Conferences
12–16 May 2025, Girona, Spain
2nd Edition—Advances in Space AstroParticle Physics 2025
The 2025 edition of ASAPP will be held from May 12, 2025 to May 16, 2025 by the Institute for High Energy Physics of Barcelona (IFAE) in Hotel Eden Roc, Sant Feliu de Guíxols, Girona, Spain.
Organizer:
The National Institute for Nuclear Physics
Venue:
Girona, Spain
Language:
English
Objectives: The ASAPP 2025 International Conference, the second conference in the ASAPP series, aims to review the progress in the design, development, integration and testing of instrumentation for measuring particles and high-energy radiation in space. The deployment and operation of novel instrumentation for particle and high-energy radiation measurement in space will facilitate future astroparticle missions investigating fundamental physics and the cosmos (e.g., cosmic ray physics, the search for dark matter, matter–antimatter asymmetry, multi-messenger astronomy, etc.); applications for monitoring the space radiation environment; and investigations into the impact of low-energy ionizing particles on instrumentation, space weather, and Earth sciences.
Scientific Program (in brief)
The conference organizers would like to invite the research community to submit abstract proposals on the topics listed below (see the Scientific Program page for details):
- Instrumentation and missions for direct high-energy cosmic ray measurements in space.
- Instrumentation and missions for indirect high-energy cosmic ray measurements in space.
- Instrumentation and missions for direct low-energy cosmic ray measurements in space.
- Instrumentation and missions for hard X-ray and γ-ray direct measurements in space.
- The R&D of novel approaches and instruments for particle and high-energy radiation measurements in space, including (but not limited to) the following: tracking detectors; calorimetry detectors; fast time-of-flight systems; detectors for particle ID; high-temperature superconducting magnets; FE and DAQ systems; and the application of AI techniques and approaches in space radiation instrumentation.
Considering the multitude of approaches used in the current era of space observations, contributions that cover various opportunities presented by space platforms will be addressed, from CubeSats and nanosatellite constellations to large-size space missions, including stratospheric balloon flight missions.
More information can be found by visiting the following website: