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2019


SPACE CLIMATE 7
 
Date : 2019-07-08 to 2019-07-11
Site : The meeting venue is the Hôtel Estrimont Suites & SPA, located near the Mont-Orford National Park,
Web : craq-astro.ca/spaceclimate7/
Organisator : Paul Charbonneau
 
The Space Climate Symposia Series brings together leading experts in the field of space climate. The objectives of the Symposia are three-fold:

1- to better understand the causes and effects of long-term variations in solar activity, with focus on the solar magnetic dynamo, and how the magnetic field it generates produces the various phenomena collectively making up solar activity: e.g., sunspots, flares, coronal mass ejections, coronal holes, high-speed solar wind streams etc;

2- to better understand how the varying solar activity affects the near-Earth space, atmosphere and even climate, on time scales ranging from a few solar rotations up to several millennia;

3- to better understand the intricacies of the various datasets used to make inferences about long-term solar variations: e.g., the sunspot number time series and geomagnetic observations.


Women in Physics Canada
 
Date : 2019-06-25 to 2019-06-28
Site : McGill University, Montréal, QC
Web : www.physics.mcgill.ca/wipc2019/index_fr.html
Organisator : Carolina Cruz-Vinaccia
 
Women in Physics Canada is an annual national conference that historically attracts over one hundred members of Canada’s physics community, from undergraduate to Ph.D. level, as well as professors, postdoctoral researchers and professionals from various areas of science and technology.


Canadian Astronomical Society annual meeting – CASCA 2019
 
Date : 2019-06-18 to 2019-06-20
Site : McGill University, Montréal, QC
Web : www.physics.mcgill.ca/casca2019/
Organisator : D. Haggard & N. Cowan
 
The theme of 2019 annual meeting of the Canadian Astronomical Society, CASCA 2019, will be "Emerging Fields in Astrophysics". The meeting is an opportunity to share with the country’s researchers the latest Canadian discoveries in astronomy and astrophysics.


AO4ELT6
 
Date : 2019-06-09 to 2019-06-14
Site : QUÉBEC CITY CONVENTION CENTRE
Web : http://ao4elt6.copl.ulaval.ca/
Organisator : Simon Thibault
 
ADAPTIVE OPTICS FOR EXTREMELY LARGE TELESCOPES WILL TAKE PLACE IN QUÉBEC CITY. JOIN US FROM JUNE 9-14, 2019 AT THE QUÉBEC CITY CONVENTION CENTRE.


The objectives of the SIGNALS (Star Formation, Ionized Gas, and Nebular Abundances Legacy Survey) workshop are :
 
Date : 2019-05-27 to 2019-05-30
Site : Université Laval, Building La Laurentienne, Salle 1435
Web : www.astro.phy.ulaval.ca/ws19/SIGNALS.home.html
Organisator : L. Drissen & C. Robert
 
  • to bring the team members together for helpful discussions and to outline the science objectives;
  • to give a detailed overview of the data products from SITELLE;
  • to provide tutorials on how to use ORCS (the line fitting code for SITELLE) and other useful analysis tools;
  • to define a uniform and standard data reduction pipeline based on the needs for the different science projects.


Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope 12th Users’ Meeting
 
Date : 2019-05-19 to 2019-05-22
Site : The Double Tree by Hilton Montréal
Web : www.cfht.hawaii.edu/en/news/UM2019/
Organisator : David Lafrenière
 
CFHT’s triennial Users’ Meetings are important opportunities for our community to share recent discoveries and perspectives that help guide CFHT’s future. The range of possible futures for CFHT has perhaps never been more diverse as we explore opportunities that will substantially define CFHT’s legacy in 21st century astronomy. Near term, CFHT’s future remains rooted in innovative operations enabling world-class surveys and PI research. Longer term, with the rapid advancement of the Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE), CFHT is poised to make a quantum leap in its mission, becoming a truly pivotal research facility in modern astronomy. Balancing these options as we develop a strategy forward remains one of today’s challenges and will be an important topic of discussion at the Users’ Meeting. All of these possibilities are ultimately grounded in the research capabilities CFHT’s community has developed to date. These include a suite of 5 instruments that collectively enable wide field imaging and high resolution spectroscopy and spectropolarimetry at optical and infrared wavelengths, and spectro-imaging from UV to ~1 µm. Large Programs are now the focus of >50% of the observing time at CFHT and annual publication rates have never been higher, exceeding 200 papers per year. Thanks to all of these efforts, CFHT’s science impact remains among the highest of any ground based telescope in the world, year after year. Combined with its location at a premier site like Maunakea, CFHT will celebrate its 40th anniversary in 2019 in a strong position to contribute to astronomy for many years to come.



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