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Volume 20, Number 6
February 8, 2026

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

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

1. [NASA] PDS: JUNO Data Release 32
2. [NASA] PDS: Aperiodic Data Releases in 2026.01
3. [NASA] PDS: Atlas 4 Took Released
4. [COSPAR] Session B4.5: Exploration of Mars
5. [COSPAR] Session D3.6: Comparative Magnetospheres
6. AGU EPSP Student Committee Application
7. Reminder: NASA Infrared Telescope Facility Strategic Planning
   - Seeking Community Input
8. Barringer Family Fund for Meteorite Impact Research
9. Special Issue of Geosciences: Worlds of the Solar System
10. [NASA] FY26 Aerospace Skilled Technical Workforce Hubs (NAS_Hub)
    Cooperative Agreement Notice
11. [NASA] ROSES-25 Amendment 45: F.10 PRISM Step-2 Due Date Delayed to
    February 27, 2026
12. 2026 Global Reference Atmospheric Model (GRAM) Virtual Workshop
13. Planetary Geomorphology Image of the Month
14. PhD Student in Space Physics in Uppsala, Sweden
15. PV2026: Data Preservation and Value-Adding Conference
16. [JpGU-AGU] Session P-PS04: Planetary Sciences
17. [JpGU-AGU] Session P-PS10: Martian Evaporites - Windows into
    Ancient Climates and Cradles for Life
18. Webinar: Presenting Your Research at LPSC
19. Webinar: Building Connections at Conferences - Different Approaches
    for Our Community
20. Asteroids, Comets, Meteors 2029 - Call for Letters of Intent
21. Abstract Submission Open: The Next Generation of Io Science
    Workshop
22. Tenure-Track Assistant Professor Position at Central Connecticut
    State University
23. Planetary Science Community Workshop, Louisville, KY, April 14-16,
    2026
24. Submit a Planetary Session to the 2026 GSA Connects Annual Meeting
25. Planetary Meeting Calendar Additions
26. Planetary Science Journal - New Papers
27. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets - New Papers

Commercial/Fundraising Announcements:

C1. Analog Geology & Spaceflight Training

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

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[NASA] PDS: JUNO DATA RELEASE 32

The Planetary Data System announces the 32nd release of data from the
JUNO mission. The release includes EDR and RDR level data acquired
between 2025-04-05 and 2025-07-11, which covers Juno Orbits 72, 73, and
74. Data sets from the following experiments are now available:

- ASC (advanced stellar compass)
- FGM (magnetometer)
- Gravity
- JADE (plasma)
- JEDI (energetic particle detector)
- JIRAM (infrared auroral mapper)*
- JunoCam (camera)
- MWR (microwave radiometer)
- SPICE
- UVS (ultraviolet imaging spectrometer)
- Waves (radio and plasma wave science)

To access the above data, please visit the following link:

https://pds.nasa.gov/datasearch/subscription-service/SS-20260130.shtml

JUNO data are archived at the PDS Atmospheres (ATM), Imaging (IMG),
NAIF, and Planetary Plasma Interactions (PPI) Nodes. The data can be
accessed from these nodes' web sites and from the main PDS home page:

https://pds.nasa.gov


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[NASA] PDS: APERIODIC DATA RELEASES IN 2026.01

In January 2026, PDS ingested and made available the following data,
none of which were regularly released with an ongoing mission:

2026.01.30 CLPS Blue Ghost (TO-19D) Lunar Magnetotelluric Sounder (LMS)
2026.01.27 Radio Science Documentation
2026.01.26 Voyager 2 Jupiter Plasma Wave Spectrometer Electron Density
2026.01.23 JunoCam - Machine Learning Calibration
2026.01.20 Mars Odyssey GRS Special Products (migrated)
2026.01.20 Ceres SPC Shape and Regional Models V2.0
2026.01.20 MSL ChemCam Passive Surface Spectra
2026.01.14 Mission-Independent DSN Calibration Data
2026.01.12 MER1 Navcam Science Calibrated Radiance Data
2026.01.12 MER2 Navcam Science Calibrated Radiance Data
2026.01.09 CLPS TO 19D Blue Ghost Mission One LISTER Archive
2026.01.07 MRO SHARAD Release 75 EDRs and RDRs (delayed)
2026.01.07 MRO HiRISE 74C, 75A, 75B, 75C, 76A
2026.01.05 LRO Diviner Calibrated Data
2026.01.05 LRO Diviner Raw Data

The CLPS TO 19D Blue Ghost Lunar Magnetotelluric Sounder (LMS) bundle
includes: raw Magnetometer, and Electrometer differential and
single-ended data; partially processed Magnetometer, Electrometer
differential and bias sweep, and Magnetometer and Electrometer
Housekeeping data; and calibrated Magnetometer, and Electrometer bias
and differential data.

To access those data

https://pds.nasa.gov/datasearch/subscription-service/SS-20260131.shtml

To access all data archived in PDS:

https://pds.nasa.gov


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[NASA] PDS: ATLAS 4 TOOL RELEASED

The Planetary Data System Imaging node (PDS-IMG) is proud to announce
that Atlas 4 is now live and available to users. Atlas is one of
PDS-IMG's primary search and data access tools, and version 4 has been
redesigned from the ground up to improve the user interface with an
intuitive search interface, easier bulk downloads, and an enhanced
Archive Explorer for browsing planetary data. The old Atlas 3 will be
retired in a few months. For questions or comments please contact
pds-img-jpl@jpl.nasa.gov

Atlas 4 Search:

https://pds-imaging.jpl.nasa.gov/tools/atlas/search

Atlas 4 Archive Explorer:

https://pds-imaging.jpl.nasa.gov/tools/atlas/archive-explorer


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[COSPAR] SESSION B4.5: EXPLORATION OF MARS

COSPAR is in Florence, Italy, 1-9 August 2026. Submit abstracts by
February 13 to session B4.5 Exploration of Mars:

Mars continues to be a compelling planetary exploration target. This
session focuses on forward planning for the exploration of Mars
including: (1) future hypothesis-driven or discovery-driven science
instruments or missions, (2) Mars Sample Return, (3) precursors to
prepare future human missions, (4) Science that can be carried out by
human explorers on Mars. Topics of interest include the primary
scientific drivers that require future missions to Mars (either
robotic or human), recent developments in our engineering and
technological capabilities related to missions to Mars, an updated
understanding of current mission concepts, planning related to Mars
Sample Return science, and candidate instrumentation for future
missions. The session will consist of a mixture of solicited and
contributed presentations. The program will be developed with a
special regard to achieving international representation.

For full description and to submit:

https://www.cospar-assembly.org/assembly.php


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[COSPAR] SESSION D3.6: COMPARATIVE MAGNETOSPHERES

We invite colleagues who are planning to attend the 46th COSPAR
Scientific Assembly to consider submitting abstracts to Session D3.6,
"Comparative Magnetospheres".

The abstract submission deadline is next Friday, 13 February 23:59 CET.
Conference information is available and abstract submission is possible
via the meeting website:

https://cospar2026.org/

Information for this specific session can be found at:

https://www.cospar-assembly.org/admin/sessioninfo.php?session=1453

The space environments of the worlds in our Solar System offer our best
opportunity to directly access a natural laboratory where we can study
processes that occur throughout the universe. We can learn so much more
about the fundamental physical processes in the universe by adding
in-situ measurements from additional data points to those of Earth,
specifically those that may be more analogous to other astrophysical
systems (i.e., with relativistic particle acceleration, very strong and
rapidly rotating magnetic fields, synchrotron electromagnetic
emissions, natural X-ray sources, etc.).

This session encourages presentations focusing on some of, but not
limited to, the following topics of interest across the Solar System:
solar wind-magnetosphere interactions, plasma-surface interactions,
auroral processes and current systems, magnetospheric transport and
dynamics, radiation belts and particle acceleration and loss,
moon-magnetosphere interactions, and fundamental plasma processes.

[Edited for length]


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AGU EPSP STUDENT COMMITTEE APPLICATION

The AGU Earth and Planetary Surface Processes section is looking for
motivated individuals to join our student committee. See:

https://connect.agu.org/epsp/about/students

This is a great way for students to get involved in the community,
interact with other students from across the world, and more. The
student committee currently runs the early career spotlight, the
sticker design competition, coordinates a peer mentoring program, and
organizes networking events at the AGU Fall Meeting.

In the coming year, we are looking to continue our existing efforts
and also expand our resources towards more projects desired by the
community. However, student committee members are welcomed and
encouraged to think of and implement new ways we can better serve our
EPSP student community.

If you are interested in joining, please fill out an application form
here:

https://forms.gle/MkZz42bVhyzN9NPi9

Applications are open until March 1. Feel free to reach out to the
current student committee chair (emma.rogers.gr@dartmouth.edu) if you
have questions.

Sincerely,

Emma Rogers & The AGU EPSP Student Committee


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REMINDER: NASA INFRARED TELESCOPE FACILITY STRATEGIG PLANNING - SEEKING
COMMUNITY INPUT

The NASA Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) 10-year strategic plan is
being developed.

IRTF is a facility open to anyone, regardless of affiliation and a
survey has been developed to gather inputs from across the planetary
science and astrophysics research communities. We encourage everyone
with an interest in IRTF, whether an IRTF user or not, to provide their
input. The survey will be closed on Feb 28 and the next call for
proposals will open on March 1.

https://forms.gle/kMDvFSwULkvyx5tw9

Everyone that completes the survey can participate in a prize draw for
an observing session with IRTF that includes full support and training
for planning, conducting and reducing the observations.


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BARRINGER FAMILY FUND FOR METEORITE IMPACT RESEARCH

The Barringer Family Fund for Meteorite Impact Research will provide a
number of competitive grants in the range of $2,500 to $10,000 within
support of field research at known or suspected impact sites worldwide.
Grant funds may be used to assist with travel and subsistence costs, as
well as laboratory and computer analysis of research samples and
findings. Masters, doctoral, post-doctoral students enrolled in
formal university programs are eligible as well as early career
researchers within 10 years of obtaining a PhD. Application to the fund
will be due by 1 April 2026, with notification of grant awards by 1
June 2026.

Additional details about the fund and its application process can be
found at:

https://tinyurl.com/3z9dr4ra


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SPECIAL ISSUE OF GEOSCIENCES: WORLDS OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM

The Special Issue entitled "Worlds of the Solar System: Geological
Evolution and Habitability of Planets and Moons" aims to bring together
the latest advances on the dynamic processes that have shaped planetary
bodies and their potential to support life. We welcome submissions on
comparative studies of Venus, Earth, and Mars, highlighting the
divergent evolutionary pathways of terrestrial planets from Venus'
runaway greenhouse conditions to Earth's long-term climate stability
and Mars' transition from a wetter, more habitable past to its current
arid state.

Beyond inner planets, this Special Issue also aims to explore the icy
worlds of the outer Solar System. We welcome investigations of Europa
and Enceladus focusing, among other topics, on evidence for subsurface
oceans, plume activity, and geophysical mechanisms that may create
niches for life beneath their ice shells, as well as studies on Titan
emphasizing its unique methane-based hydrological cycle, organic-rich
surface, and complex interactions between the atmosphere and surface
chemistry. Other icy moons are also a topic of interest for manuscripts
submitted to this Special Issue.

For complete submission directions and to see confirmed invited papers,
please go to:

https://www.mdpi.com/journal/geosciences/special_issues/86M95CV534


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[NASA] FY26 AEROSPACE SKILLED TECHNICAL WORKFORCE HUBS (NAS_HUB)
COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT NOTICE

Announcement Number: NNH26ZHA001C
Assistance Listing Number: 43.008

This opportunity seeks proposals to establish state or regionally
focused Skilled Technical Workforce Hubs (NAS_Hubs) that will serve as
strategic centers for developing and sustaining a skilled technical
workforce aligned with aerospace industry and NASA mission needs.

- Pre-Proposal Webinar for Proposers: Wednesday February 18, 2026,
  2:00pm-3:00 ET
- Office Hours Session: Tuesday March 3, 2026, 2:00-3:00pm ET
- Proposal Deadline: March 20, 2026, at 11:59 PM Eastern Time (ET)
- Anticipated Award Notification: June 2026

Through this NOFO, NASA seeks lead organizations to establish hubs that:

- Collaborate with aerospace employers to align education and training
  with industry-defined workforce needs
- Partner with community colleges and high school Career and Technical
  Education (CTE) programs to deliver hands-on, industry-aligned
  learning experiences
- Coordinate with state or regional workforce development system
- Build clear and sustainable employment pathways into high-demand
  aerospace technical careers

Go to:

https://tinyurl.com/bdcj2kk5

Maximum Annual Award: $500,000
Maximum Total Award: $1,500,000 over three years

Program contact: Maria Arredondo, NAS_Hub@nasaprs.com

[Edited for length]


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[NASA] ROSES-25 AMENDMENT 45: F.10 PRISM STEP-2 DUE DATE DELAYED TO
FEBRUARY 27, 2026

F.10 Payloads and Research Investigations on the Surface of the Moon
(PRISM) solicits development and flight of a science-driven suite of
instruments and supporting technology demonstration payloads tailored
to complete scientific investigations at a lunar landing destination,
that address the science goals of 1) any SMD division, e.g., Planetary
Science, Earth Science, Heliophysics, Astrophysics, and Biological and
Physical Sciences, 2) objectives of the Exploration Systems Development
Mission Directorate (ESDMD), and 3) any technology demonstration goals
of the Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD) that advance
capabilities for science, exploration, or commercial development of the
Moon.

Payloads will be delivered on a Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS)
lander to a location the lunar surface that is identified and justified
in the proposal, including the South Pole region but excluding the
North Pole region.

F.10 PRISM Step-2 proposals are now due February 27, 2026, to allow
time for proposers to make proposal and budgetary modifications due to
the adjustment to the period of performance for south polar
investigations.

Go to:

https://tinyurl.com/pamshej2

Questions concerning F.10 PRISM may be directed to Ryan Watkins and
Amanda Nahm at HQ-PRISM@mail.nasa.gov.


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2026 GLOBAL REFERENCE ATMOSPHERIC MODEL (GRAM) VIRTUAL WORKSHOP

The 2026 Global Reference Atmospheric Model (GRAM) Virtual Workshop
will be held on Wednesday, March 4, 2026.

The purpose of this workshop is for GRAM developers, GRAM users,
planetary atmospheric modelers, and other interested parties to learn
about the latest GRAM upgrades. This workshop will include
presentations regarding the GRAM Suite and upcoming updates to Earth,
Titan, and Neptune-GRAM. The workshop will also highlight the gravity
model updates that will be included in future GRAM Suite releases and
our current forward plan.

Discussion topics will include:

- Future GRAM Suite Upgrades
- Modeling and User Community Inputs Regarding the GRAM Suite
- User Community Needs and How GRAM Suite Developers Can Meet These
  Needs

Meeting RSVP: All participants planning to attend the virtual workshop
are asked to RSVP by Friday, February 27, 2026 via email to Hilary
Justh (Hilary.L.Justh@nasa.gov) with 2026 GRAM Virtual Workshop RSVP in
the subject line. Please include your name, affiliation, and contact
information when responding.


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PLANETARY GEOMORPHOLOGY IMAGE OF THE MONTH

The February image of the month is now available on the IAG's Planetary
Geomorphology web page:

https://planetarygeomorphology.wordpress.com

This month's topic is 'The interaction of two deltas on Mars',
contributed by Anastasiia Ovchinnikova, Freie Universitat Berlin,
Institute of Geological Sciences, Planetary Sciences and Remote Sensing
Group.

You can follow IAG Planetary Geomorphology Image of the Month on
BlueSky:

@planetarygeomorph.bsky.social

https://bsky.app/profile/planetarygeomorph.bsky.social

On Facebook go to:

https://www.facebook.com/PlanetaryGeomorphology

Best wishes,

Lonneke Roelofs (Chair, IAG Planetary Geomorphology working group)


14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14-14

PHD STUDENT IN SPACE PHYSICS IN UPPSALA, SWEDEN

The Swedish Institute of Space Physics (IRF) in Uppsala is seeking a
motivated PhD student to work within the ESA/JAXA BepiColombo project,
in which two spacecraft will enter orbit around the planet Mercury in
December 2026. The PhD student will be part of a research group that
has contributed to the development of an electric field instrument
(PWI/MEFISTO) onboard the Japanese spacecraft Mio.

The project is conducted in an international research environment with
scientists from several countries. The overall scientific objective is
to identify, map, and understand the key electrodynamic processes in
Mercury's space environment, with particular focus on its so-called
"auroral regions." The studies address how these processes are driven
by intense solar radiation and the solar wind, how energy transport is
governed by Mercury's magnetic field, and what role they play in the
interaction between the space environment and the planet's surface.

Information about doctoral studies is available at:

https://www.physics.uu.se

https://www.teknat.uu.se

[Edited for length]


15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15-15

PV2026: DATA PRESERVATION AND VALUE-ADDING CONFERENCE

The 11th PV Conference will be held 23-26 June 2026 at ESA's ESAC
(Madrid, Spain). PV2026 brings together the international community
working on long-term preservation, stewardship, and scientific reuse of
space‑science data.

With data volumes growing across missions, models, and simulations, the
meeting will focus on maintaining FAIR (Findable, Accessible,
Interoperable, Reusable) planetary data in an era of cloud platforms,
AI/ML, and increasingly complex science pipelines. The conference
invites contributions on:

- Preservation of data, metadata, software, workflows, and knowledge
- Sustainable and secure preservation technologies
- Approaches that add scientific value and enable reuse
- Community standards, interoperability, and multi-mission tools
- Impacts of AI/ML on preservation and data exploitation
- Governance, funding, and long-term sustainability
- Metrics for archive usage and scientific productivity

Planetary scientists who rely on robust, accessible archives and who
want to help shape the next generation of data systems are encouraged
to participate.

Abstract submission deadline: March 6

More information:

https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/pv2026


16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16-16

[JPGU-AGU] SESSION P-PS04: PLANETARY SCIENCES

We are pleased to announce the P-PS04 session "Planetary Sciences" in
JpGU-AGU joint meeting 2026 which will be held in Japan (May 24-29).
This session welcomes contributions on all aspects of planetary
science, including studies of the past, present, and future of Earth,
other planets, and planetary systems, both within and beyond the Solar
System. We are looking forward to your submissions for both oral and
poster presentations.

Session Information:

https://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2026/sessionlist_en/detail/P-PS04.html

JpGU-AGU 2026 website:

https://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2026/

Abstract Submission:

https://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2026/submission.php

Conveners:

Makito Kobayashi (The University of Tokyo)
Misako Tatsuuma (National Institute of Technology, Tokyo College)
Yuhito Shibaike (Kagoshima University)
Eito Hirai (Institute of Science Tokyo)


17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17-17

[JPGU-AGU] SESSION P-PS10: MARTIAN EVAPORITES - WINDOWS INTO ANCIENT
CLIMATES AND CRADLES FOR LIFE

Conference: JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2026 (24-29 May 2026)
Abstract Submission Deadline: 17 February 2026

We seek to advance comparative planetary science and guide future
missions targeting biosignatures and invite contributions that
(a) Examine evaporite-bearing regions on the Martian surface;
(b) Characterize the microbial and organic molecule diversity in
evaporite systems; (c) Explore limits of life and organic/mineral
interactions essential for preservation of biosignatures; (d) Model
the influence of evaporites on volatile cycling, habitability
potential, and biosignature preservation.

We invite abstract submissions that:

(a) Examine evaporite-rich regions on the Martian surface,
(b) Characterize microbial communities and organic molecular diversity
    in evaporitic environments,
(c) Investigate evaporite-organic interactions, and
(d) Model the role of evaporites in volatile cycling and planetary
    habitability

Go to:

https://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2026/submission.php

[Edited for length]


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

WEBINAR: PRESENTING YOUR RESEARCH AT LPSC

Virtual: February 25, 2026, 1:00-2:00 p.m. U.S. CST

This virtual workshop is designed to help planetary scientists
strengthen their conference presentations. Join a panel of experienced
speakers to ask questions and hear a variety of tips on giving
excellent oral and poster presentations at the conference. To register,
visit:

https://tinyurl.com/5975uvpc


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WEBINAR: BUILDING CONNECTIONS AT CONFERENCES - DIFFERENT APPROACHES FOR
OUR COMMUNITY

Virtual: February 26, 2026, 1:00-2:00 p.m. U.S. CST

Join us for a virtual webinar on how to prepare for conferences and
make the most of every opportunity. Hear from our panelists about the
steps they take before and during a conference to meet with colleagues
and mentors and develop new connections that support their research and
career goals. This session highlights a variety of approaches and
practical steps for the broad range of our community members, including
neurodivergent and introverted members of the planetary and
astrobiology communities. To register, visit:

https://tinyurl.com/3bwppwhk


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

ASTEROIDS, COMETS, METEORS 2029 - CALL FOR LETTERS OF INTENT

This message announces that the ACM Steering Committee is calling for
Letters of Intent to host the next ACM conference after ACM 2026,
tentatively scheduled for 2029 (maintaining the triennial pace). In
particular, we encourage Letters of Intent from outside the Americas
and Europe.

The due date for letters of intent is May 8, 2026. Complete
information about this call and how to prepare your proposal can be
found here:

https://tinyurl.com/ucx54vzf

We are looking forward to receiving outstanding proposals concerning
ACM2029, and hope to see you in Poznan in July, 2026, for ACM2026!


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

ABSTRACT SUBMISSION OPEN: THE NEXT GENERATION OF IO SCIENCE WORKSHOP

Io is the most volcanically active world in the Solar System, yet
fundamental questions persist regarding its origin, evolution,
present-day activity, dynamic atmosphere, and its complex interactions
with the rest of the Jovian system. Io's extreme activity makes it an
important analog for understanding processes relevant to the early
Earth and Moon, and other tidally heated bodies across the cosmos.

The Next Generation of Io Science Workshop will be held from 4/22/26 to
4/23/26. The Workshop will be hybrid, with both in-person participation
at the Applied Physics Laboratory (Laurel, MD) and online.
Participation is free.

Abstract submissions are now open. Short abstracts (<2,000 characters)
are requested by 3/6/26.

The goal of this workshop is to bring together interdisciplinary
scientists to discuss outstanding science questions about Io. We
solicit participation from the broad community - whether you have
worked on Io before or not!

More information:

https://secwww.jhuapl.edu/EventLink/Event/610

Science organizing committee: James Keane, Laz Kestay, Fran Bagenal,
Brett Denevi, Anton Ermakov, Ben Greenhagen, Katherine de Kleer,
Alfred McEwen, Ryan Ogliore, and Scott Bolton


22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22-22

TENURE-TRACK ASSISTANT PROFESSOR POSITION

Central Connecticut State University invites applications for a
tenure-track Assistant Professor position in the Department of Earth &
Space Sciences starting in August 2026. We seek a teaching-focused
candidate with experience in undergraduate instruction as well as
research interests that are synergistic with department curricula and
current expertise. The successful candidate will be responsible for
courses in mineralogy/petrology, structural geology, and field methods
as well as maintaining an ongoing research agenda that includes
mentoring of undergraduate senior projects.

For more information on the position or to submit an application,
please see the full description at:

https://tinyurl.com/ess-jobad

Applications close on February 16, 2026.


23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23-23

PLANETARY SCIENCE COMMUNITY WORKSHOP, LOUISVILLE, KY, APRIL 14-16, 2026

We have reached our minimum threshold for registrations, and the PSCW
2026 will go ahead as planned.

This workshop is for professionals working in and around the field of
planetary science, including scientists, engineers, students,
policy-makers, and industry partners. Although science is core to this
workshop, *all* topics of interest to this community are welcome.

The abstract deadline has been extended to Sunday, March 1st.
Registration ($300) will remain open until March 15.

To learn more about the workshop and to register, please visit:

https://planetaryworkshop.org/

Co-organizers: Paul Byrne (paul.byrne@wustl.edu) and Chase Million
(chase@millionconcepts.com)


24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24

SUBMIT A PLANETARY SESSION TO THE 2026 GSA CONNECTS ANNUAL MEETING

The 2026 Geological Society of America Connects Annual Meeting will
be 11-14 October 2026 in Denver, Colorado.

https://gsameetings.secure-platform.com/connects26/

Meeting Themes:
- Celebrating a Century of Continental Drift: Understanding Earth in
  Motion: Honoring a century of discovery that reshaped Earth science
- Riverscapes in Transition: Dynamics, Hazards, and Human Futures:
  Science at the intersection of water, climate, landscape, and
  society
- Innovations in Exploration from Deep Earth to Deep Space:
  From AI to Yttrium - Developing Technologies to Transform Earth
  Science

GSA also welcomes proposals for field trips and short courses.

Unlike some planetary meetings, GSA does not censor abstracts!


25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25

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

May 24-29, 2026
JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting
https://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2026/
Chibam, Japan

June 23-26, 2026
PV2026: Data Preservation and Value-Adding Conference
https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/pv2026
Madrid, Spain


26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26

PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL - NEW PAPERS

Direct Links to Open Access Papers

Editor, Brian Jackson
https://psj.aas.org

Spectral Evidence for Recent/Ongoing Activity in Mercury's Praxiteles
Basin
Anna Galiano et al. 2026 PSJ 7:27
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae2fb9

Modeling the Meteoroid Environment Far from the Ecliptic Plane
Althea V. Moorhead et al. 2026 PSJ 7:28
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae27cb

Mass-wasting Features on Galilean Icy Moons: Morphological Analysis
and Implications
R. Parekh et al. 2026 PSJ 7:29
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae2f4a

Toward Reliable Interpretations of Small-exoplanet Compositions:
Comparisons and Considerations of Equations of State and Materials
Used in Common Rocky Planet Models
Joseph G. Schulze et al. 2026 PSJ 7:30
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae2ea2


27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH: PLANETS - NEW PAPERS

Direct Links to Open Access (OA) Papers

Editors-in-Chief, Amanda Hendrix & Debra Buczkowski
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/21699100

Obscuration of Crystalline Ca-Sulfate in XRD and Raman Data When Coated
by Amorphous Ferric Sulfate: Implications for the Amorphous Components
at Gale Crater
R. J. Hopkins,  A. D. Rogers,  L. Ehm
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE009299

Impact Reactivation of a Hydrothermal System in Basalt in the Vargeao
Dome Impact Structure, Brazil
Jitse Alsemgeest et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE008966

Microimaging Spectroscopy of Carbonaceous Chondrites and Comparison to
the Spectral Diversity of Asteroids
S. A. Parra,  R. N. Greenberger,  B. L. Ehlmann
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE009048


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COMMERCIAL/FUNDRAISING ANNOUNCEMENTS

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ANALOG GEOLOGY AND SPACEFLIGHT TRAINING

Many planetary scientists don't get to go - in person - to "where the
rocks live." This trip is designed to change that for you.

Grab a seat for this season's Earth and Space Experience, where anyone
can get a primer on planetary analog field geology and an introduction
to human spaceflight operations at the Challenger Learning Center and
Spaceport America's launch operations facility.

We've trained our fellow research scientists, students, educators, and
of course, general space enthusiasts. Student pricing starts at $999.
This season we're running a special on parent-child pairs who register
together. This could be a way to hook your kids on space science!

Register at:

https://www.areslearning.com/earthandspace

For more information, contact Drs. Mark Wagner (mark@areslearning.com)
or Kirby Runyon (kirby@planex.space).


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