Current schedule

From Exoplanet Reading Group

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
-
Meetings are either in the upper geosci conference room (Hinds 451) or astro classroom (TAAC 67) as noted.  They take place generally every other Monday, at 3 pm.  
+
Sign up [https://cosmo.uchicago.edu/mailman/listinfo/exoplanet here] for the email list, if you are local and want to hear about meeting announcements.
 +
 
 +
Meetings are usually in the upper geosci conference room (Hinds 451).  They take place generally every other Monday, at 3 pm.  
Other exoplanet-themed talks and events at UChicago, beyond this reading group, are shown in double brackets.
Other exoplanet-themed talks and events at UChicago, beyond this reading group, are shown in double brackets.

Revision as of 11:53, 7 February 2014

Sign up here for the email list, if you are local and want to hear about meeting announcements.

Meetings are usually in the upper geosci conference room (Hinds 451). They take place generally every other Monday, at 3 pm.

Other exoplanet-themed talks and events at UChicago, beyond this reading group, are shown in double brackets.


Go to: Fall 2012

Go to: Winter 2013

Go to: Spring 2013

Go to: Summer 2013

Go to: Fall 2013

Go to: Winter 2014


1/13/14

Feng Ding, Common 0.1 bar tropopause in thick atmospheres set by pressure-dependent infrared transparency, Robinson & Caitling (2014)


1/27/14

Kat Deck, MIT


[[1/29/14 *Wednesday*, BSLC 115, 3:00 PM

Bruce Macintosh gives the Astronomy colloquium, Direct Imaging of Extrasolar Planets ]]


2/3/14 **off-schedule**

Nick Cowan, "Water Cycling Between Ocean and Mantle: Super-Earths Need Not be Waterworlds"


2/10/14

No meeting due to Exoclimes conference.


2/24/14

Megan Bedell, "Chemical signatures of planets: beyond solar-twins"


3/10/14

Ray Pierrehumbert, New calculations on hydrogen escape.


(Date TBD

Nicolas Dauphas, Geochemical perspective on planet formation.)


(Date and paper TBD

Jacob Bean, Discussion on exoplanet atmosphere observations and interpretation.)