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Volume 19, Number 22
June 1, 2025

Editor: Mark V. Sykes
Co-Editors: Matthew R Perry, Alex Morgan
Email: pen_editor@psi.edu
Twitter: @pen2tweets

o-------------------------TABLE OF CONTENTS---------------------------o

1. [CALL TO ACTION] Add Your Name to Save NASA Science
2. Planetary Society Statement on the FY2026 NASA Budget
3. Dashboard: Economic Impact of NASA Science Across America
4. Earth Science Women's Network Professional Development and
   Networking Committee
5. Europa Clipper Presentation Moved to June 17
6. Postdoc Position in ML Supported Cloud Formation Modelling
7. Announcing Mercury Laboratory Workshop 2025
8. HWO Draft Science Cases Open for Endorsement and Comment
9. [NASA] PDS: Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Data Release 73
10. [NASA] PDS: Aperiodic Data Releases in 2025.05
11. Planetary Meeting Calendar Additions
12. Planetary Science Journal - New Papers
13. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets - New Papers

o---------------------------------------------------------------------o

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[CALL TO ACTION] ADD YOUR NAME TO SAVE NASA SCIENCE

The full White House budget proposal for FY 2026 is out, and it
decimates the NASA Science Mission Directorate. Not only are
productive, healthy spacecraft turned off, but the pipeline of new
missions, radioisotope power systems, and research opportunities are
shuttered. This is a crisis for the future of space science and
exploration.

The Planetary Society is pushing back and has launched a petition that
will go directly to Congress as part of the official budget process.
Anyone from anywhere can sign, and Congress needs to hear from you. The
more names on the petition, the more impact it will have in showing
Congress the immense public support for space science.

Add your name at:

https://planet.ly/petition

If you've already signed, consider sharing with your friends,
neighbors, and colleagues.


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PLANETARY SOCIETY STATEMENT ON THE FY2026 NASA BUDGET

This budget is a retreat, a narrowing of ambition. This request
represents the smallest NASA budget since FY 1961 - a level enacted
before the first American had launched into space. Unlike that era of
growth, high ambition, and bold vision, this budget revels in the
opposite: what the nation cannot do. It claims we cannot lead the world
in deep space exploration, we cannot work with our allies, we cannot
invest in our scientific and industrial workforce. We resolutely reject
this disparaging view of our nation. NASA is a national symbol of what
we can do.

https://tinyurl.com/3t8p7a9v


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DASHBOARD: ECONOMIC IMPACT OF NASA SCIENCE ACROSS AMERICA

This new, interactive dashboard displays the breadth and scope of
benefits from NASA's science activities, with detail at the state and
congressional levels. It additionally provides custom-generated
economic impact reports for every state and impacted district,
providing detailed spending highlights and potential consequences of
the cuts. These are a great reference for outreach to congressional
representatives.

https://dashboards.planetary.org/nasa-science.html


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EARTH SCIENCE WOMEN'S NETWORK PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND NETWORKING
COMMITTEE

After a successful set of events over the past four years, the Earth
Science Women's Network Professional Development and Networking
Committee (formerly Member Events) is now planning a new set of event
activities for implementation in future years from late 2025 onwards.

We know that the landscape today may feel quite different to how it
was several years ago. To ensure that our activities are aligned with
the needs and interests of the ESWN community and that they are timely,
we invite you to participate in a ~5 minutes survey (open to all) to
help us shape the program:

https://forms.gle/DyZHMhvNVzV7J5zh7

The first part of the survey collects demographic information as we
would like to know more about the ESWN community and membership, to
ensure we are creating events suitable to the needs of those we serve.

This survey will close on June 30, 2025.

We are hugely appreciative of your time and thank you for your thoughts
and contributions. If you have any questions, please email events [at]
eswnonline [dot] org

We look forward to receiving your response!

The ESWN Professional Development and Networking Committee


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EUROPA CLIPPER PRESENTATION MOVED TO JUNE 17

Join the LPI for a hybrid presentation (offered in-person and
virtually) by Dr. Walter Kiefer, Director of the LPI. Dr. Kiefer will
discuss NASA's Europa Clippe0 mission and its 1.8-billion-mile journey
to Jupiter's moon, Europa. Launched in October 2024, Europa Clipper is
the first mission designed to conduct a detailed study of Europa. A
vast ocean lies beneath Europa's icy shell, and there is scientific
evidence that the ingredients for life may exist on Europa right now.

Tuesday, June 17

7:30 p.m. CT (8:30 p.m. ET / 6:30 p.m. MT / 5:30 p.m. PT)

In person or the LPI YouTube channel

To view the full announcement, please visit:

https://www.lpi.usra.edu/features/2025/050225/exploring-europa/


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POSTDOC POSITION IN ML SUPPORTED CLOUD FORMATION MODELLING

The successful candidate will be part of Prof Christiane Helling's
research group "Exoplanets: Weather & Climate" at the Space Research
Institute in Graz. The project is conducted in collaboration with Prof.
Robert Peharz from the Graz University of Technology.

In this project, we are interested in understanding cloud formation in
exoplanets and specifically the formation of molecular cluster as
pre-coursers of cloud formation in the diversity of exoplanets. We aim
to explore advanced neural network architectures, particularly Graph
Neural Networks (GNNs) and generative models, to predict the 3D
structures and thermo-chemical properties of large molecular
clusters-tasks that are computationally prohibitive using traditional
methods like Density functional theory (DFT) and molecular dynamics.
Our modelling efforts support JWST and CHEOPS in physically
interpreting observational data. We further contribute to science
case studies and science preparation for PLATO, the high-energy space
mission NewATHENA as well as HWO.

Which domain competence are we looking for:

- Astrochemistry (including carbo-hydrates),
- Cloud formation modelling (including the Solar System, exoplanets,
  brown dwarfs, AGB stars),
- Computational chemistry (including molecular cluster simulations), or
- Theoretical physics (quantum chemistry, material sciences).

Further information can be found here:

https://www.oeaw.ac.at/jobs?jh=7tvqzbob8sjpkd9ak187ayc34tv7j68


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ANNOUNCING MERCURY LABORATORY WORKSHOP 2025

We are excited to announce that the second edition of the Mercury
Laboratory Workshop will be held from September 15 to 17, 2025, in
Helsinki, Finland. After the success of our first workshop in Berlin
which brought together almost 60 participants, we are looking forward
to another engaging and productive workshop on our favorite planet!

The goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers, scientists,
and professionals to:

- Present recent advances in laboratory studies related to Mercury,
- Discuss key findings and ongoing research on Mercury's analogs and
  science,
- Foster collaborations and design future joint experiments and
  studies,
- Prepare for upcoming BepiColombo observations.

Registration is open until August 23!

For further details, including the registration process, abstract
submission, and last year program, please visit our website:

https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/bepicolombo-mercury-lab-workshop/home

Additional information will be shared in the coming weeks.

For any questions, please feel free to contact Antti Penttila
(antti.i.penttila@helsinki.fi), Mikko Vuori (mikko.vuori@helsinki.fi)
and Oceane Barraud (oceane.barraud@dlr.de).

The 2025 edition is sponsored by ESA, the University of Helsinki, and
Europlanet.

We hope to see you in Helsinki for this exciting workshop!

Antti Penttila, Mikko Vuori and Oceane Barraud


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HWO DRAFT SCIENCE CASES OPEN FOR ENDORSEMENT AND COMMENT

The Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO) is NASA's next flagship space
telescope mission after Roman and is currently being planned. The HWO
scientific community has written 60+ Science Case Development Documents
(SCDDs) to inform HWO's science objectives and investigations. Many of
these cases focus on HWO's role in advancing Solar System science and
astrobiology. These documents are now available for public viewing,
endorsement, and comment.

To read the SCDDs and endorse or offer comments on them, please visit
the HWO 2025 conference website:

https://tinyurl.com/3dw8tzj9

The endorsement and commentary period will end on June 22, 2025.


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[NASA] PDS: MARS RECONNAISSANCE ORBITER DATA RELEASE 73

The NASA Planetary Data System announces Release 73 of data from the
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO). This release contains raw,
calibrated, and derived data products nominally covering the time
period August 9 through November 8, 2024. Some instrument teams are
delivering more recent data. The data are archived at various PDS
nodes.

- CRISM, SHARAD, and Radio Science data at the Geosciences Node
- HiRISE, CTX, and MARCI data at the Cartography and Imaging Sciences
  Node
- MCS data at the Atmospheres Node
- SPICE data at the NAIF Node

For a view centered on this release:

https://pds.nasa.gov/datasearch/subscription-service/SS-20250530.shtml

The data may also be accessed at:

https://pds-geosciences.wustl.edu/missions/mro/

To access the latest PDS Data Releases, please visit the following
link:

https://pds.nasa.gov/datasearch/subscription-service/SS-Release.shtml

All available PDS data may be found at:

https://pds.nasa.gov/datasearch/data-search/

For further information, see the PDS Home Page:

https://pds.nasa.gov/

MRO data releases occur every three months. The next release is
scheduled for August 29, 2025.


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[NASA] PDS: APERIODIC DATA RELEASES IN 2025.05

In May 2025, PDS ingested and made available the following data, none
of which were regularly released with an ongoing mission:

- 2025.05.29 CLPS Task Order 2AB Peregrine Ion-Trap Mass Spectrometer
- 2025.05.27 Pioneer 11 HVM PA CRT Calibrated Bundle
- 2025.05.19 DAWN SPICE Vesta shape and improved rotation by
  Park et al.
- 2025.05.16 New Horizons Alice Pluto Encounter Raw Data
- 2025.05.16 New Horizons Alice Pluto Encounter Calibrated Data
- 2025.05.14 Pioneer 10 HVM PA CRT Calibrated Bundle
- 2025.05.09 New Horizons SDC Pluto Encounter Raw Data
- 2025.05.09 New Horizons SDC Pluto Encounter Calibrated Data
- 2025.05.09 New Horizons MVIC Pluto Encounter Raw Data
- 2025.05.09 New Horizons MVIC Pluto Encounter Partially Processed Data
- 2025.05.09 New Horizons LEISA Pluto Encounter Raw Data
- 2025.05.09 New Horizons LEISA Pluto Encounter Calibrated Data
- 2025.05.09 New Horizons Documents for the SDC Instrument v2.0

To access those data, go to:

https://pds.nasa.gov/datasearch/subscription-service/SS-20250531.shtml

To access all data archived in PDS:

https://pds.nasa.gov


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PLANETARY MEETING CALENDAR ADDITIONS

Note: Many face-to-face meetings going forward will have online
components. Check their websites for details.

Posted at https://planetarynews.org/meetings.html

September 15-17, 2025
Mercury Laboratory Workshop
https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/bepicolombo-mercury-lab-workshop/home
Helsinki, Finland


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PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL - NEW PAPERS

Direct Links to Open Access Papers
Editor, Faith Vilas

https://psj.aas.org

Activity-induced Near-infrared Spectral Variability at
29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 1, 2017-2022
Theodore Kareta et al. 2025 PSJ 6:119
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/adce07

The Spin Zone: Synchronously and Asynchronously Rotating Land Planets
Have Spectral Differences in Transmission
Nicholas Scarsdale et al. 2025 PSJ 6:120
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/adcea9

Laser-induced Breakdown Spectroscopy of Ice-regolith Mixtures:
Implications for Measurements on Planetary Surfaces
Frederic Diotte et al. 2025 PSJ 6:121
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/adce75

Rare Phosphides and Nitrides in Igneous Clasts within Aqueously
Altered Chondrites
Lucas. R. Smith et al. 2025 PSJ 6:122
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/adce00

Characterizing the Radiative-Convective Structure of Dense Rocky
Planet Atmospheres
Jessica Cmiel et al. 2025 PSJ 6:123
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/adcd5f

Producing Dust through Simulated Glacial Abrasion of Basalt Clasts
with Implications for Mars
Steven M. Adams and Gerilyn S. Soreghan 2025 PSJ 6:124
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/adc9ab

JWST Reveals Spectral Tracers of Recent Surface Modification on Europa
Richard J. Cartwright et al. 2025 PSJ 6:125
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/adcab9

Statistical Geochemical Constraints on Present-day Water Outgassing as
a Source of Secondary Atmospheres on the TRAPPIST-1 Exoplanets
Trent B. Thomas et al. 2025 PSJ 6:126
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/add261

Gravity Imaging Radio Observer (GIRO) for Planetary Science and
Mission Opportunities
R. S. Park et al. 2025 PSJ 6:127
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/adceea


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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH: PLANETS - NEW PAPERS

Direct Links to Open Access (OA) Papers
Editor-in-Chief, Amanda Hendrix

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/21699100

Thermal Impacts of Atmospheric Gravity Waves in the Martian
Thermosphere
Scott L. England, Aishwarya Kumar, Guiping Liu, Mehdi Benna
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JE008789

Groundwater Sapping in Hack Crater (Mars): Geologic Evidence and
Geophysical Modeling of Groundwater Stability
B. De Toffoli, A.-C. Plesa, E. Luzzi, E. Hauber
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JE008773


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