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Volume 20, Number 21
May 24, 2026

Editor: Mark V. Sykes
Co-Editors: Matthew R Perry, Alex Morgan
Email: pen_editor@psi.edu
X: @pen2tweets
Bluesky: @planetarynews.bsky.social

o-------------------------TABLE OF CONTENTS---------------------------o

1. [NASA] SMD RFI: Private Sector Activities in Astrobiology, Planetary
   Protection, and Space Biology Released
2. [NASA] ROSES-25 Amendment 58: F.17 Research Initiation Awards Final
   Text and Due Date
3. ML4PSP May Seminar Announcement
4. Coordinated Analysis of Astromaterials Workshop at the University of
   Arizona
5. IAA SO Advanced School on Planet and Exoplanet Atmospheres:
   Pre-Registration Deadline Soon
6. [NASA] PDS: Hayabusa2 MBUS Release
7. [DPS-58] Abstract Submission and Registration are Open
8. [DPS-58] Low-Cost Meeting Observer Option
9. [DPS-58] Splinter Meetings are Solicited
10. [DPS-58] Travel Grant Applications
11. [DPS-58] Dependent Care Applications
12. [DPS-58] Conference Lodging
13. [DPS-58] Student-Led REU Presentations
14. Planetary Meeting Calendar Additions
15. Planetary Science Journal - New Papers
16. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets - New Papers

o---------------------------------------------------------------------o

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[NASA] SMD RFI: PRIVATE SECTOR ACTIVITIES IN ASTROBIOLOGY, PLANETARY
PROTECTION, AND SPACE BIOLOGY RELEASED

NASA's Science Mission Directorate (SMD) has released a new Request for
Information (RFI) entitled, Private Sector Activities in Astrobiology,
Planetary Protection, and Space Biology, seeking expressions of
interest from U.S. private sector, academic, nonprofit, and government
organizations interested in potential partnerships in astrobiology,
planetary protection, and space biology.

This RFI is intended to help NASA identify potential collaborators who
can contribute to advancing research, technology development, and
applications that support our broader efforts to understand the
origins, evolution, and distribution of life in the universe. Please
note that the RFI is not a solicitation. NASA does not intend to award
contracts, grants, cooperative agreements or Space Act Agreements. This
RFI is voluntary and strictly for planning purposes. For the full RFI,
please visit:

https://go.nasa.gov/PSPRFI

The RFI will be open for at least 60 days following the date of
release. All responses must be submitted through the NASA Solicitation
and Proposal Integrated Review and Evaluation System (NSPIRES) by
August 10, 2026, to be considered.

Other inquiries must be submitted using subject line "PSP RFI" by email
to:

Rebecca McCauley Rench
NASA Headquarters
Email: rebecca.l.mccauleyrench@nasa.gov


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[NASA] ROSES-25 AMENDMENT 58: F.17 RESEARCH INITIATION AWARDS FINAL
TEST AND DUE DATE

Research Initiation Awards (RIA) program aims to broaden the base of
institutions involved in the SMD research and technology development
ecosystem.

Eligibility requirements on both the PI and institution include:

- The proposing institution may not be an R1 institution according to
  the Carnegie Classification guide.
- The PI may not have received federal funding as PI of a project that
  is related to the proposed research activities within the last five
  years (with exceptions described in Section 2.2).

This opportunity is designed to support the executive order (EO)
Improving Oversight of Federal Grantmaking. In particular: Section 4
(D) iv that "Discretionary grants should be given to a broad range of
recipients rather than to a select group of repeat players" by
excluding R1 institutions (see Section 2.1). See also Section 4 (D).

Neither an NOI nor Step-1 proposal is requested. Proposals are due
August 18, 2026. An informational webinar about this opportunity will
occur at 1 p.m. EDT on June 16. Register for the webinar at:

https://tinyurl.com/bzd4fvz6

For the full announcement, go to:

https://solicitation.nasaprs.com/ROSES2025

Questions concerning F.17 RIA may be directed to Maggie Yancey at
hq-smd-ria@mail.nasa.gov.

[Edited for length]


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ML4PSP MAY SEMINAR ANNOUNCEMENT

The ML4PSP seminar series is happy to host our next talk which will
take place on May 26 at 9:00 AM US Pacific Time, featuring:

Michael Barker (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)
Title: "Building a Foundation Model for Lunar Science and Exploration"

The full abstract is available here:

ml4psp.github.io/schedule

Zoom details:

https://tinyurl.com/mr4yrbza

Meeting ID: 935 6088 0593
Passcode: ml4psp

We also now have a dedicated Slack channel. You are encouraged to
join to share your work, collaborate, exchange data and ideas, and
stay engaged with the community.

To streamline communication, we have transitioned from MailChimp to
Google Groups. Future announcements will be distributed through this
platform.

We look forward to seeing you there.

Best regards,
ML4PSP Organizers
Ramana Sankar, Dona Kuruppuaratchi, Indhu Varatharajan


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COORDINATED ANALYSIS OF ASTROMATERIALS WORKSHOP AT THE UNIVERSITY OF
ARIZONA

We cordially invite non-UA student researchers to participate in an
in-person workshop on the coordinated analysis of astromaterials. The
workshop is scheduled for July 14-16, 2026, in Tucson, Arizona, at the
University of Arizona's Kuiper-Arizona Laboratory for Astromaterials
Analysis (K-ALFAA). Participants will receive both hands-on and
instructional training in analyzing planetary materials using various
types of instrumentation and in coordinating data sets. This training
opportunity is limited to 5 to 10 participants to ensure personalized
instruction. The workshop will focus on the various skills required to
optimize and coordinate micro- to nanoscale analysis of planetary
materials.

Link to apply:

https://kalfaa.lpl.arizona.edu/astromaterials-workshop

Application deadline - May 30, 2026


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IAA SO ADVANCED SCHOOL ON PLANET AND EXOPLANET ATMOSPHERES:
PRE-REGISTRATION DEADLINE SOON

The pre-registration for the IAA Severo Ochoa Advanced School "Where
Skies Meet: Multidisciplinary Views of Planet and Exoplanet
Atmospheres", which will take place in Granada (Spain) October 19-23,
2026, will close on May 31, 10 days from now!

Information about the school, including a preliminary schedule, the
list of confirmed lecturers, the social events, as well as the
pre-registration form, is at:

https://www.granadacongresos.com/whereskiesmeet

The fee of the Advanced School is 400 Euros and includes ~20 h of
lectures, coffee breaks, 3 lunches and a gala dinner on a nice Carmen
(typical house in the Albayzin moorish quarter) with views of the
Alhambra. A 1-day Workshop on Venus analogue exoplanets including
invited speakers and contributed talks is also scheduled during the
School. All participants of the school are welcome to attend, and
those working in the field of atmospheres of Venus analogues and
willing to give a contributed talk may also submit an abstract.

Please pre-register using the form available in the webpage, and
forward it to interested colleagues.

Thanks in advance

Gabriella Gilli (on behalf of the Organizing Committee)

[Edited for length]


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[NASA] PDS: HAYABUSA2 MBUS RELEASE

This release of Hayabusa2 data includes the MASCOT Engineering Bus
bundle, including MASCOT Bus housekeeping data and the MASCOT
Operations Document.

To access this bundle and the MASCOT data bundles it supports, see:

https://sbn.psi.edu/pds/resource/hayabusa2/mascot_mbus.html

and

https://sbn.psi.edu/pds/resource/hayabusa2/

All Hayabusa2 bundles:

https://pds.nasa.gov/datasearch/subscription-service/SS-20260521.shtml

To access all data archived in PDS:

https://pds.nasa.gov


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[DPS-58] ABSTRACT SUBMISSION AND REGISTRATION ARE OPEN

https://submissions.mirasmart.com/DPS58/Splash.aspx

https://aas.org/meetings/dps58/registration

Registration and abstract submission are open for DPS-58 at the
Spokane Convention Center, 25-30 October 2026. DPS will be a hybrid
meeting with live-streamed in-person and recorded virtual talks and
in-person posters. Three classes of registration include: full
in-person, full virtual, and virtual meeting observer for a very low
cost. Abstract submission will indicate a science theme plus a class
of bodies pertinent to the abstract, from which the Science Organizing
Committee will formulate the program. There is also an option to
submit to one of five special sessions:

- 5 Years of Perseverance Exploration at Jezero
- Juno at 10 years
- 20 years of MRO observing Mars
- 30 years of asteroid rendezvous missions
- Interstellar comets

Regular abstract deadline: Thursday, 11 June 2026 9:00pm ET

Early registration deadline: Monday, 15 June 2026 9:00pm ET

Late abstract deadline: July 2, 2026 12:00pm ET


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[DPS-58] LOW-COST MEETING OBSERVER OPTION

Are you interested in planetary science, and ready to attend
professional talks on topics of interest, but costs of a professional
conference are not affordable? DPS is pleased to announce a virtual
attendance option that can fit a tightly constrained budget, as a
virtual meeting observer. This option is meant for a wide variety of
planetary science amateurs and professionals:

- Amateurs who want a deeper dive than what is in the popular press
- Leaders of high-school science clubs who will share with a group
- Students and faculty at community colleges and tribal colleges
- Retired professionals who lack emeritus status in a professional
  society
- Active professionals who don't have funding to attend *all* the
  conferences they would like

The virtual attendance option, available for $50, allows full watching
and listening to oral presentations and access to recorded sessions.

For more information visit the DPS-58 registration page:

https://aas.org/meetings/dps58/registration


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[DPS-58] SPLINTER MEETINGS ARE SOLICITED

DPS welcomes community groups to hold splinter sessions at DPS's 58th
annual meeting at the Spokane Convention Center October 25-30, 2026,
including AG groups, mission or instrument teams, or other
planetary-themed groups. The venue features 4-6 rooms that seat
between 30-100 and are available anytime, plus 4 large halls seating
>250 which are available Saturday-Sunday October 24-25, or for 60-90
minute lunch meetings Monday-Thursday, October 26-29. Rooms will be
outfitted for hybrid participation with AV hardware; users must supply
laptops. Zoom reservations may be arranged by users, or supplied at no
cost by AAS. In-person participants are expected to register for
attendance at DPS; virtual participants may attend at no cost. Apply
for a splinter meeting here:

https://submissions.mirasmart.com/DPS58/Splash.aspx

Application deadline is Thursday, June 11; selected applicants will be
notified in late June. Catering is available at cost with forms sent
with selection notifications.


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[DPS-58] TRAVEL GRANT APPLICATIONS

The Division for Planetary Sciences (DPS) offers travel grants to
support attendance at DPS-58 to be held 25-30 October 2026 in Spokane,
Washington, U.S.A. At least 30 grants may be awarded at $500-$1500
each.

Hartmann Student Travel Grants support student presentations at the
annual DPS meeting. (Postdoctoral scholars may also be eligible, but
students are prioritized.) Award of a travel grant assumes submission
of a DPS abstract, to be described in the application.

Underrepresented Minority (URM) Communities in Planetary Science
Travel Grants support attendance by students and professionals who are
members of groups that have had inadequate access to the planetary
science community.

Applicants for DPS travel grants do not need to be U.S. citizens or
permanent residents. Eligible candidates are welcome to apply for both
grants, but if selected would receive only one. Apply here:

https://dps.aas.org/news/dps-travel-grants-application/


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[DPS-58] DEPENDENT CARE APPLICATIONS

The Division for Planetary Sciences (DPS) offers Susan Niebur
Dependent Care grants to support attendance at DPS-58 to be held 25-30
October 2026 in Spokane, Washington, U.S.A. These grants provide
financial assistance to qualifying members to facilitate their meeting
attendance by offsetting costs for child care, elder care, spousal
care, etc., at the meeting location or at home during the DPS
conference. Apply for a dependent care grant here:

https://dps.aas.org/development/dps-dependent-care-grant-application/


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[DPS-58] CONFERENCE LODGING

Please consider arranging your hotel for DPS-58 at official conference
lodging. There is a block of rooms at government rates, and lodging is
connected to the conference venue-the Spokane Convention Center-via a
covered a walkway. The hotel features an onsite restaurant and other
options are located nearby. Utilizing this lodging will cut both cost
to attend the conference and carbon footprint to attend the conference
by eliminating the need for car rental.


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[DPS-58] STUDENT-LED REU PRESENTATIONS

The Science Organizing Committee for DPS-58 is aware that the regular
abstract deadline comes early for students participating in a summer
internship program such as Research Experiences for Undergraduates
(REU). When submitting a student-led abstract to DPS-58 that describes
work completed as part of an REU or other internship, authors are asked
to note in the "Special requests" field that the abstract is
student-led work from an REU or other internship, and whether oral or
poster presentation is desired. For such abstracts, oral presentation
will be considered even for submissions made as "late abstracts" by
July 2.


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PLANETARY MEETING CALENDAR ADDITIONS

Note: Many face-to-face meetings going forward will have online
components. Check their websites for details.

Posted at https://planetarynews.org/meetings.html

July 14-16, 2026
Coordinated Analysis of Astromaterials Workshop at the University of
Arizona
https://kalfaa.lpl.arizona.edu/astromaterials-workshop
Tucson, AZ

October 19-21, 2026
Austrian ELT Workshop
https://elt-austria-2026.pages.ist.ac.at
Klosterneuburg, Austria

October 19-23, 2026
Where Skies Meet: Multidisciplinary Views of Planet and Exoplanet
Atmospheres
https://www.granadacongresos.com/whereskiesmeet
Granada, Spain

November 30-December 4, 2026
LARIM 2026: XVIII Latin American Regional IAU Meeting
https://sites.google.com/astro.unam.mx/larim2026/
Cancun, Mexico

January 11-15, 2027
From Gaia to GaiaNIR - Science from Precision Astrometry Across the
Universe and Beyond the Extinction Barrier
https://conferences.uoa.gr/event/126/
Athens, Greece


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PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL - NEW PAPERS

Direct Links to Open Access Papers

Editor, Brian Jackson
https://psj.aas.org

Feeling the Pressure: Effects of Formation Pressure on the Physical
Properties of Titan Haze Analogs
Adis Husic et al. 2026 PSJ 7:111
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae63ca

Challenge in Arrokoth's Single Merger to Achieve the Shape's Principal
Axis Configuration
Ketan Kamat et al. 2026 PSJ 7:112
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae5f8e

Venting and Outgassing Simulations of Pressurized Lunar Modules:
Contamination of the Lunar Environment
S. Boccelli et al. 2026 PSJ 7:113
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae63c4

Carbonates in Ryugu and Bennu with MicrOmega: Insights into Aqueous
Alteration on Primitive Asteroids
Max Mahlke et al. 2026 PSJ 7:114
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae6643

Bilayered Martian Polar CO2 Snow Generation
Anthony D. Toigo et al. 2026 PSJ 7:115
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae63c0

Variability of Callisto's Optical Aurora in Eclipse
Zachariah Milby et al. 2026 PSJ 7:116
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae650c

Heliostack: A Novel Approach to Minor Planet Discovery
Kevin J. Napier et al. 2026 PSJ 7:117
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae63b7

Enhanced Topography Models for Selected Lunar South Pole Regions with
Shape-from-Shading
Stefano Bertone et al. 2026 PSJ 7:118
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae5b70

Magma Activity History and Formation Mechanism of Lacus Somniorum, the
Largest Lunar Lacus
Yihao Chen et al. 2026 PSJ 7:119
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae66e4

Investigation of Venus' Thermal History, Crustal Evolution, and Core
Dynamics with a Coupled Interior-lithosphere-atmosphere Model
Rodolfo Garcia et al. 2026 PSJ 7:120
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae5248

Overview of Hayabusa2 Extended Mission's Flyby of Near-Earth Asteroid
(98943) Torifune
Masatoshi Hirabayashi et al. 2026 PSJ 7:121
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae5f79

Monitoring Volatile Evolution in Disrupting Comet D/2021 A1 (Leonard)
with NOEMA and APEX
Timothy N. Proudkii et al. 2026 PSJ 7:122
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae5b73


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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH: PLANETS - NEW PAPERS

Direct Links to Open Access (OA) Papers

Editors-in-Chief, Amanda Hendrix & Debra Buczkowski
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/21699100

Characterizing Patterns of Resurfacing on Venus With Volcanoes and
Coronae
Nicholas J. Montiel & Barbara De Toffoli
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE009632

Volcanism at Piton de la Fournaise as an Analog for Chloris Mons, Venus
Evan G. K. Cooper et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2026JE009756

Exploring Enceladus's Interior Structure Using Electromagnetic
Induction
Alexander Grayver & Joachim Saur
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE009589

Modeling the Seasonality of Wind-Driven Hydrocarbon Waves in Titan's
Polar Lakes
Charlene E. Detelich et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2026JE009693

Shallow Impact Craters Suggest Titan Stores Methane in an Insulating
Clathrate Crust
L. R. Schurmeier et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE009629

Thermodynamic Constraints on H2 Production and Habitability From
Mg-Rich Serpentinites as Mars Analogs
Devan M. Nisson et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE009395

Mercury's Low-Latitude Boundary Layer: Identification of Distinct
Proton Populations Using MESSENGER Spacecraft Data
X. Wang et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE009617


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