The EPSC committee, the DPS Committee, the Scientific Organizing Committee and Copernicus Meetings invite the world-wide community of planetary scientists to submit an abstract for presentation of their recent work at the EPSC-DPS2025 meeting, which will take place at the Finlandia Hall Helsinki, Finland, 7–12 September 2025. EPSC-DPS2025 will be organised as a fully hybrid meeting and will allow virtual access to all oral and poster sessions.
We are looking forward to meeting everyone in person this year in Helsinki. The ethos for EPSC-DPS2025 is to create a simple, flexible, and inclusive meeting that provides multiple opportunities for interaction, scientific discussion, and networking. The programme of the congress will contain oral and poster sessions, as well as workshops and panel discussions.
The current list of sessions is organised around the following Programme Groups:
Small Bodies (comets, KBOs, rings, asteroids, meteorites, dust) (SB)
Exoplanets, Origins of Planetary Systems and Astrobiology (EXOA)
Outreach, Diversity, Amateur Astronomy (ODAA)
Submit your abstract now by accessing the scientific programme and the abstract submission tool:
Please browse the list of sessions and identify the session that most closely matches your area of interest; your abstract can be submitted directly to that session.
For future deadlines including (early) registration, refer to the deadlines & milestones of the conference.
Information on registration and social events, as well as a separate online form for requesting splinter meetings & workshops will also be available soon on the meeting website.
We look forward to seeing you in Helsinki!
Lena Noack & Noah Jäggi on behalf of the EPSC committee
Athena Coustenis & Scott Murchie on behalf of the DPS committee
Stavro Ivanovski, Ákos Kereszturi, Connor Nixon, and James Roberts on behalf of the Scientific Organizing Committee
2024 has been a transformational year for Europlanet, with the completion of the Europlanet 2024 Research Infrastructure (RI) project and the full transition to become a sustainable non-profit association. Here are some of our highlights from the past 12 months.
December – Europlanet Enters a New Era
Over the past decade, work has been ongoing to create a sustainability plan that will enable Europlanet to continue its activities, independent of EC funding.
The first step was the launch of the Europlanet Society in 2018 to support the sustainability of networking programmes. Since 2023, the foundation of the Europlanet Association Sans But Lucratif (AISBL) has made Europlanet a sustainable legal entity. In December 2024, a new organisational membership programme was launched that will provide a solid foundation for a Europlanet research infrastructure in decades to come.
This new funding model will enable Europlanet to carry on core activities, including:
Mobility programmes, with access to facilities, telescopes and expert exchanges.
Training and mentoring of early career planetary scientists and the wider community, including the Planetary Mapping Winter School.
Support for the community at a grass-roots level through travel bursaries, prizes and small grants.
Sustaining and growing our community through EPSC, strategic partnerships and other activities in all regions of Europe and internationally.
Ensuring the voice of the planetary science community is heard in important strategic fora in Europe and internationally.
Europlanet hosts webinars on the last Tuesday of every month on topics ranging from careers to scientific techniques and services. In 2024, we started a collaboration with the European Space Agency’s Juice Mission team to host a new series of webinars (held on Fridays, once a quarter) with a special focus on Juice, its journey to the Jupiter system, and the science it will be doing during flybys and when it starts its main mission to study Jupiter’s icy moons.
The Planets In Your Hands Exhibition. Credit: Europlanet/T Roger.
September – Europlanet Science Congress (EPSC) Returns to Berlin
Europlanet General Assembly at EPSC2024. Credit: Europlanet/T Roger.
The Europlanet Science Congress (EPSC) returned to Berlin for a third time from 8-13 September 2024. Established in 2006, EPSC has grown into the largest annual meeting in Europe for planetary science and has been hosted in nine different countries. The hybrid 2024 edition, hosted by the Freie Universität Berlin and online, was attended 1200 participants from 43 countries.
The meeting received 1221 abstracts, with 1183 presentations scheduled over 98 Scientific Sessions, including 693 orals presentations, 22 dissertation oral talks and 500 posters presentations.
To foster interactions, connections and potential collaborations among diverse Europlanet communities — including academics, industry professionals, policymakers, and communicators at all career levels — E-SPIN was a new thematic event for EPSC2024. The event focused on ‘innovation’ in planetary sciences, serving as a common thread across all these communities.
Outreach programmes included a public event at the Zeiss Planetarium, and EPSC Goes Live for Schools, which supported conference attendants to engage with schools in the Berlin area and online. The conference was sponsored by Freie Universität Berlin, the Natural History Museum of Berlin and the Space: Science & Technology journal. Bursaries for 128 early careers, researchers from under-represented states amateurs and teachers were supported through Europlanet and the International Commission on Planetary Atmospheres and their Evolution (ICPAE).
August – Europlanet Magazine Special Issue
A special compilation of articles about Europlanet 2024 RI activities from the last seven issues of the Europlanet Magazine was published in the summer of 2024. The first feature is a summary of the main findings by the project’s impact evaluation officer, whose role has been to assess the effectiveness of the RI for its user community. The articles that follow give more in-depth overviews of the project’s main activities, including Transnational Access visits to laboratories and field sites, upgrades to facilities, Virtual Access services and Networking Activities.
The Europlanet Magazine, established in 2021, aims to highlight the range of activities by the Europlanet community academic and industrial partners, and the wider planetary community. The next issue will be published in spring 2025. Read Issue 7 here.
July – A Wrap for Europlanet 2024 RI
Infographic showing main results from the Europlanet 2024 Research Infrastructure (RI) project.
The 31 July 2024 marked the end of the Europlanet 2024 Research Infrastructure (RI) project. The €10 million programme was funded by the European Commission (EC) to provide infrastructure to address the major scientific and technological challenges facing modern planetary science and strengthen Europe’s position at the forefront of space exploration. With over 50 beneficiaries providing access to more than 40 facilities on 5 continents, as well as four virtual access services linking over 100 data services and catalogues, the project was one of the most complex and ambitious ever supported by the EC.
Professional evaluation of the project reveals that significant impact has emerged from the project in scientific, technological, training and education, economic, social and societal domains. Find out more.
June – A Month of Meetings
The Europlanet Early Careers (EPEC) network’s annual raining school took place in Padova, Italy, from 24-28 June 2024. Credit: EPEC/Europlanet.
June and July were busy months for Europlanet, with participation in multiple conferences and workshops. Europlanet had a stand at the European Astronomical Society (EAS) Annual Meeting in Padova, Italy and the British Planetary Science Congress (BPSC) in Leicester.
The Europlanet Early Career (EPEC) Annual Week was hosted at the Università degli Studi di Padova. Across four days, 23 in-person participants and 20 online attendees networked and took part in workshops, talks and social activities. EPEC Annual Week is a great opportunity for early careers to make new connections, create collaborations and get to know the wider Europlanet community. This year’s highlights included sessions on planetary science in Italy and a group walking tour of Padova’s historic city centre.
The Europlanet Central Europe Hub’s Tatra workshop, held on 19-20 June 2024 at the Astronomical Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Tatranská Lomnica, Slovakia, brought together experts and early careers in planetary and space science from across Europe for two days of presentations and discussions.
Transnational Access (TA) is a cornerstone of all research infrastructure projects funded by the European Commission. By enabling researchers from one country to visit facilities in another, with all travel and service costs covered, the Commission aims to maximise the efficiency and quality of science produced, bridge the gap between highly developed and lesser-developed regions, support international collaboration and train the next generation of researchers.
Calls issued through the Europlanet 2024 RI project attracted a total of 323 applications. The Covid-19 pandemic caused serious disruption to the programme, requiring the EC to grant a six-month extension to allow facilities to work through the backlog of TA visits. However, of the 211 TA projects approved for funding, 197 were actually carried out, involving 293 researchers and 2077 days of access. The diverse science supported by the TA programme has led to several high-impact publications and new collaborations.
A new TA call will be issued in early 2025 and you can read all the TA publishable reports since 2020 here.
April – Virtual Access Services Highighted
Schematic view of planetary material escaping through Venus magnetosheath flank. TCredit: Thibaut Roger/Europlanet 2024 RI/Hadid et al.
A fleeting visit of the ESA/JAXA BepiColombo mission to Venus revealed surprising insights into how gases are stripped away from the upper layers of the planet’s atmosphere. Detections in a previously unexplored region of Venus’s magnetic environment showed carbon and oxygen accelerated to speeds where they could escape the planet’s gravitational pull. Europlanet’s SPIDER space weather modelling tools enabled the researchers to track how the particles propagated through the Venusian magnetosheath. The results were published in Nature Astronomy on 12 April.
Meanwhile, the VESPA Virtual Observatory for Solar System data ran an implementation workshop in Warsaw from 22-26 April to make six new services accessible to the community through VESPA. These included:
A service to supports calibration, curation, archiving and dissemination of data from ground-based solar telescopes, provided by the Science Data Centre (SDC) of the Institute for Solarphysics in Germany.
Ionospheric Total Electron Content (TEC) fluctuation maps from the Space Radio Diagnostic Research Centre in Poland
Measurements of Earth’s magnetic field anomalies caused by meteorite impacts, provided by the University of Warsaw in Poland
British Astronomical Association Comet Image Archive
A Student Science Club CubeSat Mission by the Rzeszow University of Technology in Poland
Lunar Sample Spectroscopy Database (LSSD) from the Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, India.
VESPA currently provides access to over 90 services in the VESPA Portal and over 290 in the IVOA registry.
Europlanet’s other Virtual Access (VA) services are also thriving, with a new Machine Learning Working Group on Discord and the GMAP Community GitHub.
Europlanet organised a first planetary science workshop in Bolivia from 6-9 January 2024. The workshop was over four days at the Institute for Geological and Environmental Research (Instituto de Investigaciones Geologicas y del Medio Ambiente UMSA) in La Paz, Bolivia. The purpose of the workshop was to provide tools for the processing and mapping of planetary surfaces, exploring different planets and analogous environments in Bolivia and Latin America.
The Bolivia workshop followed on from a Europlanet Latin America Planetary Science Workshop, ‘Connecting Earth with other Planets’, which was held in Buenos Aires from 31 October – 03 November 2023. Speakers were drawn from universities across Latin America and the Europlanet community, as well as the Argentinian national space agency (CONAE) and the European Space Agency (ESA). The workhsop stimulated many discussions and proved a very useful opportunity for networking and connecting local communities.
The Europlanet Workshop Series of events in Africa and South America was organised by the Global Collaboration and Integration Task of the Europlanet 2024 Research Infrastructure (RI) project. We look forward to further collaborations with colleagues around the world in 2025.
January – GMAP Geology and Planetary Mapping Winter School 2024
The annual Geology and Planetary Mapping Winter School aims to introduce scientists and amateur enthusiasts to geological mapping of other planetary bodies. The fourth edition of the school ran synchronously (with live sessions) in the week 22-26 January 2024, and asynchronously (allowing participants to work at their own pace) on the Streavent platform until the end of February 2024. The focus of the 2024 school was geologic mapping aspects of Venus, icy satellites and small bodies. The programme was largely hands-on, with the inclusion of seminars and time for asynchronous interaction and individual or project mapping work. The school attracted more than 590 registrations from 75 countries around the world.
Each planetary body was introduced, with participants guided through hands-on activities such as the individual completion of a small mapping area. At the end of each day, specific time slots were dedicated to seminars, which provided insights, perspectives, and additional knowledge on related topics. The event was co-funded by the Europlanet 2024 Research Infrastructure (RI) project’s GMAP teams at the University of Padova and Constructor University.
All materials and videos from the 2021-2024 editions of the Winter School are freely available, and registration for the 2025 edition is now open at: https://www.planetarymapping.eu
The future competitiveness of the European Research Area in science and technology is predicated upon the ERA having a Research Infrastructure (RI) based on facilities and people. Modern science and technology require access to state-of-the-art facilities, both large (e.g. synchrotrons, accelerators) and medium/small (e.g. suites of analytical tools). These may be based in custom-built sites, on the premises of universities, or at national institutes. Facilities are not restricted to laboratories but also embrace field-sites, computational and data bases/archives with both on-site or virtual access.
Europe has built up a complex, multidisciplinary set of RIs that support a myriad of science and technology embracing all fields, such that European Researchers and European industry are able to act at the forefront of modern research with examples including AI and machine learning, astronomy, climate change, nanotechnology, next-generation health care and quantum computing. Uniquely, the majority of these facilities are open to all European researchers at no cost to the user. Hence, we have been able to exploit the full intellectual capacity of ERA home to over 2 million researchers.
RIs may be single-site in Europe or internationally (e.g. CERN or European Southern Observatory (ESO)), or ‘Distributed’ across many sites and nation states e.g. European Synchrotron network. However, such a RI has grown largely organically with access funding often relying upon direct Funding from the EC Framework programmes. Future funding and models for the sustaining of ERA RIs are now in question and alternative structural and funding models for the ERA RI network are being developed ranging from the 29 European Research Infrastructure Consortia (ERICs) often led by governmental organisations to growing numbers of Associations internationale sans but lucrative (AISBLs) commonly organised and led by the community of academics and institutions. One size and structure does not fit all, and the operability and sustainability of ERA RIs are and will be necessarily varied. However, discussions between different RIs to share operational models and examples of good practice are required.
This one-day meeting is arranged to directly follow the European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI) meeting held in Szeged, Hungary, 16-17 September 2024. The meeting is open to all ERA RIs and builds upon the recently published ESFRI landscape analysis of ERA RIs. The meeting is focused upon two specific topics:
13.00 Introduction – Mr. Roland Jakab, CEO, HUN-REN
13.05 The ESFRI landscape/perspective – Professor Peter Lèvai (HUN-REN Wigner RCP, Budapest)
13.20 The League of Accelerator-based Photon Sources as an integral part of Europe’s RI ecosystem – Professor Jakub Szlachetko LEAPS Coordinator, SOLARIS National Synchroton Radiation Centre, Poland
13.35 As climate change is continuing – how to organise the sustainability of ICOS? – Emmanuel Salmon
13.50 The role and importance of small to medium sized Distributed Research Infrastructures in sustaining European research competitiveness – Dr Oguz Ozkan, European Science Foundation
14.05 The NEPHEWS project; co-funding PaN RI, working with PaN user communities – Dr. Cormac McGuinness, Trinity College Dublin
14.20 Research Infrastructures and Networks Beyond EC funding – Models and a Case Study for Sustainable Operations – Anita Heward, Europlanet
14.35 Session 1 Panel and Open Forum Future RI models and their sustainability – Chair: Nigel Mason, Europlanet
15:30 Coffee Break
Widening participation in the ERA – The role of RIs
Chair: Peter Lèvai
16.00 EU RI landscape – Geographical Distribution and RIs in less represented states – Nigel Mason Europlanet
16.15 CERIC – A distributed infrastructure in materials, biomaterials and nanotechnolog – Ornela De Giacomo, CERIC Deputy Executive Director
16.30 ELI – A major RI in Central Europe – Zsolt Fülöp, ELI ERIC
16.45 The Europlanet experience in HUN-REN Atomki – Professor Bela Sulik, HUN-REN Atomki
17.00 Training and retaining RI staff – Prof. Enrico Guarini, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy.
17.15 Panel and Open Forum. How can we widen participation /develop RIs in less represented regions of Europe?
Chair: István Szabó HUN-REN
End 18.00
Session 1. Models of ERA RIs and their Sustainability
The EU research infrastructure community remains poorly connected and acts in many disparate ways. It is thus often hard for agencies and governmental organisations to understand and navigate the EU RI landscape. In this session we will review the different types of ERA RIs, their structure (and the advantages and disadvantages of each). We will aim to characterize some of the terms widely used (but with different definitions in different communities) such as ‘Distributed Research Infrastructures’, discuss how ERA RIs may work more closely together to optimise their functionality (many facilities are in more than one RI with each RI operating different management and access provisions) and increase their visibility and impact to disparate user communities (including industry). Different models for long-term sustainability of RIs will be discussed and debated. Finally, the provision for cooperation and information exchange between ERA RIs will be discussed with the option of hosting biannual meetings
Session 2. 2. Widening Participation in ERA RIs
The vast majority of ERA RIs draw upon facilities based in a limited number of countries. To date, there are fewer facilities and thus less institutional membership of RIs from the nation-states in Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe. In this session we aim to review this landscape and explore both the potential and the challenges for facilities and RIs in these regions. This discussion is topical for both the Hungarian Presidency (2024) and Polish Presidency (2025).The discussion aims to identify those initiatives that are present in the region that help the connection of the EU-15 and EU-13 countries’ researchers through the domestic research infrastructures. These infrastructures are playing a pivotal role in enabling researchers to use the scale-up facilities that are present mostly in the EU-15 (with the exception of the one ELI ERIC). Also, the national infrastructures are nodes of many distributed research infrastructures, and as such they can contribute to economic development as well either through their own development or through in-kind contributions to the large-scale research infrastructures.
Venue:
The Venue is close to the ELTe Department of Atomic Physics and the Department of Geophysics and Space.
The nearest hotel to the venue is the Radisson Hotel Budapest BudaPart (1117 Budapest, Dombóvári út 25 A). A range of more affordable hotels are available over the river, with self-catering apartments available near the venue bookable through Booking.com.
Organising Committee
Professor N J Mason, Atomki and Europlanet Zsolt Fülöp, HUN-REN Atomki Dr Szabó István, HUN-REN
Following the success of the COPCA 2022 Conference, we are proud to announce a second iteration: the COPCA 2024 Conference will take place between 15-18 October 2024 in Valletta, Malta!
The Collisions Physics and Chemistry and their Applications (COPCA) conference in 2024 will bring together scientific researchers from several interdisciplinary fields to share their research and results. This year, a particular focus will be placed on processes relevant to radiation chemistry and physics, astrophysics and astrochemistry, and materials science.
This year, the conference will take place alongside a thematically-related workshop of the COST Action CA20129 “Multiscale Irradiation and Chemistry-Driven Processes and Related Technologies” (MultIChem). Sessions related to this workshop will be held on 15 and 16 October 2024. For more information on this COST Action, please click here.
The venue for the conference is the Aula Magna, situated at the Valletta Campus of the University of Malta.
The early bird conference fee (applicable up to 31 July 2024) is €425. From 01 August 2024 onwards, the regular conference fee of €575 will apply. Options are also available for accompanying persons.
Early career researchers (ECRs), including undergraduate and postgraduate students as well as post-doctoral researchers, are particularly encouraged to attend and to contribute to the success of COPCA 2024. In order to encourage the participation of ECRs, a session will be held to allow several ECRs to showcase their work in 10-minute presentations. These presentations will be judged by an independent panel and prizes will be awarded to the best presentations!
An inaugural workshop on Nuclear Astrochemistry has taken place this week at the European Centre for Theoretical Studies in Nuclear Physics and Related Areas (ECT*) in Trento, Italy. The aim of the workshop is to introduce the ideas of this new interdisciplinary field, connecting the disparate fields of nuclear physics, astrochemistry and planet formation.
The workshop, the first of its kind, has brought leading experts together with early career researchers who will develop the nuclear astrochemistry field through observations (using JWST), theoretical models and simulations and laboratory studies to address the fundamental questions of how the elements and molecules of life are created in the universe and the consequences for the search for life beyond Earth and our Solar System.
Participants in the Inaugural Workshop on Nuclear Astrochemistry
The Europlanet Society participated for the first time in the Space Tech Expo Europe, which took place in Germany (Bremen) between 14-16 November 2023. Attending the event provided an opportunity not only to strengthen the Society’s presence on the European space scene, but also to highlight its commitment to innovation and technological development in the planetary exploration sector.
Europlanet stand at Space Tech Expo Europe. Credit: D MoreauEuroplanet stand at Space Tech Expo Europe. Credit: D MoreauEuroplanet stand at Space Tech Expo Europe. Credit: D Moreau
During the event, Europlanet organized eleven business-to-business sessions, and eighty-one presentations at the stand to share know-how with participants. The Society also took the opportunity to unveil its new sustainability project (Europlanet Association), as well as to showcase its achievements, share knowledge and establish strategic partnerships with other key players in the space industry.
Europlanet’s presence at the Space Tech Expo Europe in Bremen was a great success, highlighting the society’s continued commitment to planetology exploration, exploitation and space innovation. This participation marks the start of a new era for Europlanet, opening the way to new opportunities, partnerships and achievements in the field of European planetology exploration and beyond.
The first Europlanet Research Infrastructure Meeting (ERIM), co-hosted with the 5th Europlanet Early Career (EPEC) Annual Week, will take place next week (19-23 June 2023) in Bratislava, Slovakia.
Almost 150 people will join in person, with a further 130 people registered to participate online.
If you will be joining us for ERIM 2023 and EPEC Annual Week, here are some final updates and reminders.
The Whova app is your online portal for ERIM and EPEC Annual Week 2023. Use the app to access sessions remotely, receive updates to the programme and other notices, and join discussions. It’s also a great place for networking with other ERIM participants. If you haven’t already done so, please download the Whova mobile app or access it from the desktop web platform. Add sessions to your personal agenda to help us ensure appropriate room allocations and keep the meeting running smoothly.
Remote participation: In the Whova app, click on ‘Agenda’ and then choose the session you want to join. The window for the live stream will open 10 minutes before the scheduled start of the session to enable speakers and panellists to test their audio/video and screen-sharing settings. The link is the same for speakers and general attendees. All attendees will be muted when they enter the WebEx livestream. You can request to be unmuted by using the ‘raise hand’ function or asking through the chat. Guidelines and tutorials for participants and speakers are available on the ERIM 2023 website.
Incident reporting: ERIM 2023 and EPEC Annual Week are committed to providing a safe, welcoming and inclusive experience for participants. In registering for ERIM and EPEC Annual Week 2023, physical and virtual participants have accepted that they are bound by the Code of Conduct for Europlanet 2024 RI. If you observe or experience behaviour that is in breach of the Code of Conduct and wish to file a report, please use the incident reporting form.
Quiet room: We will provide access to a quiet room within the Hotel Sorea for any on-site participant that may have need of a space to pray, breastfeed or simply have a moment of silence. We will advertise the location of this room daily on the Whova app Community Board and on the ERIM Notices Board in the lobby of the Hotel Sorea.
Social event and excursion:There are still some tickets available for the social event dinner (€30) on Wednesday 21 June at the Parlament Restaurant, which has panoramic views of the castle and Danube. Some places are also available on the bus for the excursion to Comenuis University Astronomical Observatory (10€) on Thursday 22 June. To sign up for either or both of these events, register now.
Public transport: Participants can get to the Hotel Sorea by bus or tram (the nearest stop is Kráľovské údolie). Hotel Družba and Faculty of Mathematics, Physics and Informatics, Comenius University (FMFI UK), are at bus/tram stop Botanická záhrada. More details on travel and local information are available on the ERIM website.
Changes to your plans:If your travel plans change or you want to change your participation from in-person to hybrid (or vice versa) please let us know so that we can keep the venue up to date with numbers.
Europlanet Challenges: An objective of the meeting will be to brainstorm action plans for 10 challenges related to the sustainability of Europlanet. On Monday, we will ask all participants to join one of 10 topical teams that will focus on each of the challenges. Look out for discussion threads on the Community Board where you can get involved.
ERIM is a new kind of meeting to support European planetary science and associated communities. The format of ERIM 2023 is a series of interactive workshops related to the activities of the Europlanet 2024 Research Infrastructure (RI) project, research infrastructures in general, and the Europlanet Society. The meeting will be co-hosted with EPEC Annual Week 2023, the training school for the Europlanet Early Career Network.
How will it Work?
Workshops will be organised under a series of programme tracks. You can dip in and out of programme tracks, workshops and even sessions during the week. The aim is to make new connections, brainstorm ideas, develop synergies, increase opportunities for collaboration and help us build a strong, thriving, sustainable community for planetary science in Europe.
You don’t have to be a member of the Europlanet Society or the Europlanet 2024 RI project to participate in ERIM. We are looking for new people to engage with Europlanet, so everyone is welcome. However, we will be offering free accommodation and travel grants to a limited number (~150) of participants. If we are over-subscribed in requests for support, priority will be given to Europlanet Society members. (Find out about other benefits of joining the Europlanet Society).
Programme
Many different topics will be covered within the ERIM programme tracks and workshops, including:
Europlanet VA Services (including the VESPA Virtual Observatory for planetary data, SPIDER Space Weather Services, GMAP Geological Mapping and Machine Learning)
Research Infrastructures (including Common Challenges and Sustainability for Small and Medium-sized Distributed RIs, and the Europlanet 2024 RI Council Meeting)
ERIM 2023 will bring together a range of planetary science and Europlanet community workshops, including interactive sessions on geological mapping, planetary space weather, the Europlanet Telescope Network, industry engagement, innovations in outreach tools.
The Europlanet Early Career (EPEC) Annual Week will be co-hosted with ERIM, along with Europlanet Society meetings of the Regional Hubs and the Europlanet General Assembly.
Europlanet 2024 RI has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 871149.
Europlanet AISBL (Association Internationale Sans But Lucratif – 0800.634.634) is hosted by the Department of Planetary Atmospheres of the Royal Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy (BIRA-IASB), Avenue Circulaire 3, B-1180 Brussels, Belgium.