From msinha at swin.edu.au Mon May 31 12:56:26 2021 From: msinha at swin.edu.au (Manodeep Sinha) Date: Mon, 31 May 2021 02:56:26 +0000 Subject: [ASA] ASA ECR Chapter Elections 2021 References: Message-ID: Dear colleagues, This is a reminder for sending in nominations for the ASA ECR Chapter Steering Committee. Nominations close this Friday (4th June). Please feel free to email me if you have any questions regarding the Chapter or the nominations process. Cheers, Manodeep On 17/5/21 3:15 pm, Manodeep Sinha wrote: Dear colleagues, The Early Career Researcher (ECR) Chapter of the ASA is inviting nominations for five positions on the Chapter Steering Committee - student representative, senior representative, and three ordinary committee members. The ECR Chapter is active in promoting and assisting the career development of early- and mid-career researchers in the Australian astronomy community. The goals of the chapter are: * Inform the members about opportunities for professional training and support * Provide training for the members in areas of professional development * Connect the members with each other, with senior academic mentors, and with former academics working in industry, providing a support network * Act as an advocacy and representation body for the members The ECR chapter has been active since 2013. Over that period it has organised activities that have been beneficial to our ECR members, including workshops (2012, 2014, 2016, 2018, 2020), an 'Astronomers in Industry' group for perspectives and advice on moving into industry, a scheme for providing feedback on writing (2019), the annual 'Speed-Meet-a-Mentor' session at the ASA meeting, and a mentoring scheme for partnering senior mentors with postdocs and PhD students. The ECR Chapter is run by a Steering Committee who develop and carry out initiatives to fulfill the Chapter's goals. The Committee consists of a Chair, five Steering Committee members, a student representative and a senior representative. Terms are held for two years (ordinary members) and one year (student representative and senior representative). This year we are looking for 3 ordinary members, the student representative and the senior representative. In the interest of having a steering committee that reflects the diverse experiences of the community, we particularly encourage people from racial, cultural and gender minorities to nominate. These positions are open to all Chapter members, except for the student representative, which is open to students only. Becoming a member of the Chapter can be done through the ASA membership website at https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/ZvXJCXLW2mUXjnlx9c6DCnt?domain=asa.astronomy.org.au. Manodeep Sinha will be the returning officer for this election. Please send all nominations via email to msinha at swin.edu.au by Friday 4 June, 2021. Each nomination must include a brief paragraph summarising your interest in the position and how you intend to contribute to the broad goals of the Chapter. Please note that this information will be made available to voters. Kind regards, Manodeep Sinha - Returning Officer and ECR Chapter Steering Committee immediate past chair (on behalf of the ECR Chapter steering committee) -- Dr. Manodeep Sinha, Senior Research Software Scientist, ASTRO 3D Centre of Excellence, SA 118, Centre for Astrophysics & Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology, Hawthorn, VIC 3122. +61-3-9214-4918 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From kdorrell at unimelb.edu.au Mon May 31 19:30:48 2021 From: kdorrell at unimelb.edu.au (KIM Dorrell) Date: Mon, 31 May 2021 09:30:48 +0000 Subject: [ASA] FW: Second Announcement! Registrations Open/Call for Abstract Submissions - 2021 ASA ASM and HWSA Message-ID: Dear ASA Members/fellow Australian astronomers, 2021 ASM and HWSA Registrations and abstract submissions for the 2021 ASA Annual Scientific Meeting and Harley Wood School for Astronomy have been rolling in! Please circulate this reminder to your networks. Key dates Meeting: Mon 12th July ? Fri 16th July 2021 Abstract submissions: 5:00pm AEST on 4 June 2021 Late Abstract submissions: 5:00pm AEST on 18 June 2021 Poster submissions: 5:00pm AEST on 2 July 2021 Registration: 5:00pm AEST on 2 July 2021 Full details are available on the meeting website: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/_mVeCvl1rKi7qyZkMTQy0Xx?domain=blogs.unimelb.edu.au The ASM will be held in the week of Monday 12th July - Friday 16th July, with five in-person hubs complementing a fully virtual programme. This year?s HWSA will be held from Friday 9th July ? Sunday 11th July at the Albury-Wodonga campus of La Trobe University. We might be largely online this year but we won?t be boring! Highlights include: * A Meta Talk on Climate Science featuring Dr Karl S. Kruszelnicki, Julius Sumner Miller Fellow and Prof Peter Tuthill, (both University of Sydney) * An industry engagement session presented by AAL * A sustainability seminar and challenge with $$$ prizes * Mental health discussions * Rainbow Astronomy get-togethers Venue Information Participants are welcome to attend an in-person hub from any location (subject to local COVID travel and visitor guidelines and the policy of their home institution). Hubs will be located at: * Brisbane (Qld) ? University of Queensland * Sydney (NSW) ? AAO Macquarie * Canberra (ACT) ? RSAA, Mt Stromlo * Melbourne (VIC) ? University of Melbourne (event hosts) * Tasmania (TAS) ? University of Tasmania * Adelaide (SA) ? University of Adelaide * Perth (WA) ? ARRC Building, CSIRO * New Zealand (NZ) ? University of Auckland (tbc) All talks and activities advertised as part of the national programme will also be broadcast via Zoom. Links will be sent out to registered participants prior to each day of the meeting. Local hubs may also organise social and other events that will not be available virtually. Registration Costs * In-person hub participation (Full ASA Members/Non-Members) - $150 plus GST includes daily lunches and refreshments * Online-only participation (Full ASA Members/Non-Members) - $50 plus GST * In-person hub participation (Students/Retired ASA Members) ? NO CHARGE includes daily lunches and refreshments * Online-only participation (Students/Retired ASA Members) ? NO CHARGE To register and submit an abstract or poster: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/nL7LCwV1vMfGkRnwYuq_vMd?domain=blogs.unimelb.edu.au Scientific Organising Committee * Christian Reichardt (University of Melbourne, Co-Chair) * Emma Ryan-Weber (Swinburne University of Technology, Co-Chair) * Nichole Barry (University of Melbourne) * Jackie Bondell (Swinburne University of Technology) * Barbara Catinella (University of Western Australia) * Andrew Cole (University of Tasmania) * Christoph Federrath (Australian National University) * Devika Kamath (Macquarie University) * Ivo Rolf Seitenzahl (University of New South Wales, Australian Defence Force Academy) * Khaled Said Soliman (University of Queensland) * Linqing Wen (University of Western Australia) Local Organising Committee * Christian Reichardt (University of Melbourne) * Rachel Webster (University of Melbourne) * Kim Dorrell (University of Melbourne) * Hub Contacts (please check website: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/FVqRCxngwOf1DQjWrFY8bPi?domain=blogs.unimelb.edu.au ) We can?t to wait to see you either online or in person somewhere around the country! Kind regards Kim Dorrell On behalf of the Local and Scientific Organising Committees ???????????????????---------------------------??????????? Kim Dorrell | Centre Coordinator ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav) ARC Centre of Excellence for All-sky Astrophysics in 3D (ASTRO 3D) School of Physics | Faculty of Science Room 708, David Caro Building 192 The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010 Australia T: +61 3 8344 5449 E: kdorrell at unimelb.edu.au science.unimelb.edu.au| https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/dWepCyojxQTrKy3B9HRQbXd?domain=ozgrav.org | https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/wY1wCANpgjCNB15D7CMF-ea?domain=astro3d.org.au My work days are Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, 10am-5pm I acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the land on which I work, and pay my respects to the Elders, past and present [cid:17982e0d2054cff311] CRICOS: 00116K This email and any attachments may contain personal information or information that is otherwise confidential or the subject of copyright. Any use, disclosure or copying of any part of it is prohibited. The University does not warrant that this email or any attachments are free from viruses or defects. Please check any attachments for viruses and defects before opening them. If this email is received in error please delete it and notify us by return email. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 10554 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: From fiona.panther at uwa.edu.au Tue Jun 1 15:31:09 2021 From: fiona.panther at uwa.edu.au (Fiona Panther) Date: Tue, 1 Jun 2021 05:31:09 +0000 Subject: [ASA] Invitation to participate in the Australian GW follow-up capabilities study Message-ID: Dear friends, I would like to invite you all to participate in a survey on the capabilities for Australia to follow up GW alerts during next year's O4 LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA observing run. Apologies if you receive this email more than once. This survey is to gauge the Australian astronomy community's interest in (and prior experience in) following up gravitational wave alerts. This survey is designed to facilitate the future rapid follow-up busy days, and also to provide a report on Australia's readiness for O4 and beyond. Who should fill out this survey: Any Australia-based astronomer - professional or amateur - at any career level who is curious about gravitational wave follow-up. ECRs are especially encouraged to participate. You do not need to have participated in searching for GWs before. Your responses will be anonymized. However, by filling it out you consent to the data collection being used to provide a report on Australia's interest and readiness to follow up gravitational wave alerts that will be presented to the Australian astronomy community (hopefully at the ASA) and to the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA collaboration to assist in informing the policy that governs how gravitational wave alerts are reported to the public and the astronomy community. A copy of the report will be provided to all participants - please provide your email so we can send you a copy of the report. Any questions can be directed to Dr Fiona Panther (fiona.panther at uwa.edu.au) https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/ZyscC0YKPviGQY0lRCwjrVb?domain=docs.google.com Best regards, Fiona Dr Fiona H. Panther Postdoctoral Researcher Department of Physics School of Physics, Mathematics and Computing University of Western Australia -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From celine.dorgeville at anu.edu.au Tue Jun 1 19:01:05 2021 From: celine.dorgeville at anu.edu.au (Celine D'Orgeville) Date: Tue, 1 Jun 2021 09:01:05 +0000 Subject: [ASA] Fwd: Request for Research Participation - Women in Leadership in Higher Education References: Message-ID: Dear colleagues, If you are female or identify as a woman, please read on and consider participating in this survey by contacting Dr Heather Stewart (h.stewart at griffith.edu.au) or Ass Professor Deborah Delaney (debdelaney888 at gmail.com) or Ass Professor Harsh Suri (harsh.suri at deakin.edu.au). Best regards, ********************************** Professor C?line d?Orgeville Australian National University Translational Fellow Advanced Instrumentation and Technology Centre Deputy Director ANU Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics Mount Stromlo Observatory, Cotter Road, Weston Creek, ACT 2611, Australia Phone: +61 2 6125 6374 E-mail: celine.dorgeville at anu.edu.au https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/ohymCOMKzVTpllnq8sEdzdv?domain=researchers.anu.edu.au https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/SuT2CP7LAXfK99Wywu04yQp?domain=spie.org Pronouns: she/her Exploring female leadership capability in times of Crisis (GU Ref No:2021/022) Thanks for taking the time to read this email. We are approaching you to help support our research into exploring your leadership journey in Higher Education (HE). What we ask of you is to participate in a conversation with the researcher/s. Through this conversation we would like to gain insights into your experience, stories and insights from working in HE. The focus is about you and your understanding as a female leader and how you have navigated the challenges. These conversations will be recorded after gaining your consent and are aimed at lasting around 30-45 minutes, but can be shorter or longer as you feel necessary. All conversations will be in strict co-ordinance of current Queensland Health to comply with Covid19 restrictions at the time e.g. social distancing; masks. In the case where it will be more appropriate, the interview will be done virtually via Teams as supported by Griffith University. As soon as the conversations are completed your identification will be removed. Further anonymity will be generated in the analysis as we combine the recorded interviews and use various analysis tools. Your recorded conversation with the researcher will be treated with respect and held securely on Griffith University supported data storage. Participation in this project will hold no personal benefit but will enhance the understanding of female leaders in HE and their experiences along with benefits and or challenges. In addition, we aim to take this project into academic publications to enhance understanding of female leaders navigating academia. This research is asking for voluntary participation whereby you can request to cease participation at any point If you would like further information, please contact the chief investigators Dr Heather Stewart (h.stewart at griffith.edu.au) or Ass Professor Deborah Delaney (debdelaney888 at gmail.com) or Ass Professor Harsh Suri (harsh.suri at deakin.edu.au). In anticipation of your contribution, thank-you for your time and participation. Best regards, Heather Stewart Deborah Delaney Harsh Suri GU Ref No: 2020/022 Many thanks Rose Professor Rosemary Stockdale | Dean (Engagement) Griffith Business School Griffith University | Nathan campus | QLD 4111 | Business 1 (N50) Room 0.07 South Bank campus | QLD 4101 | Graduate Centre (SO7) Room 4.24 T +61 7 373 56497 | E r.stockdale at griffith.edu.au Administration Officer: Caitlin Patane | T +61 7 373 58122 | E caitlin.patane at griffith.edu.au [signature_1231299534] Griffith University - CRICOS Provider Number 00233E PRIVILEGED - PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL This email and any files transmitted with it are intended solely for the use of the addressee(s) and may contain information which is confidential or privileged. If you receive this email and you are not the addressee or responsible for delivery of the email to the addressee(s), please disregard the contents of the email, delete the mail and notify the author immediately. PLEASE CONSIDER THE ENVIRONMENT BEFORE PRINTING THIS EMAIL -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 91174 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: From Cathryn.Trott at curtin.edu.au Wed Jun 2 16:20:12 2021 From: Cathryn.Trott at curtin.edu.au (Cathryn Trott) Date: Wed, 2 Jun 2021 06:20:12 +0000 Subject: [ASA] 2021 ASA Prizes announcement Message-ID: Dear ASA members, It is with great pleasure that I am able to announce the recipients of the 2021 ASA Prizes. This year the competition for all prizes was extremely high, and I would like to thank the selection panels who worked hard to assess each prize. I would also like to thank the students, researchers and supervisors who nominated themselves or others for these prizes. They are an excellent example of the quality of astronomy research and outreach in Australia. The Bok, Heisler, Webster and Green Prize recipients will be offered to present their work at the Annual Scientific Meeting next month. Please join me in congratulating the winners. Regards, Cathryn Bok Prize - outstanding research in astronomy or a closely related field, by an Honours student or eligible Masters student at an Australian university. Madeleine McKenzie - The University of Western Australia Masters Dissertation: Simulating the Formation of Multiple Stellar Populations in Globular Clusters Madeleine?s project was based on simulations, which can be a difficult project to complete as not always simulations can render useful results. The fact that the project was at the intersection of observations and theory was considered as one of the factors contributing to the difficulty of the project, and thus making the successful outcome of this project even more impressive. Honourable mention: Ethan Payne (Monash) Charlene Heisler Prize - most outstanding PhD thesis in astronomy or a closely related field, accepted by an Australian university Colm Talbot - Monash University Doctoral Thesis: Astrophysics of Binary Black Holes at the Dawn of Gravitational-Wave Astronomy Colm?s research studied the origin of compact objects and their populations using GW signals. The thesis was marked as "Exceptional" and "Excellent" by the referees, and resulted in 4 first-author publications and 7 co-authored publications. Colm contributed to the code BILBY that is used by LIGO as well as outside the LIGO collaboration, and also contributed to teaching/outreach activities. Louise Webster Prize - outstanding research by a scientist early in their post-doctoral career Joseph Callingham (ASTRON; formally University of Sydney) ?Anisotropic winds in a Wolf?Rayet binary identify a potential gamma-ray burst progenitor?, Nature Astronomy, 3, 82 (2019) Anne Green Prize - significant advance or accomplishment by a mid-career scientist Keith Bannister - CASS For pioneering work on Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs), impact in terms of success of ASKAP and successful implementation of the FRB search mode, and for opening a key new area having impact in high energy physics, galaxy evolution, the IGM and cosmology. David Allen Prize - exceptional achievement in astronomy communication Geraint Lewis - The University of Sydney The Robert Ellery Lectureship - outstanding contributions in astronomy or a related field Tamara Davis - The University Queensland (2021) Tamara will deliver her Ellery Lectureship at the 2022 ASM. Matthew Bailes - Swinburne University of Technology (2020) Matthew will deliver his Ellery Lectureship at the 2021 ASM. _______________________________________________________ Cathryn Trott Associate Professor ARC Future Fellow President, Astronomical Society of Australia ARC Centre of Excellence for All Sky Astrophysics in 3D (ASTRO 3D) International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research Curtin University Bentley WA, Australia cathryn.trott at curtin.edu.au -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From isobel.romero-shaw at monash.edu Wed Jun 2 18:53:12 2021 From: isobel.romero-shaw at monash.edu (Isobel Romero-Shaw) Date: Wed, 2 Jun 2021 18:53:12 +1000 Subject: [ASA] Information about panelists for ANITA Green Computing School Panel Discussion session tomorrow! Message-ID: Hi ASA friends, Please see below for an advertisement for the second session of the ANITA Green Computing school. This will feature a talk from Adam Stevens about carbon emissions in astronomy, followed by a panel discussion on the same topic. Please feel free to come along if you're interested! Thanks, Isobel ------------------------------ I hope you're as excited as I am about our talk from Adam Stevens and the subsequent panel discussion session tomorrow afternoon (3pm-4.30pm AEST). To get you even more excited, here is a bit more information about our wonderful panelists (see below). Here's the Zoom link again: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/G6EoCZY1Nqi5A29Dmizti69?domain=anu.zoom.us Can't wait to see you all there tomorrow! And please do email me with any questions you might want to put to the panel. Best wishes, Isobel *ANITA GREEN COMPUTING SCHOOL : CARBON EMISSIONS IN ASTRONOMY : PANEL DISCUSSION : PANELISTS* [image: panellists.png] *Dr. Adam Stevens* @arh_stevens [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/qhNXC1WLPxcMx5NkjCGW99n?domain=twitter.com] Personal website [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/aJYjC2xMQzipWOzRxtBwGTm?domain=adamstevens.webnode.com] Adam is a postdoctoral researcher at UWA, who works to understand the formation and evolution of galaxies using semi-analytic models and cosmological hydrodynamic simulations. He is also passionate about acting on climate change, and is the lead author of the Nature Astronomy perspective article ?The Imperative to Reduce Carbon Emissions in Astronomy? [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/yifKC3QNPBipo0zG8tDctmT?domain=nature.com]. *Dr. Vanessa Moss* @cosmicpudding [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/9tatC4QOPEiBE3KmjCVqEUV?domain=twitter.com] CSIROscope interview [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/Zu6VC5QPXJiZ34Lxnh8WwpT?domain=blog.csiro.au] Vanessa is a researcher based at CSIRO Space and Astronomy. She is Head of Science Operations for the ASKAP radio telescope, and leads the SEAFOG FLASH project studying HI and X-ray absorption in distant galaxies. Vanessa also recently chaired The Future of Meetings symposium [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/YI9HC6XQ4Lfr78Y13hB63xr?domain=tfom.org], which explored how our meetings, conferences and other academic interactions can be more accessible, inclusive and sustainable. *Dr. Pascal Elahi* ICRAR profile [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/hXM4C71R2NTA2o1QPH2PQ7J?domain=icrar.org] Pascal is a High-Performance Computing specialist at Pawsey Supercomputing Centre, WA, and is also a computational astrophysicist, simulating entire virtual universes within supercomputers. Pascal is also passionate about green computing, and is a co-author on ?The Imperative to Reduce Carbon Emissions in Astronomy? [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/yifKC3QNPBipo0zG8tDctmT?domain=nature.com]. *Dr. Natasha Hurley-Walker* @ColourfulCosmos [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/qhF1C81V0PT6WLpzJTEoxuZ?domain=twitter.com] Personal website [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/q_3yC91WPRTkA9EMZiQg91f?domain=nhurleywalker.com] ICRAR profile [https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/OM2RC0YKPviGQZwMEipiwLv?domain=icrar.org] Natasha is a multi-award-winning radio astronomer, who used the Murchison Widefield Array to create a low-radio-frequency panoramic view of the Universe. She has shared this image in a popular TEDx talk [ https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/PMvwCgZ0N1iAKpZmgHxfRRE?domain=youtube.com. As well as being a Senior Lecturer and ARC Future Fellow at Curtin University, Natasha is an advocate for sustainable astronomy, and recently gave a talk for the International Astronomical Union on ?Exploring the Universe Without Costing the Earth? [youtu.be/2UyBRPxsIww]. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: panellists.png Type: image/png Size: 424192 bytes Desc: not available URL: From stuart.ryder at astronomyaustralia.org.au Fri Jun 4 12:25:16 2021 From: stuart.ryder at astronomyaustralia.org.au (stuart.ryder at astronomyaustralia.org.au) Date: Fri, 4 Jun 2021 12:25:16 +1000 Subject: [ASA] European Southern Observatory: Project Controller opportunity Message-ID: <002201d758e8$dbac7b50$930571f0$@astronomyaustralia.org.au> Dear colleagues, On behalf of ESO and the Dept of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources we would like to bring the following job opportunity to the attention of you, and anyone in your institution who may have the relevant skills and experience. Project Controller Applications close: 30 June 2021 The European Southern Observatory (ESO) is the foremost intergovernmental astronomy organisation in Europe and the world's most productive ground-based astronomical observatory. ESO carries out an ambitious programme focused on the design, construction and operation of powerful ground-based observing facilities enabling astronomers to make important scientific discoveries at various sites in Chile, and its headquarters in Garching, Germany. Australia has a 10 year Strategic Partnership enabling it to access ESO telescopes at La Silla Paranal Observatory, including the world-leading 8 metre Very Large Telescope. Australians may also apply for positions with ESO across all its operations on the same basis as member states. Working within the Directorate of Programmes, this current opportunity in Garching, Germany would be responsible for supporting a number of Project Managers within the Directorate of Programmes with all activities related to project cost, schedule and risk management, project management processes and administrative functions for the development of complex state of the art unique projects. This is an excellent opportunity for professionals who have experience in project control and project management within scientific projects and who wish to play a key role in large international projects. A Master's degree or engineering qualification or a degree in Business Administration is required. Working at ESO gives Australians exposure to sophisticated scientific and engineering skills and helps build formal and informal networks with European astronomers, engineers and colleagues in other big science organisations. Further details can be found here: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/WqElC6XQ4Lfr7RZnrs6deF_?domain=recruitment.eso.org. Please be aware that: * There are currently Australian Government general bans on overseas travel by Australians during the COVID-19 emergency. Individuals may be able to apply for exceptions, if moving off-shore 'permanently' for work-related reasons, but that would depend on the nature of the reasons and evidence of circumstances. Each application would be assessed by The Australian Border Force (ABF) Commissioner, on a case-by-case basis. * There are entry restrictions for individuals returning to Australia, and mandatory quarantine, which may be at the traveller's own cost * Travellers will need to comply with visa and other entry requirements for their destination country * Flights to and from Australia may be difficult to book, and travel restrictions and regulations may change at short notice * The COVID-19 situation in overseas countries changes daily, and there may be local or national lock-downs, quarantine, curfews and domestic travel bans * Consular support for Australians overseas may be limited in some locations due to tight restrictions on local services and movements, including for Australian embassy staff. * Many travel insurance policies won't cover claims relating to COVID-19. Read insurance policies carefully to know what will and won't be covered. For additional information, please consult: * Smart Traveller Advice: https://www.smartraveller.gov.au/COVID-19/leaving-Australia * Department of Home Affairs Advice: https://covid19.homeaffairs.gov.au/leaving-australia and https://www.homeaffairs.gov.au/covid-19/Documents/outward-travel-restriction s-operation-directive.pdf ______________________________ Dr. Stuart Ryder Program Manager (Mon, Wed, Fri) Astronomy Australia Ltd. T: +61 (02) 9372 4843 M: +61 (0419) 970834 E: stuart.ryder at astronomyaustralia.org.au W: www.astronomyaustralia.org.au O: c/o AAO, 105 Delhi Rd, North Ryde, NSW 2113, Australia AAL endeavours to be an environmentally sustainable organisation built upon equity, diversity and mutual respect for its staff and stakeholders. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1036 bytes Desc: not available URL: From aaron.robotham at uwa.edu.au Fri Jun 4 14:29:27 2021 From: aaron.robotham at uwa.edu.au (Aaron Robotham) Date: Fri, 4 Jun 2021 04:29:27 +0000 Subject: [ASA] Multiple PhD opportunities at ICRAR-UWA Message-ID: Dear ASA Colleagues, Firstly apologies if you receive this through multiple channels. Aaron Robotham and Luke Davies are currently advertising 2-4 fully funded PhD scholarships (depending on applicant qualifications) to work on various projects in galaxy evolution science at ICRAR as part of their Australian Research Council Future Fellowships. These projects both follow the theme of the environmental impact on the evolution of galaxies over cosmic time, and have a strong components involving large international surveys/collaborations (AAT-GAMA, AAT-DEVILS, 4MOST-WAVES, HST-SkySurf, ASKAP-DINGO, MeerKAT-MIGHTEE). Full details can be found here: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/M7fkC1WLPxcMxr4xGIODI6D?domain=jobregister.aas.org If you have any current or past students that may be interested in this opportunity, please forward this email to them or ask them to contact either Aaron (aaron.robotham at uwa.edu.au) or Luke (luke.j.davies at uwa.edu.au) directly for further details. The deadline for applications is the 30th June 2021. Many thanks, Aaron and Luke ------------------------------------------ Associate Professor: Aaron S.G. Robotham ARC Future Fellow (2020) Research Associate Professor & Principal Research Fellow University: University of Western Australia (UWA) Department: International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) Room: G44, KJM Building, UWA, 7 Fairway, Crawley, Perth, WA 6009 Post: ICRAR M468, UWA, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, Perth, WA 6009 Tel: (+61) 08 6488 5564 Email: aaron.robotham at uwa.edu.au -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: