The 248th meeting of the American Astronomical Society, to be held in Pasadena, CA, 14–18 June, is nearly here. The AAS Publishing team looks forward to connecting with meeting attendees, and you can find representatives from the publishing and journals’ editorial staff at the AAS booth in the Exhibit Hall in the Pasadena Convention Center. AAS Director of Scholarly Publishing Kerry Kroffe will be available at the AAS Publishing booth, so be sure to stop by to say hello, chat about the journals, and pick up some swag!
AAS Nova Editors Kerry Hensley and Susanna Kohler, AAS Media Fellow Lexi Gault, Astrobites Media Intern Niloofar Sharei, and the rest of the Astrobites team will also be available periodically at the Astrobites booth in the Exhibit Hall. We look forward to seeing you there!
AAS Peer Review Workshop
This workshop led by the scientific editors of the AAS journals will teach participants about the peer review process, give them the opportunity to see both poor and exemplary referee reports, and provide them with hands-on experience in writing a peer review report. Participants will receive a graduation certificate. While signups for the AAS 248 peer review workshop are closed, more workshops are planned for future AAS meetings, so keep an eye out for more information about upcoming opportunities!
Open Science, Data, and AI in Astronomy: Sessions to Look for at AAS 248
Note: The links in this section take you to the corresponding entries in the AAS 248 block schedule. You must be logged in for the links to work correctly; otherwise, they will take you to the main block schedule page. Note that times and locations are subject to change.
The upcoming AAS meeting has a number of sessions, workshops, and lectures for those interested in open-source tools, data management strategies, and AI’s role in astronomy. Sunday, 14 June, will feature a trio of data-related workshops. (Note that these workshops require an additional fee and can be added to your registration.) The “Euclid Data in the Cloud: Access, Analysis, and Science Opportunities” workshop (10:00 am – 11:30 pm PDT in Room 101) will introduce participants to accessing and analyzing data from Euclid, a European Space Agency mission with NASA participation. The overlapping workshop “High Energy Science Analysis with HEASARC Services” (10:00 am – 12:00 pm PDT in Room 102), organized by the High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center (HEASARC), is targeted toward early-career scientists and anyone curious about HEASARC services. The workshop will begin with an overview of available services before transitioning into hands-on experimentation with these tools. Finally, “An Introduction to Fornax: Scalable Data and Compute for Scientific Analysis” (2:00–4:00 pm PDT in Room 101) will introduce attendees to NASA’s new Astrophysics Science Platform through live demonstrations and guided exercises.
Of particular interest regarding AI in astronomy is Monday morning’s plenary lecture from Sanmi (Oluwasanmi) Koyejo titled “The Measurement Gap: What AI Can Get Wrong and Why Astronomers Are the Fix.” This session will take place from 11:40 am to 12:30 pm PDT in Ballroom DE.
The “AI-Driven Science in the Survey Era” Special Session will take place on Tuesday, 16 June, from 2:00 pm to 3:30 pm in Ballroom F. This session will highlight recent breakthroughs in a broad range of astronomical sub-fields that have greatly benefited from the use of AI and machine-learning techniques. Also on Tuesday, check out recent work on imaging and data-handling methods at the “Observational Imaging Methods and Data Pipelines” iPoster session from 5:00 pm to 6:00 pm in the Exhibit Hall.