sci24002 — Announcement

Rare Gems in Big Data

January 5, 2024

The discovery potential of large astrophysical surveys: science opportunities, tools, and techniques

20–23 May 2024 Tucson, AZ, USA

https://noirlab.edu/gems 

Main topics

Surveys, time-domain and multi-messenger astrophysics, galaxies, cosmology, Milky Way and nearby galaxies, stellar populations, exoplanets, Solar System objects, techniques and tools.

Introduction

NOIRLab was established in 2019 to enable and share breakthrough discoveries in astronomy and astrophysics with state-of-the-art ground-based observatories, data products, and services for a diverse and inclusive community. As part of this mission, we are happy to announce the first in a regular NOIRLab conference series, on the topic of Rare Gems in Big Data.

Discoveries of rare gems in large astrophysical surveys have the potential to transform our understanding of the Universe across a broad range of science areas, such as the Milky Way and its halo, transients and variables, moving objects, planetary systems, and multi-messenger astronomy. Such discoveries, however, will be driven not only by the available data but also by the tools and infrastructure available to mine them. The motivation for this four-day NOIRLab conference is to explore the discovery space enabled by ongoing and upcoming astrophysical surveys (DESI, Rubin/LSST etc.) and the tools and techniques needed to find rare gems in them, including anomaly detection, citizen science, and AI & machine learning. We will also highlight the importance of spectroscopic and photometric follow-up observations and the services and tools developed by NOIRLab and others such as data archives, science platforms, and real-time astronomy systems. 

The conference will feature talks by experts in the field to give background and set context, sessions designed for discussion and active engagement by participants, and live demos with opportunities for participants to try out new techniques. 

The gems within the data are ready to shine brightly at this unparalleled gathering of astronomical minds.

Submit your abstract here: https://forms.gle/J3obN4oxwDELbD9U9

Note: The conference will take place in person, with the option of limited remote participation. Stay tuned for updates on our website.

Important dates: 

5 January — Abstract Submission Opens
18 January — Registration Opens
1 March — Abstract Submission Deadline
19 April — Registration Deadline

Confirmed invited speakers

Pedro Bernardinelli, Sarah Casewell, William Cerny, Clare Higgs, Xin Liu, Josh Peek, Vinicius Placco, Helen Qu, Oleksandra Razim, John Wu

SOC 

Yumi Choi (Chair), Federica Bianco, Stéphanie Juneau, Ryan Lau, Tom Matheson, Aaron Meisner, David Nidever, Michelle Ntampaka, Knut Olsen, Antonella Palmese, David Trilling 

LOC

Yumi Choi (Chair), Alexus Abbott, Jessica Harris, Ryan Lau, Bryan Miller, Knut Olsen, Lamont Payne, Vinicius Placco, Kathy Vivas

Contacts

About the Announcement

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sci24002