The October issue of the IUGG electronic journal is available: http://www.iugg.org/publications/ejournals/IUGGej1310.pdf
These short, informal newsletters, issued every month on approximately the first day of the month, are intended to keep IUGG Member National Committees informed about the activities of the IUGG Associations and actions of the IUGG Secretariat.
The September issue of the IUGG electronic journal is available: http://www.iugg.org/publications/ejournals/IUGGej1309.pdf
These short, informal newsletters, issued every month on approximately the first day of the month, are intended to keep IUGG Member National Committees informed about the activities of the IUGG Associations and actions of the IUGG Secretariat.
The August issue of the IUGG electronic journal is available: http://www.iugg.org/publications/ejournals/IUGGej1308.pdf
These short, informal newsletters, issued every month on approximately the first day of the month, are intended to keep IUGG Member National Committees informed about the activities of the IUGG Associations and actions of the IUGG Secretariat.
Congratulations to James Blake (Leicester) and Sam Tuttle (Southampton), who have won this year's Rishbeth prizes.
James won the prize for the best MIST poster - his poster was on "H3+ peak altitude emission on Saturn".
Sam won the prize for the best MIST student talk - his talk was entitled "Estimating the energy spectrum of auroral electron precipitation at subkilometre spatial scales using multi-monochromatic optical observations".
Both will be contributing articles to A&G, so if you missed either of these presentations, you will be able to read about them there.
Congratulations to James and Sam, and many thanks to all who presented talks and posters at NAM.
Congratulations to Simon Thomas (Reading) and Hanna Dahlgren (Southampton/KTH), who won this year's Rishbeth prizes for their presentations at the Spring MIST meeting.
Simon won the prize for the best student talk, which was "Can we remote sense coronal mass ejections using neutron monitors?"
Hanna won the prize for the best poster, for "Investigation of the electrodynamics and formation mechanism of a polar cap arc".
Articles by both winners now appear in A&G (Thomas et al., Dahlgren et al.)