to resist potential challenges or threats to our discipline.
The year 2024 in science: a retrospective
Saturday 18th January at 2.30pm
Devastating floods, a sun in full swing, artificial intelligence spreading to all sectors of activity or hallucinogenic mushrooms in the service of medicine... Relive the major events of 2024 and discuss with leading scientists the subjects that have shifted the boundaries of knowledge or opened the way to unprecedented applications.
Cité des Sciences et de l'Industrie
E-SWAN Newsletter (09/09/2024)
NEWS FROM JSWSC (Topical Issues open for submission)
“Severe Space Weather Events of May 2024 and Their Impacts”, deadline 28 February 2025
Topical Editor-in-Chief (T-EiC): Jaroslav Urbář, Institute of Atmospheric Physics, CAS, Czech Republic
“Swarm 10-Year Anniversary”, deadline 15 February 2025
Topical Editor-in-Chief (T-EiC): Georgios Balasis, National Observatory of Athens (NOA), Greece
“Fast and Slow Solar Winds: Origin, Evolution, and Space Weather effects”, deadline 31 October 2024
Topical Editor-in-Chief (T-EiC): Stephan G. Heinemann, University of Helsinki, Finland
“Observing, modelling and forecasting TIDs and mitigating their impact on technology”, deadline extended to 30 September 2024
Topical Editor-in-Chief (T-EiC): Anna Belehaki, National Observatory of Athens, Greece, Iurii Cherniak, University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, USA.