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Volume 20, Number 25
June 21, 2026

PLANETARY EXPLORATION NEWSLETTER
Volume 20, Number 25 (June 21, 2026)

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

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

1. [NASA] SMD: ROSES-25 Amendment 59 - Several Updates to the ROSES-25
   Summary of Solicitation
2. NEO Surveyor Assistant Survey Scientist Position at UCLA
3. ML4PSP June Announcement
4. Release of planetMagFields Web App
5. Symposium on Planetary Regolith and Aeolian Processes: A Tribute to
   the Life and Career of Rob Sullivan
6. New Horizons Science Spotlight Webinar This Week
7. Be the Scientist Who Inspires the Future: Become a VIRTEX Mentor!
8. [DPS-58] Regular Registration Open; Late Abstract Deadline Extended
9. [DPS-58] Intern Presentations at DPS-58
10. [DPS-58] Low-Cost Meeting Observer Option
11. [DPS-58] Information for Exhibitors and Sponsors
12. [DPS-58] Conference Lodging
13. [DPS-58] Travel Grant Applications
14. [DPS-58] Dependent Care Applications
15. DPS Seeks a New Secretary
16. DPS Seeks a New Education Subcommittee Chair
17. DPS Environmental Affairs Subcommittee Solicits Members
18. [AGU 2026] Session P003: Creating Sustainable Habitats and
    Ecosystems Beyond Earth
19. [AGU 2026] Session P016: Mars Surface Stories - Geology,
    Mineralogy, Geochemistry
20. [AGU 2026] Session P026: Stars to Exoplanets, Sun to Earth -
    Bridging Disciplines in Search of Habitability
21. [AGU 2026] Session P032: The Surface and Subsurface of Mars as Seen
    from Orbit
22. [GSA 2026] Geological Society of America Connects Annual Meeting:
    Abstract Submission is Open
23. [GSA 2026] Session T188: Geomorphology and Surface Processes across
    the Solar System
24. [NASA] PDS: Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Data Release 66
25. Planetary Meeting Calendar Additions
26. Planetary Science Journal - New Papers
27. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets - New Papers

Commercial/Fundraising Announcements:

C1. Letters of Support Request

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

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[NASA] SMD: ROSES-25 AMENDMENT 59 - SEVERAL UPDATES TO THE ROSES-25
SUMMARY OF SOLICITATION

ROSES-25 Amendment 59 makes several additions, changes, and
clarifications to the ROSES-25 Summary of Solicitation to conform with
Agency and administration priorities, see Sections I, I(g), II(a),
II(b), III(b), III(d), V(b)ii, VI(c) & VIII(b). New text is in bold.

https://tinyurl.com/4mshwjkc

Important and substantial revisions to 2 CFR 200, the government-wide
guidance for grants and cooperative agreements are proposed to take
effect October 1, 2026, see:

https://tinyurl.com/4ncxkpp2

Many types of currently allowable costs, such as but not limited to
publications, research or events outside the United States, and
domestic conferences may be restricted, denied, or may be allowable by
legal exception or special award conditions only. Public comments on
the revisions to 2 CFR 200 may be submitted until July 13, 2026, at:

https://www.regulations.gov/commenton/OMB-2026-0034-0001

Questions concerning this amendment to ROSES-25 may be directed to
SARA@nasa.gov.

[Edited for length]


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NEO SURVEYOR ASSISTANT SURVEY SCIENTIST POSITION AT UCLA

NASA's Near-Earth Object (NEO) Surveyor is a planned mission
(launch: Sept 2027) with a goal of finding, identifying, and
characterizing potentially hazardous asteroids in our Solar System. The
NEO Surveyor Assistant Survey Scientist will work with the Principal
Investigator and Science Team in developing the NEO Surveyor survey
plan, which determines where the Observatory points as a function of
time; will participate in testing and verifying that the survey plan
obeys survey rules defined by the Science Team; will participate
actively in studying the ability to link detections of small body
candidates observed by NEO Surveyor to ensure that they result in the
determination of high-quality orbits. Qualifications for the position
include: 1+ years research experience in planetary astrophysics, Solar
System bodies, exoplanets or related subarea(s); strong programming
skills with 2+ years Python or equiv. language programming experience;
ability to interpret copious amounts of complex technical information
and data. More information on the position, including qualifications,
compensation range, benefits and how to apply are provided at:

https://jobs.ucla.edu/careers-home/jobs/10520


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ML4PSP JUNE ANNOUNCEMENT

The Machine Learning for Planetary Science and Space Physics (ML4PSP)
seminar series is happy to host our next talk which will take place on
June 23 at 9:00 AM US Pacific Time, featuring:

Presenter: Kacy Hatfield (Arizona State University)
Title: "[Dust] Devil is in the Details: A Planetary Science Approach to
Low-Data Object Detection Using Machine Learning"

The full abstract is available here:

https://ml4psp.github.io/schedule

Zoom details
Link:

https://tinyurl.com/59d489yf

Meeting ID: 935 6088 0593
Passcode: ml4psp

We also now have a dedicated Slack channel:

https://tinyurl.com/3fvzcysz

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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RELEASE OF PLANETMAGFIELDS WEB APP

Some time ago, I wrote an open-source package planetMagFields to
consolidate planetary magnetic field models in one place, and offer
easy access API to visualize and analyze them:

https://ankitbarik.github.io/planetMagFields/

With great pleasure, I am happy to announce the release of the
planetMagFields Web App:

https://planetmagfields.streamlit.app/

With this you can:
- Visualize planetary magnetic fields in 3D (including that of Earth
  going back to 1900 using IGRF)
- Visualize their fields at various radii
- Plot their spectra, and last but definitely not the least
- Provide an orbit trajectory and obtain the field components along the
  trajectory.
- As a bonus, it also provides links to the publications for the field
  models. :)

Give this a try and please reach out to me at abarik@jhu.edu or submit
issues on GitHub for any questions or feature requests! I hope this can
be a useful tool, especially for teaching.


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SYMPOSIUM ON PLANETARY REGOLITH AND AEOLIAN PROCESSES: A TRIBUTE TO THE
LIFE AND CAREER OF ROB SULLIVAN

Save the date. "Symposium on Planetary Regolith and Aeolian Processes:
A Tribute to the Life and Career of Rob Sullivan" will take place
October 12-13, 2026 at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY. The program
will include public lectures, keynote speakers, and contributed talks.
For more information and registration, go to:

https://tinyurl.com/2uanvckh

Keynote Speakers and symposium agenda will be announced soon.

SOC: Don Banfield (Ames), Jim Bell (ASU), Alex Hayes, Julie
Rathbun (Cornell)


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NEW HORIZONS SCIENCE SPOTLIGHT WEBINAR THIS WEEK

Join us on 25 June 2026, 2:30-3pm EDT (11:30-12 PDT,12:30-1pm MDT,
1:30-2pm CDT)

New Horizons continues its operation, now at ~65au from the Sun. Since
2015 it has made ground-breaking discoveries of the Pluto-Charon
system, flown past the small contact KBO binary Arrokoth and collected
phase and light curve data for some three dozen additional KBOs and the
ice giants. It has also been sampling dust density throughout the Solar
System and studying the cosmic optical background. After a brief break,
we are continuing our spotlight webinar (30 min, fourth week each
month) which we invite you to attend, or watch recorded at your
convenience.

Our speaker will be Eric Zirnstein (University of Alabama in
Huntsville) and he will be speaking on: "Formation of H+ PUI Tails
Downstream of Distant Interplanetary Shocks and Predictions for NH's
SWAP Measurements at the HTS".

Connection Link:

https://tinyurl.com/mr2rsubj

Meeting ID: 973 1769 7636
Passcode: ExtendedKB

Calendar for future seminars:

https://tinyurl.com/43reym37

Recordings are archived and posted at:

https://pluto.jhuapl.edu/News-Center/index.php#Spotlight-Presentations

For questions, contact New Horizons Co-I Susan Benecchi, susank@psi.edu


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BE THE SCIENTIST WHO INSPIRES THE FUTURE: BECOME A VIRTEX MENTOR!

For many of adolescents, personally knowing a scientist is a rare
opportunity. You can change that.

"As a scientist who works with other scientists, it's easy to take for
granted being 'on the inside' of what so many other curious,
scientifically-minded people wish they could access. In my
interactions with the Boys and Girls Clubs, I realized many students
don't have that encouraging, supportive, educational immersion. It was
a joy to be a personal touch point into space science for those
students." - VIRTEX Mentor Dr. Kirby Runyon

The VIRTEX (Virtual Trips to Extreme Environments) program, sponsored
by NASA's Office of STEM Engagement, is looking for NASA-funded
researchers to serve as virtual mentors to middle school students at
youth-serving organizations.

Minimal Time Commitment: 5 hours.

Who: Anyone conducting (or who has conducted) NASA-funded research or
efforts.

What You'll Share: Casual, virtual conversations about your career
journey.

How it Works: Sessions are held virtually during summer or afterschool
hours. Your personal contact information is never shared.

Compensation: Mentoring is voluntary. Limited professional fees are
available for early-career researchers.

Ready to become a catalyst for positive change? Apply today at:

https://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/VIRTEX/mentors/


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[DPS-58] REGULAR REGISTRATION OPEN; LATE ABSTRACT DEADLINE EXTENDED

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

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

Regular registration and a newly extended period for late 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 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 a special session:

- 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 registration deadline: 28 July 2026 at 9:00pm ET
Late abstract EXTENDED DEADLINE: 30 July 2026 at 12:00pm ET


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[DPS-58] INTERN PRESENTATIONS AT DPS-58

The Science Organizing Committee for DPS-58 is aware that the regular
abstract deadline of June 11 was early for students participating in a
summer internship program such as Research Experiences for
Undergraduates (REU). The late abstract deadline has been extended to
July 30. 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 30.


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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] INFORMATION FOR EXHIBITORS AND SPONSORS

The Local Organizing Committee for DPS-58 is soliciting exhibitors and
sponsors for the meeting. Exhibitor spaces are located in a heavily
trafficked are between the poster sessions and common area in a large,
shared ballroom. If you are interested, please contact Conor Sherry
(conor.sherry@aas.org) at the American Astronomical Society.


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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.

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


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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 SEEKS A NEW SECRETARY

The DPS seeks a successor to Dr. Denise Stephens as DPS Secretary. If
this impactful position interests you, submit a letter of interest and
a CV to DPS Chair Scott Murchie at scott.murchie@jhuapl.edu or
DPS.chair@aas.org. As Secretary, you would be part of the Executive
Committee, helping to lead the division and formulate rapid responses
to planetary community events. Regular duties are to:
- Compile and distribute eNews to DPS members;
- Maintain DPS records and documents including the DPS Meeting Guide,
  instruction guides for subcommittees, official Committee and
  Subcommittee membership lists, letterhead, bylaws, and membership
  data;
- Oversee membership applications and the membership roster;
- Collected statements from candidates for elected DPS offices
  identified by the Nominating Subcommittee, circulate them, conduct
  the annual election, and announce the results;
- Prepare prize certificates and citations; and
- Contribute to the corporate memory of DPS along with other officers.


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DPS SEEKS A NEW EDUCATION SUBCOMMITTEE CHAIR

The DPS seeks a successor to Dr. Sanlyn Buxner as Chair of the DPS
Education Subcommittee. If you are interested please contact DPS Chair
Scott Murchie and submit a CV at DPS.chair@aas.org or
scott.murchie@jhuapl.edu. Regular duties are to:
- Maintain the Education portion of the DPS website together with the
  DPS webmaster
- Maintain the searchable database of Research Experiences for
  Undergraduate students in planetary science
- Maintain the searchable database of graduate schools for planetary
  science
- Intermittently, managesDPS Education and Outreach Grants ($200 to
  $500) awarded on rolling basis
- Support education-related activities during DPS meetings in
  coordination with DPS leadership and other committees


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DPS ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS SUBCOMMITTEE SOLICITS MEMBERS

The DPS Environmental Affairs Subcommittee (EAS) is soliciting new
members. If you are interested, please contact EAS Chair Rosemary
Killen at rosemary.killen@nasa.gov with your name, affiliation and
email. In addition, please provide a brief statement concerning your
priorities for environmental sustainability as it relates to the DPS.


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[AGU 2026] SESSION P003: CREATING SUSTAINABLE HABITATS AND ECOSYSTEMS
BEYOND EARTH

Abstracts due: Wednesday, 5 August 2026, 23:59 PM EDT (03:59 UTC)
Session Link:

https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu26/prelim.cgi/Session/279867

If we decide in the future to create sustainable habitats and
ecosystems beyond Earth, enlarging our environmental responsibilities,
then science will have a critical role to play. As the cost of access
to space continues to fall, a fresh look at the research agenda for
creating sustainable habitats and ecosystems is timely and necessary.
We encourage contributions on all aspects of either local terraforming
or global terraforming on or beyond Earth, including planetary
atmospheres, climate modeling and climate feedbacks, monitoring of
climate change beyond Earth, spacecraft data analysis, hydrology,
soil/regolith composition, soil and regolith characterization and
remediation for biological suitability, biogeochemistry, in-situ
resource utilization for environmental control and life-support,
oxygen production, ecology, and space physics, as well as the
exploration and distribution of terraforming-relevant resources.
Submissions on technologies and techniques that support applied
astrobiology goals are particularly encouraged.

Conveners: Edwin Kite, Nils Averesch, and Chuanfei Dong


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[AGU 2026] SESSION P016: MARS SURFACE STORIES - GEOLOGY, MINERALOGY,
GEOCHEMISTRY

Abstracts due: Wednesday, 5 August 2026, 23:59 PM EDT (03:59 UTC)
Session Link:

https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu26/prelim.cgi/Session/283492

This session will highlight recent advances in understanding the
surface of Mars through integrated presentations about the planet's
geology, mineralogy, and geochemistry. It will bring together results
from orbital, landed, roving, laboratory, and analog investigations to
reconstruct surface processes, identify key mineral assemblages, and
interpret the chemical histories recorded in Martian rocks and
regolith. Contributions may address sedimentary, volcanic, and
alteration environments; links between mineralogy and habitability;
terrestrial analog studies and field sites; and implications for Mars'
climatic and aqueous evolution. By combining observations across
scales and techniques, the session aims to sharpen our view of how
Mars' surface has evolved through time and where the most informative
records of those changes might still be preserved.

Conveners: Jim Bell, Briony Horgan, Alicia Vaughan


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[AGU 2026] SESSION P026: STARS TO EXOPLANETS, SUN TO EARTH - BRIDGING
DISCIPLINES IN SEARCH OF HABITABILITY

Abstracts due: Wednesday, 5 August 2026, 23:59 PM EDT (03:59 UTC)
Session Link:

https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu26/prelim.cgi/Session/281371

The research of all four of NASA's science divisions provides critical
insights into the formation and evolution of planetary systems,
particularly those that may be capable of supporting life. Working
across these science divisions is a must for the community to make
forward progress. In this session, we seek to highlight work that
demonstrates that interdisciplinary ideal. We want to hear about your
laboratory experiments, theoretical studies, modeling efforts, and
observations. Whether your work applies lessons learned from old
contexts to new (e.g., Earth biology and planetary evolution to
exoplanets broadly), or takes a novel approach to characterizing
exoplanet systems and their potential to harbor life, we want to hear
from you. This session is sponsored by NASA's Nexus for Exoplanet
System Science (NExSS), a research coordination network aimed at
fostering communication and collaboration across disciplines in
exoplanet research. Early career researchers are especially encouraged
to showcase their work.

The conveners: Ofer Cohen (Mass Lowell), Linda Sohl (NASA GISS), and
Hilairy Hartnett (UW)


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[AGU 2026] SESSION P032: THE SURFACE AND SUBSURFACE OF MARS AS SEEN
FROM ORBIT

Abstracts due: Wednesday, 5 August 2026, 23:59 PM EDT (03:59 UTC)
Session Link:

https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu26/prelim.cgi/Session/283502

Several orbiting spacecraft are celebrating their many years
continuously acquiring data of the surface and subsurface of Mars.
Odyssey has been in orbit 25 years, MRO and Mars Express for over 20
years, and TGO for 10 years. These orbiters, along with many others
throughout time, have acquired a rich interdisciplinary dataset from
which to learn about current and past processes on Mars, with the aim
of unraveling its geologic, climatic, and evolutionary history in
comparison to Earth and other planets. This session invites submissions
on all aspects of martian surface and subsurface processes, their
interactions with the environment, and their changes in time, with
emphasis on interdisciplinary science.

The conveners: Leslie Tamppari (JPL), Jeffrey Plaut (JPL), Ernst Hauber
(DLR), and Ingrid Daubar (Brown)


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[GSA 2026] GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA CONNECTS ANNUAL MEETING:
ABSTRACT SUBMISSION IS OPEN

Abstract submission is open for the Geological Society of America
Connects Annual Meeting, October 11-14 in Denver!

https://connects.geosociety.org/

Planetary related sessions include:
- Big Science from Small Worlds
- Boxwork and Fracture Halos: Changes in mineralogy and erosion
  resistance around fracture features on Earth, Mars, and across the
  Solar System
- Friends of Hoth, Rogue Moons: Icy Ocean Worlds
- The G.K. Gilbert Award Session
- Geomorphology and Landscape Evolution of Mars
- Geomorphology and Surface Processes Across the Solar System
- Hydrothermal Processes Across the Solar System
- Impact Cratering: From the Earth into the Solar System
- Mineralogy in the Solar System
- Myths and Misrepresentations surrounding Cosmic Impact claims in
  Paleoclimatology, Paleontology, Paleoecology, Geoarchaeology, and
  Quaternary Research
- Planetary Exploration and Education: How We Learn About Our Solar
  System and Beyond
- Planetary sample science: Unlocking the history of lunar, Martian,
  and asteroidal materials
- Shake and Bake: Volcanism and Tectonism across the Solar System
- The Astro-Geoheritage of the Solar System: Past Explorations and
  Future Considerations
- Venus and Earth: Separated at Birth

Abstract deadline: August 6


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[GSA 2026] SESSION T188: GEOMORPHOLOGY AND SURFACE PROCESSES ACROSS
THE SOLAR SYSTEM

If you plan on attending the 2026 Geological Society of America
Connects Meeting in Denver, Colorado (October 11-14, 2025), we
encourage you to consider submitting an abstract to session T188:
Geomorphology and Surface Processes Across the Solar System.

This session welcomes abstracts on any aspect of planetary
geomorphology and surface processes, including but not restricted to:
Earth analogues, laboratory experiments, numerical models, planetary
comparison, mapping, in situ data, or remote sensing studies.

The session brings together researchers studying Earth and other
planetary bodies to compare how geomorphic processes operate across
different environmental conditions. By fostering dialogue between
terrestrial and planetary scientists, it promotes cross-system insight
into the fundamental mechanisms that shape landscapes throughout the
Solar System.

We are also excited to have two excellent invited speakers: An Li
(University of Washington) and Harrison Martin (Caltech).

The abstract portal is open and can be accessed here:

https://gsameetings.secure-platform.com/connects26

The deadline for submitting abstracts is August 6, 2025.

Thanks, and we hope to see you in Denver!

Session Conveners: Alex Morgan (PSI), Marisa Palucis (Dartmouth),
Abdallah Zaki (UT Austin)


24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24-24

[NASA] PDS: LUNAR RECONNAISSANCE ORBITER DATA RELEASE 66

The NASA Planetary Data System announces Release 66 of data from the
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter mission. This release contains raw,
calibrated, and derived data products covering the nominal time period
from December 15, 2025, through March 14, 2026. Some instrument teams
are delivering more recent data. The data are archived at various PDS
nodes.

- CRaTER at the PPI Node
- Diviner at the Geosciences Node
- LAMP at the Cartography and Imaging Sciences Node
- LEND at the Geosciences Node
- LOLA at the Geosciences Node
- LROC at the LROC Data Node
- Mini-RF at the Geosciences Node
- Radio Science at the Geosciences Node
- SPICE at the NAIF Node

The data may be accessed from

https://pds-geosciences.wustl.edu/missions/lro/.

Or for a dataset-oriented perspective:

https://pds.nasa.gov/datasearch/subscription-service/SS-20260615.shtml

LRO releases occur every three months. The next release is scheduled
for September 15, 2026.


25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25-25

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

October 12-13, 2026
Symposium on Planetary Regolith and Aeolian Processes: A Tribute to the
Life and Career of Rob Sullivan
https://tinyurl.com/2uanvckh
Ithaca, NY


26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26-26

PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL - NEW PAPERS

Direct Links to Open Access Papers

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

Early CN Outgassing and Production Rates of C/2024 E1 (Wierzchos)
at 4 au
A. C. Mura et al. 2026 PSJ 7:152
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae7335

The Effects of Realistic Impact-processed Asteroid Topology on
Atmospheric Airbursts
Sean P. Stokes et al. 2026 PSJ 7:153
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae71b8

Geologic Mapping and Reconstruction of the Volcanic and Tectonic
History of the Mare Vaporum Region to Assess Resource Potential
Astrid Oetting et al. 2026 PSJ 7:154
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ae6fa5


27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27-27

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

Geological Mapping and Structural Analysis of the Western Half of the
Eminescu Quadrangle (H09), Mercury
M. El Yazidi et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JE008785

Impact and Crystallization Modeling of the Sudbury Basin and Its
Implications for a Hadean Crust
Nicolas B. Litza et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE009224

Alteration of Feldspar-Rich Rocks on Ancient Mars and Its Possible Link
to Ca/Fe-Rich Carbonates
C. Wang,  T. Usui,  M. Melwani Daswani
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE009358

The Case for a Completely Solid Martian Mantle-No Basal Magma Layer
Extant
Megan S. Duncan,  Scott D. King,  Mathew B. Weller
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE009598

Late-Stage Debris Flows Eroded Aeolis Mons in Gediz Vallis, Gale
Crater, Mars
Joel M. Davis et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JE009538

New High Precision Measurements of Apollo Samples: 0.3-5 GHz Complex
Refractive Indices
P. Linton et al.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2026JE009703


C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1-C1

COMMERCIAL: LETTERS OF SUPPORT REQUEST

Potomac Database Systems ("Potomac" potomacdb.com) is innovating a new
commercial paradigm for lunar surface data collection and access.
"Pathfinders," instrumented lunar surface impact penetrators, will
provide geophysical data across the Moon from seismometry to regolith
and volatile composition. These unique data will be available on the
web app, Nexus, hosted by Potomac.

Potomac is seeking non-binding letters of support from scientists who
believe commercial lunar data should be more accessible, affordable,
and useful to the global Moon community. To learn more and indicate
potential, no-obligation interest in signing, click here:

https://forms.gle/WPVE173XZUSJCRE98

For other questions, contact info@potomacdb.com.


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