Oscillatory Processes in Solar and Stellar Coronae
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Professor Valery M Nakariakov graduated from the School of Radiophysics of Lobachevsky’s Gorky (now – Nizhny Novgorod) State University in 1989. He defended his PhD thesis in Plasma Physics at the Applied Physics Institute of RAS in 1993. The topic of his PhD research was theoretical modelling of the interaction of waves with plasma non-uniformities. In 1995-1999 he was a postdoc at the University of St Andrews, UK. In 1999, he became Lecturer (Full Professor from 2007) and Head of the Solar Physics team in the Physics Department of the University of Warwick, UK. His main area of research is related to the observational study and theoretical modelling of magnetohydrodynamic waves in plasma structures on the Sun's Corona, new methods of plasma diagnostics, radiophysics of the Sun, and quasi-periodic processes in solar and stellar flares. From 2011-2014, he served as President of the European Solar Physics Division of the European Physical Society. In 2015, he was honored by the Payne-Gaposchkin Medal and Prize of the Institute of Physics, UK.
Prof. Dipankar Banerjee is currently the director of the Aryabhatta Research Institute of Observational Sciences (ARIES), Nainital.Heis an astrophysicist with a bachelor’s degree in physics (St. Xavier’s college) and master’s degree in theoretical physics from University of Kolkata, India. He has obtained his PhD from Indian Institute of Astrophysics and completed two postdoctoral tenures in reputed institutions in Europe. He is the co-chair of the Science working group of the “Aditya” mission. Aditya is the first dedicated Indian mission to study the Sun, expected to be launched by ISRO around 2022. He is also the project coordinator for the National Large-Solar Telescope Project (NLST). NLST is a proposed 2-meter ground-based telescope planned to be installed at a Himalayan site. He is also involved with NASA’s PUNCH mission.Dr. Banerjee has more than 120 peer-reviewed publications with around 3000 Citations in international journals. He is currently supervising 6 PhD students while 11 of his students have completed their PhDs.
Dr. Bo Li received his BSc in Nuclear Physics and Technology from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) in 1996. He went on to pursue his post-graduate study in Space Physics at the same institution and received his PhD in Geophysics in 2001; the thesis being on magnetohydrodynamic waves in the highly inhomogeneous chromosphere and corona of the Sun. From 2002 to early 2009 he was a research assistant in Aberystwyth University, UK. Since 2009, he has been a professor at the School of Space Science and Physics of Shandong University in Weihai, China. Bo Li’s current research interests are primarily with low-frequency waves and oscillations in the solar atmosphere and in a broad context, solar atmospheric seismology. He has extensive experience in multi-fluid modeling of the solar wind as well; paying special attention to the role of hydromagnetic waves/turbulence in wind heating and acceleration.
Dr. Maurizio Falanga received his university degree for Theoretical Physics and Astronomy at the University of Basel, Switzerland in 1998 (Univ. degree thesis Advisor: Prof. F.-K. Thielemann). In 2002, he received his PhD degree in astrophysics from the University of Rome “La Sapienza”. For the PhD entrance examination, he was ranked 4/80. His PhD thesis work included theoretical General Relativistic ray-tracing calculations to reproduce the light curve emitted by matter orbiting in the strong-field regime around a black hole or from a neutron star surface (Advisor Prof. L. Stella). After his PhD, he held various positions: From 2002–2006 Post-doc, CEA-Saclay, Service d’Astrophysique (High Energy Division), Paris, from 2006-2009 research scientist, AIM - Unit´e Mixte de Recherche; University Paris 7 - CNRS - CEA, Paris. His research interests are mostly focused on: Accretion and emission in neutron stars, white dwarfs and black holes, physics of the pulsar magnetosphere, X-ray polarization, accretion wind models, radiative transfer, star atmospheres, magnetohydrodynamics, plasma instability, type I X-ray bursts, numerical simulation, and mapping supermassive black holes. Since 2009, he has been the Science Program Manager at the International Space Science Institute (ISSI) in Bern, Switzerland. Currently, apart from the science program responsibilities at ISSI, he is still active as researcher in high energy Astrophysics.