Webinar #8 - Cassini's mission to Saturn

The webinar Cassini's mission to Saturn took place in the Scientix online meeting room on the 2nd of June 2017 at 18:00 CEST, Brussels time.

In just few months from today, on September 15, 2017 the Cassini spacecraft will end its mission with a spectacular fall in Saturn, after having completed over 300 revolutions around the gas giant planet, since July 2004. During its mission, Cassini impressed the scientific community and the whole world with a chain of discoveries regarding the nature and the dynamics of Saturn and its moons (e.g. Titan, Enceladus). In this webinar, participants together with the speaker followed Cassini’s 17-year adventure focusing on the ways it advanced our knowledge regarding our Solar System and the how it introduced new, multi-level challenges in the field of Space Awareness.  

The webinar was held by Dr. Nick Sergis, a Researcher at the Office of Space Research and Technology of the Academy of Athens since 2006. He is a member of the Cassini/MIMI Scientific Team, the IAASARS Space Research and Technology Group, the Uranus Pathfinder Consortium and the editorial board of Annales Geophysicae. Being an active researcher with numerous papers publlished in prestigious scientific journals and invited speaker to conferences and seminars, Nick has been continuously serving as a reviewer for proposals submitted for funding to NASA and many scientific journals of his field.

In 2008, he was elected “best reviewer in the field” by the editorial board of Annales Geophysicae and in 2009 he received the “NASA Group Achievement Award” as a member of the Cassini/MIMI Team. Dr. Sergis is a co-leader of the Plasma Radial Transport Team, selected for funding by the International Space Science Institute (ISSI) in 2014. His research interests include Space and Planetary Physics, Magnetospheric Data Analysis with emphasis on the Outer Planets and their moons, Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Coupling, and Solar Wind Dynamics. He participates in a number of ongoing scientific collaborations with institutes from the USA, the UK, Germany and Argentina. He is a member of the American Geophysical Union (AGU), the European Geosciences Union (EGU) and the International Astronomical Union (IAU).

Presentation is available for download in PDF format.

Material discussed in the webinar:

- Video 1

- Video 2

- Video 3

- Video 4

https://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/

https://eyes.nasa.gov/

Contact details for Dr. Nick Sergis - nsergis (at) phys.uoa.gr

Image (cover): Illustration of Cassini Spacecraft's Grand Finale Dive
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Register
Past webinar
Location
Scientix online meeting room
Target group
“Our Wonderful Universe” MOOC participants, primary and secondary school teachers and students, educational authorities, researchers, etc.
Language
English
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