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Three ET positions at RWTH Aachen

The successful candidates will be employed under a regular employment contract. The positions are to be filled at the earliest possible date and offered for a fixed term of two years. If the Einstein Telescope in the NL-B-D border region is approved, RWTH will attempt to continue the contract. The fixed-term employment is possible as it constitutes one of the fixed-term options of the Wissenschaftszeitvertragsgesetz (German Act on Fixed-term Scientific Contracts). This is a full-time position. The salary is based on the German public service salary scale (TV-L). The position corresponds to a pay grade of EG 13 TV-L. Application time: 18.07.2024

Please find here full details:

Euregio Meuse-Rhine (EMR) Gravitational Waves PhD School, November 4-8 2024 at KU Leuven

The aim of the EMR GW PhD School is to provide beginning PhD students, primarily from the EMR countries (Belgium - Netherlands - Germany), with courses on all aspects of gravitational waves, and in particular in the context of the future Einstein Telescope and the space mission LISA.

Over the course of a week (Mon morning to Fri afternoon), the students will follow six courses taught by distinguished lecturers, with two topics each in theory, data analysis, and instrumentation.

Last but not least, participants get to meet their fellow students from the neighboring institutes and countries, who will be their peers and colleagues throughout (and possibly beyond) their PhD studies working on gravitational wave physics.
Students will have the opportunity to present their own work or research topic to each other in a brief, informal presentation (on Thursday). Thursday evening there will also be a social activity organized.

The target audience of this school is beginning PhD students (first or second year) and advanced Master students. Other young (or less young) researchers wanting to get acquainted with gravitational wave physics are also welcome to apply.

Students from all over the world are welcome to apply, although precedence will be given to students from the EMR region countries (Belgium – Netherlands – Germany)

Participation in the school is free, but participants are responsible for their own accommodation and local expenses. (Accommodations can be booked through the local organizers by indicating this on the application form.) Coffee breaks and lunch are provided for registered participants.

The lecturers and courses for this year are:

  • (Theory) Maarten van de Meent (Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen): “The Relativistic Two-Body Problem”
  • (Theory) Sébastien Clesse (Université Libre Bruxelles): “Cosmology with Gravitational Waves”
  • (Data analysis) Gregorio Carullo (Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen/University of Birmingham): “Logic with incomplete information: data analysis foundations, and applications to gravitational-waves observations”
  • (Data analysis) Henri Inchauspé (Universität Heidelberg / KU Leuven): “Data analysis for LISA”
  • (Instrumentation) Joseph Martino (APC): “LISA Constellation Performance and Noise Budget”
  • (Instrumentation) Joris van Heijningen (Vrije Universtiteit Amsterdam/Nikhef): “How to create a freely falling test mass?”

Local scientific organizing commitee:

  • Thomas Hertog
  • Tjonnie Li
  • Daniel Mayerson
  • Jonathan Menu

School Website

NEOSGrav2024, October 1-4, Pune

The international conference on Neutron star Equation of State and Gravitational Waves (NEOSGrav2024) shall take place in Goa, India during 01 - 04 October 2024. It is being organized by the Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA), Pune.

The scientific programme shall consist of invited review talks and some short oral presentations.

The following areas in the neutron star physics will be covered in the meeting:

  1. Fundamental Physics from Neutron stars
  2. Constraining Neutron Star EoS with Electromagnetic observations
  3. Constraining Neutron Star EoS with Gravitational waves
  4. Numerical modelling of Neutron Stars

In addition to the science sessions, there will be two public talks during the week at the Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani – Goa Campus and Goa Science Centre

Venue: All the scientific sessions shall be held at the Kenilworth Hotel, Goa.
Date: October 01 – 04, 2024

Scientific Organizing Committee:
Debarati Chatterjee (Chair) — IUCAA, Pune, India
Prof. Dipankar Bhattacharya — Ashoka University, India
Prof. Sukanta Bose — Washington State University, USA
Prayush Kumar — ICTS, Bengaluru, India

Local Organizing Committee:
Debarati Chatterjee (IUCAA)
M. S. Sahasrabudhe (IUCAA)
S. Samuel (IUCAA)
Yogesh Thakare (IUCAA)
Kinjal Banerjee (BITS Pilani, Goa)
Tarun Kumar Jha (BITS Pilani, Goa)
Reshma Raut Dessai (Goa University)
Ananthraman S.V. (Ashoka University)

IUCAA Advisory Committee:
Durgesh Tripathi — IUCAA, Pune, India
Ranjeev Mishra — IUCAA, Pune, India

For any queries: Please write email to – neosgrav2024(at)iucaa.in

Conference Website

GR24 & Amaldi16, July 14-18, 2025, Glasgow

Welcome to the joint GR24 and Amaldi16 meeting to be held in Scotland, July 2025.  

The International Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation is organised every three years under the guidance of the International Society on General Relativity and Gravitation. It is the principal international meeting for scientists working in all areas of relativity and gravitation.

The Edoardo Amaldi Conference on Gravitational Waves is organised every two years under the guidance of the Gravitational Wave International Committee. It is the principal international meeting for scientists working in all areas of gravitational-wave science.

In 2025, the 24th International Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation (GR24) and the 16th Edoardo Amaldi Conference on Gravitational Waves (Amaldi16) will be held together as a joint meeting, bringing together experts from across classical and quantum gravity, mathematical and applied relativity, gravitational-wave instrumentation and data-analysis, and multimessenger astronomy.

The GR24–Amaldi Meeting will be held as a primarily in-person event at the Scottish Event Campus, Glasgow. Online resources will be made freely available after the event. Meeting organisation is led by the Institute for Gravitational Research at the University of Glasgow and the Institute of Physics.

Key Dates

  • Call for abstracts: 8 November 2024
  • Abstract submission deadline: 21 March 2025
  • Early registration deadline: 9 May 2025
  • Registration deadline: 29 June 2025

Conference Website

GraSP24 – Gravity Shape Pisa 2024, October 23–25

Gravity Shape Pisa 2024:  Exploring New Sources of Gravitational Waves
Gravity Shape Pisa (GraSP) 2024 is the 2nd edition of the International Conference GraSP, entirely organised by PhD students that supports the active participation of young researchers.

The event is organized to balance “senior” and “young” talk sessions in the fields of observative and theoretical gravitational wave physics. This will give the opportunity to early-stage researchers to spread their work, but also to experienced scientists to be aware about original research inputs coming from younger physicists. The conference will focus on still undetected sources of gravitational waves and their study in current and future detectors. Presentations will cover aspects of astrophysics, cosmology and fundamental physics.

GraSP 2024 will take place in the Physics Department “E. Fermi” of the University of Pisa.

No FEE required.

Conference Website

3rd Astro-COLIBRI Multi-Messenger Astrophysics Workshop, September 16-20, 2024, Paris-Saclay

The key objective of this workshop is to develop and disseminate a research agenda on interconnecting software tools in real-time multi-messenger astronomy. This international conference provides a forum for leading scientists and young researchers to foster communication within the community between developers and users with a range of expertise in the production and use of software tools that facilitates life in rapidly evolving real-time multi-messenger astronomy.

Workshop Website

Enabling future gravitational waves astrophysics in the milli-hertz regime, June 30 – Juli 25, 2025, Munich

Join us to explore the uncharted milli-Hertz regime of the gravitational wave spectrum, a domain soon to be unlocked by space missions. With a special emphasis on the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) mission, our workshop also broadens its scope to include other milli-Hertz missions and aims to explore synergies with the next generation of ground-based gravitational wave detectors.

The milli-Hertz regime is unique due to the variety of gravitational wave sources emitting at these frequencies, including binaries of stellar remnants such as white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes within our own Galaxy, as well as inspiraling compact objects onto massive black holes (aka Extreme/Intermediate Mass Ratio Inspirals,

E/IMRI)  and mergers between nascent massive black holes (MBH) at cosmic dawn. This regime is also unique in terms of waveform modelling, data analysis and data interpretation, presenting challenges that call for a community-driven approach.

Our workshop will bring together leading experts and early career scientists in the field of theoretical modelling (from astrophysics to numerical relativity), electromagnetic observations, and gravitational wave data analysis, aiming to prepare the community for the new kind of gravitational wave data and to enable groundbreaking astrophysics in the milli-Hertz regime. The format will balance scientific talks, interactive tutorials, and open discussions, creating an ideal environment for initiating new collaborations and consolidating ongoing projects. More broadly, we strive to foster a community where interdisciplinary and creative collaborations can flourish.

Week 1 (30th June – 4th July): Astrophysical Modelling and Uncertainties

• Review and assess state-of-the-art astrophysical models.

• Identify gaps and uncertainties in mHz GW source modelling.

Key topics to be discussed include:

– Robustness of stellar binary modelling against assumptions on stability of mass transfer, accretion onto compact objects, common envelopes, and tides.

– Predicting MBH binaries/EMRI/IMRI event rates and their key waveform properties.

– Existence and distribution of intermediate-mass black holes.

– Synergies with upcoming electromagnetic surveys.

Week 2 (7th – 11th July): Waveform Modelling Challenges

• Outline a road-map for addressing challenges in waveform modelling before 2030s.

• Access the required waveform accuracy for the mHz data analysis.

Key questions to be discussed include:

– Integrating post-Newtonian and numerical relativity simulations to provide predictions for waveforms under realistic orbital configuration of the mHz GW sources.

– Explore the possibility of extending black hole perturbation theory for IMRIs.

– Including environmental effects in GW waveforms.

– Advances and applicability of emerging methods based on effective field theory and amplitude scattering techniques.

Week 3 (14th – 18th July): Data Analysis and Parameter Estimation

• Discuss data analysis complexities; in particular challenges of the “global fit” approach.

• Focus on precise source parameter estimation and accurate source subtraction to facilitate the analysis of stochastic backgrounds.

Key questions to be discussed include:

– Utilising electromagnetic observations of Galactic binaries for instrument noise estimation.

– Identify waveforms that effectively capture the diversity and complexity of astrophysical populations for each source type while optimising computational efficiency.

– Formulate astrophysically motivated priors for the global fit analysis.

– Discuss strategies for extracting astrophysical sources from GW data to analyse stochastic signals.

Week 4 (21st – 25th July): Data Interpretation via Astrophysical Models

• Build upon insights from previous weeks’ discussions to explore the scientific interpretation of mHz GW data using astrophysical models.

• Develop astrophysics-focused mock data challenges to prepare the community for future data interpretation.

Key questions to be discussed include:

– Re-discovering our Galaxy using mHz GW detections.

– Understanding MBH formation through GW detections.

– Leveraging GW event rates to study physical processes in galactic nuclei.

– Identifying promising electromagnetic counterparts for mHz GW sources

Workshop Website

Fundamental physics and gravitational wave detectors, September 9-20, 2024, Pollica

Gravitational waves (GWs) from compact binaries have been detected in the kHz regime, and Pulsar Timing Arrays are revealing a GW background in the nHz band. Experimental ideas spanning from nHz to MHz are being explored to cover the gravitational spectrum. This is an exciting time to explore what GWs can uncover about fundamental physics and cosmology by detecting astrophysical and primordial GW sources, as well as exploring effects that could be induced by various Dark Matter candidates.

This workshop will unite astrophysicists, cosmologists, and particle physicists to discuss open questions and define theoretical targets, guiding the field in experimental strategies across the gravitational spectrum to learn about our Universe.

All of this is to be set against the backdrop of the medieval town of Pollica, in Southwestern Italy (Cilento region). The workshop will take place from the 9th to the 20th of September 2024.

Location: the workshop will take place in the Castello dei Principi Capano, in Pollica (SA).

Workshop Website

PhD positions in Theory and Phenomenology of High Energy Physics at RWTH Aachen

Prof. M. Czakon and Prof. M. Worek invite applications for Ph.D. positions in theoretical particle physics (hep-ph) with a starting date in the fall of 2024. The PhD projects concern precision Standard Model predictions for the LHC, perturbative QCD, top quark and Higgs boson physics. The recipients will be hosted by the Institute for Theoretical Particle Physics and Cosmology, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany. The deadline for applications is June 7, 2024.

We explicitly encourage applications from qualified women. Applicants with disabilities will be given preference if equally qualified.

More information about the Institute for Theoretical Particle Physics and Cosmology, RWTH Aachen University can be found at:

https://www.particle-theory.rwth-aachen.de

The PhD positions are funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). The PhD students will be eligible for association with

  • the Research Training Group: Physics of the Heaviest Particles at the LHC – http://www.rwth-aachen.de/rtg2497
  • the Transregional Collaborative Research Centre: P3H – Particle Physics Phenomenology after the Higgs Discovery – https://p3h.particle.kit.edu/.

Please enclose in the application:

  • cover letter stating your interests, motivation, and preference for either Prof. Czakon or Prof. Worek
  • research statement,
  • curriculum vitae,
  • degree certificates and study transcripts with a description of the grading scheme,
  • abstract (maximum half a page) of your diploma or masters thesis,
  • list of your publications (if any).

Please arrange for 2 letters of recommendation to be submitted via AcademicJobsOnline.org.

Shortlisted candidates will be invited for a job interview shortly after the deadline. The job interview will include:

  • an oral scientific presentation (20 minutes) given by you on a subject of your choice,
  • an interview to gain a deeper understanding of your knowledge and motivation.

Please find here full details.

Gravitational-wave SNOWBALLS,Populations, and models, January 20-24, 2025 in Sexten (Italy)

This workshop brings together researchers at the forefront of both forward astrophysical modeling of compact object binary formation and gravitational-wave data analysis in preparation for the upcoming O4 data release of the  LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA interferometers.

Gravitational waves represent an incredibly exciting new frontier in observational astronomy. The rapidly growing data set of mergers of black holes and neutron stars contains information on the compact-object masses, spins, and merger redshifts. The population of these sources has the potential to inform our understanding of fields as broad as stellar and binary evolution, mass-transfer physics, dynamics in dense stellar environments, supernova modeling, nucleosynthesis, chemical evolution, the cosmological history of the Universe, as well as the fundamental theory of gravity. Yet, these discoveries rely on inference using data with limited precision and significant selection effects, using potentially imperfect models that may lead to incorrect conclusions.

The workshop is organized by Davide Gerosa, Ilya Mandel, and Salvatore Vitale at the Sexten Center for Astrophysics, which is located in the beautiful Dolomites, in the Italian Alps. Sexten overlooks the Tre Cime di Lavaredo (Three Peaks of Lavaredo) which are among the most iconic peaks in alpinism history. Scientific sessions are hosted at the Bad Moos hotel, which is right next to the ski slopes. Please don’t throw too many snowballs at other conference attendees.

Workshop Website