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Volume 19, Number 29
July 20, 2025

Editor: Alex Morgan
Co-Editors: Mark V. Sykes, Matthew R Perry
Email: pen_editor@psi.edu
X: @pen2tweets
Bluesky: @planetarynews.bsky.social

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

1. [NASA] ROSES-25 Amendment 1: Restrictions on Interagency Awards
2. [NASA] ROSES-25 Amendment 2: Exoplanets Research Program Step-1 Due 
   Date Deferred to November 25, 2025
3. Tenure Track Assistant Professor in Astronomy at Mount Holyoke 
   College
4. The Comet And Asteroid Telescopic Catalog Hunter (CATCH)
5. Astrobiology Spectral Database (ASD) Virtual Workshop
6. Feedback Requested: Search for Life Mission Science Analysis Group
7. Nonlinear Wave, Chaos and Artificial Intelligence Workshop 2026
8. Second Announcement: JUICE School at Les Houches (France)
9. Mercury Laboratory Workshop 2025: Abstract and Student Application 
   Deadline Extended To 25 July
10. [AGU 2025] Special Session P002: Aerial Exploration of Mars
11. [AGU 2025] Session P021: Io, Europa and Ganymede in the Eyes of 
    Juno
12. [AGU 2025] Session P023: Machine Learning and Data Science Methods 
    for Planetary Science
13. [AGU 2025] Session P033: Radar Investigations of Planetary 
    Surfaces and Subsurfaces 
14. [AGU 2025] Session P037: Technological Advances in Icy World 
    Exploration
15. [AGU 2025] Session P045: Titan - Atmosphere, Ionosphere, Space 
    Environment and their Interactions
16. [AGU 2025] Session P051: Planetary Sciences Student and Early 
    Career GeoBurst
17. [GSA 2025] Session T172: Powering Discovery Using 3-D Petrology of 
    Earth And Solar System Materials
18. [GSA 2025] Session T188: Geomorphology And Surface Processes 
    Across the Solar System
19. Planetary Meeting Calendar Additions
20. Planetary Science Journal - New Papers
21. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets - New Papers

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

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[NASA] ROSES-25 AMENDMENT 1: RESTRICTIONS ON INTERAGENCY AWARDS

ROSES-2025 Amendment 1 announces restrictions on funding of 
interagency awards from most proposal opportunities of ROSES-25. For 
more information, see the research program overviews (A.1 - D.1 & F.1) 
and Sections I(d)i and III(a) of the ROSES-25 Summary of Solicitation.

Appendix A (Earth Science) of ROSES-25 already had a prohibition on 
funding from NASA to government agencies other than NASA. That wording 
has been clarified. Appendix C, (Planetary Science) has also adopted 
this prohibition. Appendix B (Heliophysics), Appendix D 
(Astrophysics), and F.3 The Exoplanet Research Program have not 
applied that outright prohibition, but require any proposer planning 
on NASA funding to or through government agencies other than NASA seek 
approval from the point of contact for the program element to which 
they are planning to propose. D.1 The Astrophysics Research Program 
Overview notes that approvals for interagency awards for less than 
$100k per year are unlikely to be granted, regardless of whether the 
other Federal Agency is the submitting institution or a subawardee.

General questions regarding ROSES-25 may be directed to sara@nasa.gov. 
Questions regarding specific program elements should be directed to 
the appropriate point of contact at:

https://science.nasa.gov/researchers/program-officers-list/

[Edited for length]


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[NASA] ROSES-25 AMENDMENT 2: EXOPLANETS RESEARCH PROGRAM STEP-1 DUE 
DATE DEFERRED TO NOVEMBER 25, 2025

The Exoplanets Research Program (XRP), element F.3 of ROSES-25, 
solicits basic research proposals to conduct scientific investigations 
that significantly improve our understanding of exoplanets and 
exoplanet formation. This program element is cross-divisional and 
jointly managed by three of the Divisions within NASA's Science 
Mission Directorate: Astrophysics, Planetary Science, and 
Heliophysics. Proposed investigations that combine multiple scientific 
disciplines or cross traditional Divisional science boundaries, for 
example, by including topics or analysis techniques from Heliophysics, 
are highly encouraged.

ROSES-2025 Amendment 2 defers the Step-1 due date for F.3 XRP to 
November 25, 2025.

On or about July 17 2025, this Amendment to the NASA Research 
Announcement "Research Opportunities in Space and Earth Sciences 
(ROSES) 2025" (NNH25ZDA001N) will be posted on the NASA research 
opportunity homepage at:

https://solicitation.nasaprs.com/ROSES2025

and will appear on SARA's ROSES blog at:

https://science.nasa.gov/researchers/solicitations/roses-2025/

Questions concerning F.3 XRP may be directed to John Wisniewski at 
hq-xrp@mail.nasa.gov.


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TENURE TRACK ASSISTANT PROFESSOR IN ASTRONOMY AT MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGE

The Mount Holyoke College Physics & Astronomy Department invites 
applications for an Assistant Professor in Astronomy (tenure track) 
to begin in Fall 2026. We seek a candidate with a strong commitment 
to undergraduate teaching in a liberal arts environment, who will 
establish a vigorous research program involving undergraduates. A PhD 
in astronomy or a related field is required. Mount Holyoke College is 
an active member of the Five College Astronomy Department (FCAD), 
which provides multiple opportunities for research collaborations 
including at nearby UMass Amherst, the flagship campus of the state 
university system.

The candidate will teach across our core astronomy curriculum, which 
spans general-education to upper level astrophysics. With the recent 
merging of physics and astronomy, there is the opportunity to revamp 
the astronomy major sequence in collaboration with the FCAD.

Submit statements concerning (1) teaching philosophy with illustrative 
examples, (2) research plan, and (3) a statement about mentoring a 
diverse student body, as well as a cover letter addressing your 
interest in Mount Holyoke and CV. To apply, submit materials here:

https://tinyurl.com/2wj4pb86

For further information please contact Prof. Spencer Smith at 
smiths@mtholyoke.edu. Review of applications will begin October 1.

[Edited for length]


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THE COMET AND ASTEROID TELESCOPIC CATALOG HUNTER (CATCH)

The Small Bodies Node (SBN) of NASA's Planetary Data System (PDS)
announces version 3 of a service to search for known Solar System
objects within sky surveys, the Comet and Asteroid Telescopic Catalog
Hunter (CATCH). Sub-frame images from the surveys within the CATCH 
database that contain the ephemeris position of a specified known 
small body are displayed in the user's browser, and each sub-frame may 
be selected for download. A meta-data table is also displayed 
alongside the cut-out images. The graphical user interface includes 
several enhancements that provide context to the data, including 
background source positions and a Solar System position diagram. 
Searches may be restricted by survey or date range, and searches by 
fixed coordinates are also possible. Data sources include all of the 
sky surveys archived with the PDS: Catalina Sky Survey, ATLAS, 
Spacewatch, NEAT, and LONEOS. The service is API-based, so that 
queries can be scripted. Further information, including the extent of 
the CATCH database holdings, can be found on the service's "about" page.

Feedback on your experience using CATCH is requested by July 27:

https://go.umd.edu/catch-v3-feedback

To learn more about CATCH:

https://catch.astro.umd.edu/


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ASTROBIOLOGY SPECTRAL DATABASE (ASD) VIRTUAL WORKSHOP

Wednesday July 23, 10 am - 4 pm CT

ASD is a NASA-funded project to build a database for mass spectrometry 
and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) data of abiotic experiments and 
extraterrestrial material extracts. For this workshop we are 
interested in hearing from anyone in the community that works with 
spectral data who would stand to benefit from such a database (or 
future iterations where we aim to expand to other spectral data).

You must register (free) for the workshop to receive a meeting link. 
The workshop includes invited talks from members of METLIN, Open 
Reaction Database, Open Data Repository, AHED, and the PDS Geosciences 
node as well as break out discussions to workshop ASD metadata 
standards, submission protocols, and strategies to ensure submission 
quality.

Before the workshop, consider taking a survey to help make the ASD 
your primary resource. The survey takes approximately ten minutes to 
complete.

For more information including the agenda with speakers:

https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/asd2025/technical_program/

Registration:

https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/asd2025/registration/

ASD survey:

https://forms.gle/S4D1UUFBet9pQKTp9

For questions contact:

Laura Rodriguez (Lrodriguez@lpi.usra.edu)


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FEEDBACK REQUESTED: SEARCH FOR LIFE MISSION SCIENCE ANALYSIS GROUP

The deadline to submit feedback and inputs to the MEPAG Search for 
Life Science Analysis Group (SFL-SAG) workshop is Tuesday, July 22. 
These inputs will feed into Part 2 of the workshop as well as the 
final report. Instructions to submit 1-2 page white papers are also 
included within the feedback form linked below.

Thank you to those who were able to attend the workshop last week, and 
for those who weren't able to attend, we hope you are able to review 
the meeting recording and files and provide feedback as you are able.

The recording, presentations, and other materials from this morning's 
workshop are now available in this google drive folder:

https://bit.ly/4nEgcpw

Link to Feedback/Community Input Form:

https://bit.ly/4lffRIh


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NONLINEAR WAVE, CHAOS AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE WORKSHOP 2026

The 11th International Nonlinear Wave, Chaos and AI Workshop (NWCAI 
Workshop 2026) will be held in Potsdam, Germany, 6-12 September 2026. 
The workshop is aimed to be a highly interactive, friendly, informal 
get-together of scientists from different fields of expertise 
discussing common workshop topics with highlights on (1) nonlinear 
waves, (2) chaos, and (3) nonlinear physics using AI. Previous 
workshops had experts in plasma physics (space and astrophysical 
plasmas, laboratory plasmas, and fusion plasmas), geophysics 
(atmospheric, ionospheric, and oceanic turbulence), fluid dynamics, 
nonlinear physics, and mathematics. We arrange for a book as an outlet 
for the writeup of the talks. We expect all presentations to be 
written up and submitted for this publication. There will be an upper 
limit of 30 attendees so that the workshop format will be effective. 
For this reason, the attendance is by invitation only. Please contact 
one of the 5 Convenors for attendance.

Convenors:
- Yasuhito Narita, Technical University of Braunschweig, Germany, 
  y.narita@tu-braunschweig.de
- Bruce Tsurutani, Pasadena, California, bruce.tsurutani@gmail.com
- George Morales, University of California at Los Angeles, California, 
  morales@physics.ucla.edu
- Gurbax Lakhina, Navi Mumbai, India, gslakhina@gmail.com
- Masahiro Hoshino, The University of Tokyo, Japan, 
  mhoshino@g.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


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SECOND ANNOUNCEMENT: JUICE SCHOOL AT LES HOUCHES (FRANCE)

25-30 January 2026

Deadline for registration and request for grants: 15 August, 2025

https://tinyurl.com/3kjtnu7c

This school is targeted (but not limited) to early career scientists. 
It will cover the main science topics of the JUICE mission with the 
goal to best prepare the future exploitation and interpretation of its 
data. Key topics include Jupiter, its atmosphere and magnetosphere, 
the icy Galilean moons (with an emphasis on Ganymede), minor moons and 
the dust and ring system. Ground- and space- based observations 
recently obtained on the Jupiter system, as well as links with 
exoplanet science, will also be presented. The format of the school 
includes tutorials, seminar-like presentations, inspirational evening 
talks, a poster session, a workshop on science planning and archive, 
and a roundtable on future missions to outer planets.


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MERCURY LABORATORY WORKSHOP 2025: ABSTRACT AND STUDENT APPLICATION 
DEADLINE EXTENDED TO 25 JULY

We are pleased to announce that the abstract submission deadline for 
the Mercury Laboratory Workshop 2025 has been extended to July 25 at 
5PM (CEST). You can submit your abstract here:

https://tinyurl.com/ywrca9p6

The Mercury Laboratory Workshop 2025 will take place at the University 
of Helsinki, Finland, from 15-17 September 2025. The aim of the 
workshop is to foster discussions on existing and needed laboratory 
experiments relevant to Mercury, to strengthen connections within the 
Mercury research community and to prepare for the interpretation of 
the BepiColombo data. 

The workshop is open to both in-person and remote participants, 
regardless of whether you attended the first edition. We welcome a 
wide range of contributions, and all experimental topics related to 
Mercury are encouraged.

Additionally, we're happy to remind you that the ESA Education Office 
will again sponsor the attendance of up to 4 students. Deadline for 
application is also extended to July 25, please see:

https://tinyurl.com/596d248k

Registration remains open until August 23.

For more information:

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

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

We look forward to welcoming you to Helsinki!

[Edited for length]


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[AGU 2025] SPECIAL SESSION P002: AERIAL EXPLORATION OF MARS

Semi-autonomous rotorcraft have revolutionized terrestrial geological
and atmospheric science. Their ability to explore high and low, far
and wide allows them to deploy instrumentation and collect
remote-sensing data in regions and from perspectives otherwise
difficult or impossible to access. The success of the Ingenuity Mars
helicopter similarly opens prospects for transforming the study of
Mars. Rotorcraft on Mars can facilitate geological and geophysical
investigations, enable atmospheric measurements, and assist human
exploration. Future missions to Mars could involve these aircraft as
complements to ground-bound assets, such as rovers or fixed stations,
or as stand-alone vehicles. This session welcomes presentations that
consider how small rotorcraft may advance our understanding of Mars,
both past and present. Submissions on aircraft-enabled Mars science,
missions, and human exploration are all welcome. For details of
additional activities, including a social e-mail Brian Jackson at
bjackson@boisestate.edu or see:

https://boi.st/AGU-2025-Mars-UAS

Abstracts may be submitted here:

https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu25/prelim.cgi/Session/250381


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[AGU 2025] SESSION P021: IO, EUROPA AND GANYMEDE IN THE EYES OF JUNO

Session link:

https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu25/prelim.cgi/Session/248354

Abstract Deadline: Wednesday, July 30, 2025, 23:59 EDT

The Juno spacecraft performed flybys of Ganymede, Europa, and Io 
between 2021 and 2025. The data collected during these flybys provided 
unprecedented views of these moons. Juno's multi-instrument 
measurements include high-resolution imagery in visible, ultraviolet, 
and infrared of the surface geology and composition, microwave 
sounding of the subsurface, gravitational sounding of the interior, as 
well as the in-situ characterization of the electromagnetic fields and 
particles environment of these moons. Concurrent observations from 
space-based and ground-based observatories, e.g. from JWST and ALMA, 
continue to reveal new features of these satellites. This session 
welcomes papers related to Juno's flybys of Europa, Ganymede and Io as 
well as space-based and ground-based remote observations of these 
moons, including the surface composition and processes, ice-shell 
structure, ocean dynamics, the structure and dynamics of deeper layers 
as well as atmospheric and space environment studies. Modeling work 
that provides context and interpretation of measurements are equally 
welcome.

Conveners: Hao Cao (UCLA), Paul Schenk (LPI), Dustin Buccino (JPL), 
Ali Sulaiman (Univ. of Minnesota), Natalie Soheila Wolfenbarger (LANL)


12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12

[AGU 2025] SESSION P023: MACHINE LEARNING AND DATA SCIENCE METHODS FOR 
PLANETARY SCIENCE

Many facets of research in planetary science rely on analyzing large 
volumes of in-situ and remote spacecraft data. Traditionally, these 
data were collected and analyzed manually. In recent decades, 
developments in machine learning (ML) techniques have begun to 
gradually augment traditional methods, answering the need for 
automation that can efficiently and intelligently extract information 
from large datasets in a useful manner. This session will be dedicated 
to data driven research that leverages ML and data science to enhance 
our scientific understanding and return from planetary data and 
missions. Topics may encompass studies from Earth-based data and 
existing and future planetary missions. Submissions are welcome for 
applications across science and engineering, including but not limited 
to: spacecraft operations and mission planning; surface, atmosphere, 
and space environment; object detection and classification; change 
detection; ML augmented physics-based models; interpretable methods; 
and other studies that apply ML and data science methods to planetary 
science.

Please submit your abstracts by Wednesday, 30 July 2025 at 23:59 EDT 
at this link:

https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu25/prelim.cgi/Session/249660

Conveners:
Ramanakumar Sankar (UC Berkeley)
Abigail Azari (University of Alberta)
Hannah Rae Kerne (ASU)
Lior Rubanenko (Tel Aviv University)


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[AGU 2025] SESSION P033: RADAR INVESTIGATIONS OF PLANETARY SURFACES 
AND SUBSURFACES

We welcome abstract submissions to the AGU25 Fall Meeting Session: 

P033: Radar Investigations of Planetary Surfaces and Subsurfaces:

https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu25/prelim.cgi/Session/248758

Description: Proposed and existing radar instruments are enabling an 
unprecedented range of radio geophysical observations of the surfaces 
and subsurfaces of Solar System bodies. This has spurred the 
development and application of new instrumentation, processing, 
modeling, analysis, and interpretation approaches to planetary radar 
science and engineering. We invite abstracts on any topic involving 
the use of radar data to understand planetary bodies. These may 
describe (but are not limited to) new results from existing radar 
observations, the development and application of new observation or 
data processing techniques, numerical modeling of existing or future 
observations, and/or the analysis of airborne or orbital radar data 
from terrestrial analog studies for Solar System observation.

Please note that the abstract submission deadline is Wednesday, 30 
July 2025 at 23:59 EDT/03:59 UTC.

We look forward to receiving your abstracts and creating an engaging 
session for the community.

Thank you,

Sean Peters, Indujaa Ganesh, Kristian Chan, G Wes Patterson


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[AGU 2025] SESSION P037: TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES IN ICY WORLD 
EXPLORATION

Ocean worlds and subsurface icy/permafrost regions on planetary bodies 
captivate because of their astrobiological potential. Confirmation of 
life and habitability requires a landed mission that would allow ice 
and sub-ice shell penetration. Decades of research by labs and 
industry have catapulted a "cryobot" mission out of the realm of 
science fiction and into a viable mission capability. As the community 
makes leaps and bounds in technological innovation on multiple fronts, 
it is important to share results along the way and learn from one 
another's successes and challenges. In this session we seek to bring 
together those in the community working on technologies and 
innovations for icy environment and ocean world subsurface 
exploration. We seek input from industry, government labs, and 
academia and hope to cover all aspects of landed/probe missions 
including modeling, laboratory experiments, field tests, and mission 
studies.

Please submit your abstracts at:

https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu25/prelim.cgi/Session/251635

Conveners: Wes Patterson, Samuel Howell, Benjamin Fernando, and 
Christine McCarthy


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[AGU 2025] SESSION P045: TITAN - ATMOSPHERE, IONOSPHERE, SPACE 
ENVIRONMENT AND THEIR INTERACTIONS

We invite submissions to our AGU 2025 session "Titan: Atmosphere, 
Ionosphere, Space Environment and their Interactions"

https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu25/prelim.cgi/Session/250591

Saturn's largest moon, Titan, is unique among the other moons in the 
Solar System. It possesses a thick atmosphere composed of several 
hydrocarbon species and is home to some of the most complex organic 
chemistry known. The atmosphere in many ways is analogous to Earth's 
with methane forming clouds, rain and surface lakes. One of the major 
objectives of the Cassini mission was to study Titan's atmosphere and 
its interaction with the space environment. New discoveries and 
insights continue to be made 8 years after the end of the Cassini 
mission. This session brings together researchers studying Titan's 
atmosphere, ionosphere and space environment to present their latest 
results. Presentations highlighting data analysis, theory, modeling, 
and any combination thereof that furthers our understanding of the 
various regions of Titan and the interactions between them are welcome.

We look forward to receiving your contributions.

Best regards,

Matt Fillingim, Steve Ledvina, Jared Bell, Niklas Edberg, and 
Konstantin Kim


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[AGU 2025] SESSION P051: PLANETARY SCIENCES STUDENT AND EARLY CAREER 
GEOBURST

Student and Early Career GeoBurst Session at AGU 2025

All students and early career researchers attending AGU 2025, please 
consider submitting an abstract to the Planetary Sciences Student and 
Early Career GeoBurst Session:

https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu25/prelim.cgi/Session/260145

Each presenter will have just a few minutes to highlight their key 
findings, novel methodologies, or emerging questions in their field, 
offering a concise and engaging overview of their work. The GeoBurst 
format is designed to foster broad exposure, spark dialogue, and 
encourage engagement with attendees across all Planetary Sciences 
disciplines as well as other related sections. Please note, abstracts 
submitted to this session will be considered for in-person 
presentations, are exempt from the first author policy and can submit 
a different abstract to another session or section.


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[GSA 2025] SESSION T172: POWERING DISCOVERY USING 3-D PETROLOGY OF 
EARTH AND SOLAR SYSTEM MATERIALS

Please join us in San Antonio, TX for the 2025 Geological Society of 
America Connects Meeting from October 19-22. Consider submitting an 
abstract to session T172, "Powering Discovery Using 3-D Petrology of 
Earth and Solar System Materials".

We seek contributions demonstrating the utilization and potential of 
3D imaging and textural analysis for making new observations and 
deriving new insights on Earth and Solar System materials.

We hope this session provides an opportunity for planetary and 
non-planetary scientists to share their work using 3D imaging methods 
on geological materials, from terrestrial sediments to 
extra-terrestrial sulfides.

The deadline for abstract submission is Tuesday, August 5 and the 
submission portal can be reached here:

https://gsameetings.secure-platform.com/connects25/

Session conveners: Rich Ketcham (ketcham@jsg.utexas.edu), Romy Hanna 
(romy@jsg.utexas.edu), and Scott Eckley (scott.a.eckley@nasa.gov).


18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18-18

[GSA 2025] SESSION T188: GEOMORPHOLOGY AND SURFACE PROCESSES ACROSS 
THE SOLAR SYSTEM

If you plan on attending the 2025 Geological Society of America
Connects Meeting in San Antonio, Texas (October 19-22, 2025), we
encourage you to consider submitting an abstract to session T188.
Geomorphology and Surface Processes Across the Solar System. This
session welcomes abstracts on any aspect of planetary geomorphology
and surface processes, including but not restricted to: Earth
analogues, laboratory experiments, numerical models, planetary
comparison, mapping, in situ data, or remote sensing studies.

This session fits well with one of the three key themes for the GSA
meeting: "From Earth to the Cosmos: Geoscience Beyond Our Planet".
We are also excited to have two excellent invited talks from Maddy
Turner (U. Chicago) and Tian Dong (UT Rio Grande Valley).

The abstract portal is open and can be accessed here:

https://gsameetings.secure-platform.com/connects25

The deadline for submitting abstracts is August 5, 2025.

Thanks, and we hope to see some of y'all in San Antonio!

Session Conveners: Tim Goudge (UT Austin), Alex Morgan (PSI), Marisa
Palucis (Dartmouth), Abdallah Zaki (UT Austin), and Ben Cardenas (Penn
State)


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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

August 18-20, 2025
Excellence in Science Leadership: A Workshop on Strategies for 
Unlocking Individual Potential
https://workforce.psi.edu/leadership/
Online

December 14-19, 2025
44th International Workshop on Bayesian Inference and Maximum Entropy 
Methods in Science and Engineering (MaxEnt 2025)
https://www.maxent2025.co.nz
Auckland, New Zealand

January 26-30, 2026
European ALMA school
https://www.alma-allegro.nl/european-alma-school/
Leiden, The Netherlands

July 6-10, 2026
Asteroids, Comets, Meteors (ACM) 2026 Conference
https://tinyurl.com/ywvc9hnb
Poznan, Poland

[Editor Note: If there is a planetary-related meeting, conference or
workshop that you think your colleagues should be aware of, please
send the date, title, URL and location to pen_editor@psi.edu.]


20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20-20

PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL - NEW PAPERS

Direct Links to Open Access Papers

Editor, Faith Vilas
https://psj.aas.org

Determinations of Asteroid Masses Using Mutual Encounters Observed in
the Legacy Survey of Space and Time
Gary M. Bernstein et al. 2025 PSJ 6:162
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ade3de

A Systematic Study of Hot O Production and Escape from Martian
Atmosphere in Response to Enhanced Extreme-ultraviolet Irradiance from
Solar Flares
Chirag Rathi et al. 2025 PSJ 6:163
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ade708

Diffusion-adsorption of Water Vapor in Chemically Activated Lunar Soil
Norbert Schorghofer 2025 PSJ 6:164
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ade5b2

A Terminology and Quantitative Framework for Assessing the
Habitability of Solar System and Extraterrestrial Worlds
Daniel Apai et al. 2025 PSJ 6:165
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/addda8


21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21-21

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

Influences of Non-Oberbeck-Boussinesq Effects on Tracer Transport in 
Icy Ocean Worlds
Shuang Wang & Wanying Kang
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JE008892

Global Lunar Boulder Map From LRO NAC Optical Images Using Deep 
Learning: Implications for Regolith and Protolith
B. Aussel et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE008981

Scour Pits in the Medusae Fossae Formation and Olympus Mons Region on 
Mars
Santa L. Perez-Cortes et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JE008664


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