Conferences: Difference between revisions

From Fluids Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(5 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 12: Line 12:


== Conferences ==
== Conferences ==
* List of conferences that we've attended
** and some thoughts that we've had on them
* Ocean Sciences
** Very large conference, wide range of topics. Fairly light on numerical talks.
*** (Ben) I quite enjoyed this conference. Massive poster session was good. Good chance to see interesting talks in your field and check out interesting talks in other fields.
** Attended [https://osm.agu.org/2018/ February 2018 in Portland]
** [https://osm.agu.org/2018/future-meetings/ 2020 meeting in San Diego] (16–21 February)


{| class="wikitable sortable"
{| class="wikitable sortable"
Line 40: Line 32:
|-
|-
| Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society Congress
| Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society Congress
|  
| [https://congress.cmos.ca/ CMOS Congress]
| July
| July
| Small
| Small
Line 48: Line 40:
|-  
|-  
| American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
| American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
|
| [https://fallmeeting.agu.org AGU Fall Meeting]
| December
| December
| ~20000 people
| ~25000 people
| Usually San Francisco
| Usually San Francisco
|
| Atmospheric, Earth-Covering (including Ocean Sciences), Geophysics, and Space Physics, and Interdisciplinary. Good combination of observational and numerical work.
|
| Overwhelmingly large, incredible poster sessions, lots of chance to see interdisciplinary work (science education, public health, science/art) and participate in workshops.
|-
|-
| European Geophysical Union
| European Geophysical Union
|
| [https://www.egu.eu/meetings/general-assembly/ 2019 EGU General Assembly]
| April
| April
| ~15000 people
| ~15000 people
| Vienna, Austria
| Ocean sciences, cryospheric sciences, general geophysics, climatology. Much of the research is observational and numerical.
| Tremendously well attended. Every day has hundreds of posters to look at. Due to the shear number of people, one usually comes out with a memorable idea or two.
|-
| American Physical Society Division of Fluid Dynamics
| [https://www.apsdfd2018.org 2018 APS DFD Annual Meeting]
| November
| ~3500
| Seattle (2019)
| Observational oceanography, small crymospere session, numerical simulation, internal waves.
| Weaker poster session, as this conference is focused mainly on talks. If you submit an abstract and ask for a talk, you <i>will</i> get a talk. Perhaps it's good practice as the talks are required to be swift and there is no room to add fluff. Often, there is a contingent from Cornell that we have ties to, so this is a good opportunity to meet researchers from other institutions.
|-
| International Association for Great Lakes Research Conference
| [http://iaglr.org/conference/about.php IAGLR Conference]
| June
| Very Small
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| American Physical Society Division of Fluid Dynamics
| Conference of the Computational Fluid Dynamics Society of Canada
|  
| [https://www.cfdcanada.ca/ CFD Canada]
| November
| June
|
| Very Small
|
|
|
|
Line 87: Line 95:
* Frank's Noodle House (pretty cheap, incredibly good noodles)
* Frank's Noodle House (pretty cheap, incredibly good noodles)
* Little Bird (signs for Petit Ouseau. Expensive, but great French food)
* Little Bird (signs for Petit Ouseau. Expensive, but great French food)
=== Washington ===
* Del Sol (amazing burritos)
* Busboys and Poets (great locally-sourced brunch, great social causes)

Latest revision as of 20:51, 20 April 2019

We've attended quite a few conferences over the years. This is a place to record some notes on them and, perhaps more importantly, good places to eat!

Feel free to add your thoughts / recommendations here.

General Notes

Flights

  • Avoid electronic boarding passes, since you'll need to submit a boarding pass with your receipts to get reimbursed
  • You'll likely be buying your tickets well in advance of the conference, so you may want to consider getting a travel advance so that you get that money back earlier

Conferences

Name Link Month(s) Size Location Topic(s) Thoughts
Ocean Sciences 2020 meeting in San Diego February ~ 4000 people Various (Portland 2018, San Diego 2020) Wide range of topics. Fairly light on numerical talks. (Ben) I quite enjoyed this conference. Massive poster session was good. Good chance to see interesting talks in your field and check out interesting talks in other fields.
Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society Congress CMOS Congress July Small Various Canadian Cities (2019: Montreal as part of IUGG)
American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting AGU Fall Meeting December ~25000 people Usually San Francisco Atmospheric, Earth-Covering (including Ocean Sciences), Geophysics, and Space Physics, and Interdisciplinary. Good combination of observational and numerical work. Overwhelmingly large, incredible poster sessions, lots of chance to see interdisciplinary work (science education, public health, science/art) and participate in workshops.
European Geophysical Union 2019 EGU General Assembly April ~15000 people Vienna, Austria Ocean sciences, cryospheric sciences, general geophysics, climatology. Much of the research is observational and numerical. Tremendously well attended. Every day has hundreds of posters to look at. Due to the shear number of people, one usually comes out with a memorable idea or two.
American Physical Society Division of Fluid Dynamics 2018 APS DFD Annual Meeting November ~3500 Seattle (2019) Observational oceanography, small crymospere session, numerical simulation, internal waves. Weaker poster session, as this conference is focused mainly on talks. If you submit an abstract and ask for a talk, you will get a talk. Perhaps it's good practice as the talks are required to be swift and there is no room to add fluff. Often, there is a contingent from Cornell that we have ties to, so this is a good opportunity to meet researchers from other institutions.
International Association for Great Lakes Research Conference IAGLR Conference June Very Small
Conference of the Computational Fluid Dynamics Society of Canada CFD Canada June Very Small

Food

Denver

  • Sam's No. 3 Diner (arm sized burritos)
  • Rhein Haus (good German beer)

Vienna

  • derHannes

Portland

  • Afuri Ramen (not super cheap, but fantastic ramen)
  • Tarad thai (decent prices, good food. Lunch special is a good deal)
  • Eisenhower bagels (great bagels at a great price)
  • Frank's Noodle House (pretty cheap, incredibly good noodles)
  • Little Bird (signs for Petit Ouseau. Expensive, but great French food)

Washington

  • Del Sol (amazing burritos)
  • Busboys and Poets (great locally-sourced brunch, great social causes)