Abstract deadline for ESWW

Dear all,

Please can I remind you of the upcoming abstract deadline for European Space Weather Week (ESWW), which will be held in Ostend, Belgium, November 27 – December 1, 2017.

The abstract deadline for oral contributions is May 31. After that time, you can submit posters.

In particular, I would like to encourage submissions to ESWW Session 14 (see details below).

Regards,
Jackie

SESSION 14 – MULTI-VIEWPOINT VERSUS SINGLE-VIEWPOINT OBSERVATIONS AND MODELLING – LESSONS LEARNED FROM 10 YEARS OF STEREO
Barbara Thompson (NASA GSFC); Manuela Temmer (University of Graz); Jackie Davies (RAL Space); Volker Bothmer (University of Göttingen); Alexis Rouillard (IRAP); Stefaan Poedts (KU Leuven)
Friday 01/12, 9:45 – 13:00

KEYWORDS – remote sensing, in-situ, multi-view point data, inner heliosphere, large-scale solar disturbances;
The launch of STEREO, at the end of 2006, heralded the start of a new era in the observation of the solar system. Together with SoHO, located at a fixed position at L1, STEREO has continuously provided multiple views of large-scale phenomena propagating through the inner heliosphere. With this unprecedented combination of remote-sensing and in-situ observations, in particular, we have been able to gain a much deeper understanding of the 3-dimensional nature of large-scale inner heliospheric structures such as coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and stream/corotating interaction regions (SIRs/CIRs). But what have we gleaned about the limitations of single-viewpoint observations? How can we apply that knowledge in a future with, potentially, only single-spacecraft observations? Moreover, what are the implications for the design of future multi-viewpoint missions?

In this session, we invite observational, theoretical, and modeling contributions that address these questions and cover studies on the evolution, propagation and morphology of large-scale structures (CMEs, SIRs & CIRs) from single- or multi-view point observations at any wavelength.

http://www.stce.be/esww14/