Free-floating planets in the Milky Way

Tue, 07/25/2017 - 08:31

For a long time scientists have predicted the existence of Earth-mass free-floating planets, ejected from their parent planetary systems and gravitationally unbound to any star. Polish astronomers working at the OGLE survey at the Warsaw University Astronomical Observatory for the first time found hints of a population of these objects. The discovery has been published in the prestigious journal Nature.

Some planetary systems are not as stable as our Solar System. Planet-planet interactions in young planetary systems may cause collisions, smashing into the central star, or – most likely – ejections from the parent system. Free-floating (rogue) planets can also be formed as a result of other processes, like interactions in stellar clusters or stellar fly-bys. Unfortunately, rogue planets (except for very young objects) cannot be directly observed, because they do not emit light. They can be, however, detected with the technique of gravitational microlensing.

An artist's impression of a gravitational microlensing event by a free-floating planet. Credit: J. Skowron / Warsaw University Observatory

If a massive object (a star or a planet) passes between an Earth-based observer and a distant source star, its gravity may deflect and focus light from the source. The observer will measure a short brightening of the source star – explains Przemek Mróz, a PhD student at the Warsaw University Observatory and the lead author of the study.

The observed signal is independent of the lens' brightness and so dark objects, like black holes and planets, can be detected this way. Duration of microlensing events depends on the lens' mass – the less massive the lens, the shorter the microlensing event. Most of the observed events, which typically last several days, are caused by stars. Microlensing events caused by Jupiter-mass lenses usually last 1–2 days, whereas Earth-mass – barely a few hours. The probability of microlensing of a single source is very low, so modern microlensing surveys are monitoring hundreds of millions of stars in the Milky Way center every night.

The first attempt to find the free-floating planets was the 2011 analysis of microlensing events discovered by the Japan/New Zealand MOA survey. According to that work, free-floating Jupiter-mass planets should be twice as common as stars. The 2011 paper attracted considerable attention. However, over the years, serious doubts were cast over the claims of a large population of Jupiter-mass free-floating planets – says Prof. Andrzej Udalski, the principal investigator of the OGLE project.

The 2011 analysis was based on a relatively small sample of events. Moreover, infrared surveys of young stellar clusters discovered significantly less substellar-mass objects, while theorists predicted relatively few Jupiter-mass free-floating planets (most of the ejected planets should be Earth-mass objects).

New observations conducted by the OGLE survey during the years 2010–15 solved this mystery. The survey uses a dedicated 1.3-m telescope located at Las Campanas Observatory, Chile, in one of the best astronomical sites in the world. Images collected using the Polish telescope are of better quality than those used in the previous analysis, which enabled astronomers to measure the microlensing timescales more precisely. Some regions of the sky were monitored once every 20 minutes. These very frequent observations enabled the team to discover very short duration microlensing events caused by freefloating planets.

We analyzed light curves of almost 50 million stars that were monitored for six years, which gives a total of 400 billion of photometric measurements – says Przemek Mróz. We did not find a significant excess of events lasting 1–2 days, which can be attributed to Jupiter-mass free-floating planets. This indicated that for every 100 stars, there should be less than 25 Jupiter-mass free-floaters, consistent with our expectations from planet formation theories.

Astronomers, however, found a handful of extremely short events, which lasted a few hours. Such events are likely caused by Earth- and super-Earth-mass objects.

The sensitivity of our experiment to such events is very low, meaning that a very few detections imply the existence of a large population of Earth-mass free-floating planets – says Udalski.

Nevertheless, we cannot exclude the possibility that some of the ultrashort events that we found may be unknown flaring stars or some other astrophysical sources – points out Dr Jan Skowron, a co-author of the study.

Currently, we reached the maximum sensitivity to short-timescale events from a single Earth-based observatory – says Przemek Mróz. Future space-based microlensing experiments, like WFIRST and Euclid, will enable the exploration of these short events in more detail.

The discovery would be impossible without long-term observations conducted by the OGLE sky survey. The project is among the largest and longest sky surveys, this year it celebrates its 25th anniversary. One of the first goals of the OGLE survey was searching for and studying dark matter using the gravitational microlensing technique. Current studies cover a large range of topics – searching for exoplanets, studying the structure and evolution of the Milky Way and neighboring galaxies, studies of variable stars, quasars, transients (novae, supernovae, tidal disruption events, etc).

The paper that describes the discovery has been published in Nature: No large population of unbound or wide-orbit Jupiter-mass planets, Przemek Mróz, Andrzej Udalski, Jan Skowron, Radosław Poleski, Szymon Kozłowski, Michał K. Szymański, Igor Soszyński, Łukasz Wyrzykowski, Paweł Pietrukowicz, Krzysztof Ulaczyk, Dorota Skowron & Michał Pawlak, 2017, Nature, doi:10.1038/nature23276.

NCN searching for research institutions ready to establish Dioscuri Centres of Scientific Excellence

Wed, 07/12/2017 - 13:50

The National Science Centre invites research institutions to declare commitment as potential Host Institutions to Dioscuri Centres of Scientific Excellence. Applications for the establishment of Dioscuri Centres may come from basic organisational units and research centres of higher education institutions, research units of the Polish Academy of Sciences, research institutes, international research institutes established on the territory of Poland, Polish Academy of Learning, other research institutions established on the territory of Poland. The deadline for submissions expires on 2nd October 2017.

Full text of the announcement:

  • Call announcement for Polish research institutions to submit proposals for the establishment of Dioscuri Centres of Scientific Excellence - text
  • Attachment - text

Submissions meeting the formal requirements will be published alongside the Dioscuri call announcement, thus helping researchers find the right research institution in Poland. Researchers will be able to choose an institution from beyond the published list, provided that the institution meets the formal requirements and will commit to satisfy the basic conditions specified in the announcement.

Dioscuri is an initiative by the Max Planck Society (MPG), intended to establish Centres of Scientific Excellence in Central and Eastern Europe. The Centres will enable outstanding researchers to carry out top level research at research institutions in this part of Europe.

For details of the Dioscuri programme and all formal requirements, see the call announcement.


Kontakt:

Marcin Liana, tel. 12 341 9161

Małgorzata Jacobs-Kozyra, tel. 12 341 9173

 

10 Dioscuri Centres of Scientific Excellence to be established in Poland

Wed, 07/05/2017 - 09:47

On 4th July at the Wawel Royal Castle in Krakow, the National Science Centre (NCN) and the Max Planck Society (MPG) signed an agreement providing for the establishment of ten Dioscuri Centres of Scientific Excellence at Polish research units.Present at the ceremony was the Polish Minister of Science and Higher Education, Jarosław Gowin, whereas the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research was represented by its Director General, Volker Rieke. On behalf of the NCN, the agreement was signed by the Centre’s director, professor Zbigniew Błocki, and professor Martin Stratmann, the president of the MPG signed the document for his institution. Also present was the Consul General of the Federal Republic of Germany in Krakow, dr Michael Groß.

Dioscuri is an initiative by the Max Planck Society, Germany’s independent research institution, intended to establish Centres of Scientific Excellence in Central and Eastern Europe. The Centres will enable outstanding researchers to carry out research on world’s top level. The signing of the agreement between the MPG and the NCN on 4th July will inaugurate the programme. The undertaking will help bring to Poland outstanding leader researchers, who will set up their research teams here. This will offer researchers from all around the world an opportunity to work in the best international teams.

It has been a little more than a year now since I announced a development strategy for research and higher education in Poland, the document beginning with the phrase “Strategy for scientific excellence.” It is the most important direction for both the Polish government and the country’s academic community. Today, by entering into cooperation with the Max Planck Society, we take another step towards that excellence, said Minister Gowin. Evident is the convergence of the direction of the planned reforms in Poland’s science and higher education and the solutions that have functioned in Germany for years. For this reason today’s ceremony is one of great importance. The opportunity for the Polish researchers to collaborate with the Max Planck Society is an exceptional chance for science in Poland. I am positive that today’s event will initiate a number of breakthroughs in research.

The agreement signed on 4th July between the MPG and the NCN will significantly reinforce Polish-German ties in research. The framework agreement provides for ten research labs to be established at Polish research units specialising in different fields. Each newly established Centre will cooperate with a German Mentor Institution, and its funding will be provided by the NCN from the resources contributed by the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education and the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research.

Establishing ten Dioscuri Centres of Scientific Excellence in Poland, thanks to the programme coordinated jointly by the Max Planck Society and the National Science Centre, will be a positive stimulus for research in Poland. Mobility in science is prerequisite for the rise in prestige of Poland’s scholarly community and for the progress of research at home: it does not have to be limited to leaving the country, explained professor Zbigniew Błocki. Owing to the Dioscuri programme, with the support of the Max Planck Society, we will be able to encourage world-class researchers to work in Poland.

The Centres will be set up by outstanding researchers selected following a series of international competitions. The first one will be announced in October 2017 and concluded in 2018. In the pilot edition there will be up to three winners, thus to form first three Centres.

In the event of successful application under the Dioscuri opportunity, the research institution acting as host to the planned Centre will receive annually the equivalent of € 300,000 to spend exclusively on the Centre’s operations. As a deliberate measure, the remuneration for the Centre’s investigator is supposed to be at an internationally competitive level. A project’s leader will be paid € 100,000 a year. The funding period is 5 years, and may be extended by further 5 years (on condition that it passes assessment and there is funding available).

Dioscuri: a Polish-German recipe for scientific excellence

Thu, 06/29/2017 - 00:00

Ten Dioscuri Centres of Scientific Excellence will be established at Polish research institutions as a result of signing a framework agreement between the National Science Centre (NCN) and the Max Planck Society (MPG). The official signing will take place on 4th July at the Wawel Castle in Krakow.

Dioscuri is an initiative by the Max Planck Society, Germany’s independent research institution, intended to establish Centres of Scientific Excellence in Central and Eastern Europe. The Centres will enable outstanding researchers to carry out research on world’s top level. The signing of the agreement between the MPG and the NCN on 4th July will inaugurate the programme.

The plan provides for ten Dioscuri Centres to be established in Poland, with existing organisations acting as their host institutions. Each newly established Centre will cooperate with a German Mentor Institution, and its funding will be provided by the NCN from the resources contributed by the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education and the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research.

The founding of the Centres was announced in April at Hannover Messe by the Minister of Science and Higher Education Jarosław Gowin. He stressed that Poland and Germany, under the patronage of the highly prestigious name of Max Planck Institutes, would jointly finance international research teams.

Dioscuri Centres of Scientific Excellence offer an opportunity to bring to Poland outstanding leader researchers, who will set up their research teams here. Selection of these leaders will follow a rigorous competition procedure, with international experts as referees, under the auspices of the renowned Max Planck Society. The same body of referees will later evaluate the progress of the teams’ work, said professor Marta Miączyńska, a member of the Council of the National Science Centre involved in the programme’s launch.

The Centres will be established by outstanding scholars, selected in a series of international calls. The researchers and their respective scientific institutions will be able to compete for the opportunity in October 2017. The call will be concluded in 2018. In the pilot edition there will be up to three winners, thus to form first three Centres.

The Dioscuri programme is an excellent opportunity for Polish research units to set up new teams at a truly world class level. I hope that our universities and research institutes will not fail to take it, and they will do everything they can to secure the best conditions for these largely international teams. The NCN will systematically monitor whether this actually is the case, when the programme will have started, said professor Zbigniew Błocki, Director of the NCN.

The Max Planck Society is no doubt one of the most recognisable and robust research organisations in Europe, added professor Janusz Janeczek, the Chair of the Council of the NCN. The MPG coordinates the work of several dozen research institutes in Germany and overseas. It is therefore a chance for us – both at the NCN, but also for the Polish research community as a whole – to draw on the experience and contacts of a partner who sets the standards in today’s science.

In the event of successful application under the Dioscuri opportunity, the research institution acting as host to the planned Centre will receive annually the equivalent of € 300,000 to spend exclusively on the Centre’s operations. As a deliberate measure, the remuneration for the Centre’s investigator is supposed to be at an internationally competitive level. A project’s leader will be paid € 100,000 a year. The funding period is 5 years, and may be extended by further 5 years (on condition that it passes assessment and there is funding available).

I am positive that the activity of the Dioscuri Centres will yield us important discoveries and will help us propagate Polish research achievement around the world. It’s also another chance to reinforce Polish-German ties in research, for nowadays science requires intensive international cooperation. I am also hoping that the Dioscuri Centres will influence their immediate surroundings at Polish research units, promoting high standards and scientific excellence, concluded professor Miączyńska.

The official signing of the agreement between the National Science Centre and the Max Planck Society will take place on 4th July at the Wawel Royal Castle in Krakow. The Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education will be represented by its head, minister Jarosław Gowin. The German Federal Ministry of Education and Research will be represented by the secretary of state, Cornelia Quennet-Thielen. On behalf of the NCN, the agreement will be signed by the Centre’s director, professor Zbigniew Błocki, and professor Martin Stratmann, the president of the MPG will sign the document for his institution. Also present will be the Consul General of the Federal Republic of Germany in Krakow, dr Michael Groß.

DAINA: Pre-announcement of new funding opportunity for Polish-Lithuanian research projects

Tue, 06/27/2017 - 14:47

We would like to invite all researchers to participate in DAINA – a new funding opportunity for joint Polish-Lithuanian research teams to be launched by the National Science Centre (NCN) and the Research Council of Lithuania (Lietuvos mokslo taryba, LMT). The programme aims to support research projects in all fields of science and the humanities.

Within the DAINA scheme, the NCN and LMT will fund only projects involving basic research.

Call announcement: 15th September 2017

Call deadline: 15th December 2017

Results: June 2018

Start of joint research projects: September 2018

Complete version of the call documents will be adopted by the NCN Council and made available on the website in September 2017.


ELIGIBILITY:

  • Eligible Host Institutions in Poland: academic or research organisations, research consortia, scientific networks and university organisational institutions which are not basic organisational institutions, research and development centres, Polish Academy of Sciences research centres, university research centres, scientific libraries, organisational institutions having legal personality which have been established on Polish territory;
  • Eligible Implementing Institutions in Lithuania – a Lithuanian research and study institution included in the Register of Education and Research institutions;
  • Grants that are considered state aid will not be offered;
  • Only projects involving basic research will be funded;
  • Research project duration: 24 or 36 months;
  • All costs must be eligible according to the national eligibility requirements;
  • The budget of the Polish part of the project must be at least 150 000 PLN;
  • The budget of the Lithuanian part of the project must not exceed 80 000 EUR (in the case of a 24 month project) or 120 000 EUR (in the case of a 36 month project);
  • The Polish Principal Investigator (PI) must have at least a PhD degree when submitting a proposal. The Lithuanian PI must be a scientist.

APPLICATION PROCESS:

A complete proposal (consisting of the joint project description and the CVs of both PIs) should be submitted by the Polish PI via the OSF submission system which can be found at https://osf.opi.org.pl by December 15th, 2017.

In addition, the Lithuanian PI should submit all documents required by the LMT via the LMT electronic submission system by December 15th, 2017.

PROPOSAL REVIEW AND EVALUATION PROCEDURE:

Proposals will be subject to an eligibility check and peer review. The eligibility check of proposals will be carried out by the NCN and LMT Coordinators. The peer review will be performed by Expert Teams (recommended by both NCN and LMT) and by External Reviewers.

Only proposals which will have been declared eligible by the NCN and LMT Coordinators will be peer reviewed.

The peer review will be carried out in two stages:

  1. Stage I – a preliminary evaluation will take place on the basis of data provided in the proposal by the External Reviewers (recommended by both the NCN and LMT) other than the members of the Expert Team;
  2. Stage II – a final evaluation will be carried out on the basis of data provided in the proposal and the external reviews by the Expert Team.

The proposal evaluation will take into account in particular:

  1. the research achievements of the Polish and Lithuanian PI, including their research portfolio;
  2. the quality of the research or tasks to be performed;
  3. the innovative nature of the project;
  4. the impact of the research carried out on the development of the discipline;
  5. the added value of bilateral cooperation;
  6. justification of the costs requested;
  7. the feasibility of the project.

ALLOCATION OF FUNDS:

Funds for Polish research teams will be allocated on the basis of the decisions issued by the Director of the NCN. Funds for Lithuanian research teams will be allocated on the basis of decisions issued by the Chairman of the LMT.


CONTACT:

POLAND, NCN:

Dr Magdalena Łopuszańska-Rusek; e-mail: Magdalena.Lopuszanska-Rusek@ncn.gov.pl, tel. +48 12 341 91 64

Dr hab. Wojciech Sowa, e-mail: Wojciech.Sowa@ncn.gov.pl, tel. +48 12 341 91 71

Dr Magdalena Godowska, e-mail: Magdalena.Godowska@ncn.gov.pl, tel. +48 12 341 9016

LITHUANIA, LMT:

Darius Grigaliūnas, e-mail: darius.grigaliunas@lmt.lt, tel. +370 5 236 0507

BLAPs – a new class of pulsating stars

Tue, 06/27/2017 - 13:43

Thanks to regular brightness measurements of over a billion stars of our Galaxy, astronomers working at The Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE) at Warsaw University Astronomical Observatory, Poland, have discovered an unknown class of pulsating variable stars. Follow-up observations have shown that these objects are much hotter than our Sun. A very unusual property of the objects is that they significantly change their physical parameters over a period of about half an hour. Such rapid variations have never been observed in any known type of pulsating stars. Theoretical models confirm the observed behaviour, but the origin of the new stars remains a mystery. The discovery of the new class of variable stars has been published in the prestigious Nature Astronomy journal.Pulsating stars are very important objects in modern astrophysics. They are used to measure distances in the Universe and they allow studying the evolution of stars and their interiors.

It seemed that we knew almost all about pulsating stars, that we knew all their types, but not. We have found something completely new and very unusual – says Dr. Paweł Pietrukowicz, the principal investigator and the first author of the published work.

Figure 1. Comparison of sizes of various types of pulsating variable stars. Author: Paweł Pietrukowicz / Warsaw University Astronomical Observatory, Poland

Unlike our Sun, many stars are unstable–they pulsate. The entire star expands and shrinks by a few percent. Both the size and surface temperature change, which is observed as regular brightness variations. Large-amplitude variations are seen in red giants. These are relatively cool stars with extended envelopes. Pulsating red giants such as RR Lyrae type stars and even brighter delta Cephei type stars (the so called classical Cepheids) are common in the Universe. Surface temperature of these stars is similar or slightly higher then the temperature of the Sun (~5800 K). The pulsation periods of giants cover a wide range from a few hours to hundreds of days.

 

Hot blue stars also pulsate. Its surface temperature is of several tens of thousands degrees. Among hot pulsating stars are beta Cephei type stars and subdwarfs. The former objects are even one thousand times brighter than the latter, owing to their much larger sizes. The pulsation periods of hot stars are short, they range from seconds to hours. The amplitudes are small, since the stars are compact and have less inflated envelopes. By monitoring a billion stars by the OGLE survey, the realm of variable objects have been extended for a new, unusual class of stars.

The OGLE survey is a flagship Polish observational project celebrating its 25 years. Each clear night, practically non-stop since 1992, we monitor the variability of hundreds of millions of Milky Way stars from Las Campanas Observatory, located on the Chilean Atacama Desert. – says Prof. Andrzej Udalski, the head and manager of the project.

Among discovered objects are extrasolar planets, unique events of gravitational microlensing, outbursting novae and supernovae, and many other objects that vary, including periodic objects like pulsating stars. Astronomers from OGLE have found and classified about a million genuine periodic variables, half of which are various types of pulsating stars. This is the largest collection of variable objects in the whole history of astronomy.

The discovery of the new class of pulsating stars has been a great adventure that started in 2013. That year, we surprisingly noted the first such mysterious object – mentions Dr. Pietrukowicz.

What surprised the astronomers was the fact that the first object and another stars found later vary in brightness by several tens percent in about half an hour. Such large changes in such a short timescale had never been observed before. To find the cause of this variability, follow-up observations have been taken with the largest telescopes in the world. The observations showed that the objects have the temperature of 30,000 degrees and the observed changes are due to pulsations. This allowed the investigators to build a model of the star. It turned out that the new objects have a giant-like structure with 96% of the total mass concentrated in a core having merely 20% of the size of the star. The remaining matter forms a light inflated envelope that pulsate rapidly with a large amplitude. Based on the observed properties of the stars, the name of the new class has been proposed: BLAPs, as for Blue Large-Amplitude Pulsators.

The theory describes the structure of BLAPs, but it fails to explain their origin. These stars must have lost a significant fraction of their mass at some point to became as hot as we observe them now.

Certainly, it is impossible to reach such configuration in evolution of a single star. Perhaps, the star passed by closely the supermassive black hole residing in the Galactic Centre. As the result of such an encounter, the star would loose its outer layers – suggests Prof. Wojciech Dziembowski, a theoretician and the second author of the article in Nature Astronomy.

Such a possibility is rather unlikely. A more realistic explanation is that BLAPs are the result of a merger of two low-mass stars. Future observations should help solving this mystery – adds Dr. Paweł Pietrukowicz.

The article announcing the discovery of the new class of pulsating variable stars, BLAPs, has been published in the monthly journal Nature Astronomy: “Blue large-amplitude pulsators as a new class of variable stars”, Paweł Pietrukowicz, Wojciech A. Dziembowski, Marilyn Latour, Rodolfo Angeloni, Radosław Poleski, Francesco di Mille, Igor Soszyński, Andrzej Udalski, Michał K. Szymański, Łukasz Wyrzykowski, Szymon Kozłowski, Jan Skowron, Dorota Skowron, Przemek Mróz, Michał Pawlak & Krzysztof Ulaczyk 2017, Nature Astronomy, 1, 0166 (doi: 10.1038/s41550-017-0166)

The OGLE project has received funding from the National Science Center (grants MAESTRO, OPUS, HARMONIA, SYMFONIA).

Electronic Submission System for full proposals is now open

Tue, 06/27/2017 - 09:47

Project Consortia invited to the second stage of the QuantERA Call 2017 can now submit their full proposals through the Electronic Submission System. Guidelines and further information can be found under the following link: Electronic Submission System (ESS) - guidelines (stage two).

Polish applicants must register their applications in the OSF submission system (UNISONO application) until July 11th, 2017.


Contact:

Pre-announcement of new calls for international research proposals in Humanities and Social Sciences

Tue, 06/27/2017 - 08:01

We would like to invite all researchers to participate in new international funding opportunities in Humanities and Social Sciences. Proposals submitted under the calls will be assessed by international experts.

HERA (Humanities in the European Research Area) – call for research proposals in Humanities

HERA is a network of European research funding organisations who support research in Humanities. Up to date, with co-funding from the European Commission,  the network has announced 3 calls for international research projects. 

In August 2017, HERA plans to open a new funding opportunity. Its working title is: Public spaces: culture and integration in Europe. Application in English may be submitted by research consortia composed of at least 4 research teams from a minimum of 4 countries participating in the call. The deadline for submission of proposals is scheduled for the second half of October 2017.

Countries participating in the call:

Austria, Belgium (Wallonia), The Czech Republic, Croatia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and The United Kingdom

Contact:

Wojciech Sowa, Wojciech.sowa@ncn.gov.pl, tel: 0048 12 341 9171

Malwina Gębalska, malwina.gebalska@ncn.gov.pl, tel: 0048 12 341 9017


EqUIP (EU-India Platform for Social Sciences and Humanities) – call for research projects in Humanities and Social Sciences

The call for proposals titled Sustainability, equity, wellbeing and cultural connections has been launched by the NCN together with EqUIP, whose aim is to support research in Humanities and Social Sciences carried out by researchers from India and Europe. Applications in English should focus on societal challenges facing both India and respective European countries; suggested themes include, but are not limited to, sustainability, equity, wellbeing and cultural connections. Funders strongly encourage interdisciplinary approaches across the Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH) to address the themes of this call. Other disciplines can also be involved in proposals as long as the overarching focus remains rooted in SSH.

Each proposal under this call will require the building of consortia of three or more research groups based in three or more different countries participating in the call and will be eligible for funding from their national funding agencies. Every proposal must involve representation from India eligible for funding by the Indian Council of Social Science Research or the Indian Council of Philosophical Research.

Applicants are invited to use the EqUIP partner search tool, which facilitates matches between potential partners with similar ideas. It provides the opportunity to express interest either in joining a research proposal or to search for partner(s) for an existing proposal.

Countries participating in the EqUIP call:

Finland, France, India, Norway, Poland, Slovenia, The United Kingdom

Call timetable:

  • Launch of the call: end of August 2017
  • Deadline for submitting applications: end of November 2017
  • Call results: July 2017                                                 
  • Awards commence: January 2019

For more information please see:

http://equipproject.eu/equip-call-for-collaborative-research-on-sustainability-equity-wellbeing-and-cultural-connections/

Contact:

Kinga Sekerdej, kinga.sekerdej@ncn.gov.pl, tel: 0048 12 341 9172

Malwina Gębalska, malwina.gebalska@ncn.gov.pl, tel: 0048 12 341 9017

The NCN to grant nearly € 65 million to researchers

Wed, 06/14/2017 - 17:27

The NCN has made available funding worth nearly € 65 million to researchers  with a doctorate and scientists with particularly long-standing experience, who wish to conduct research projects, establish research teams, or engage in international collaboration. On 14th June, the Centre announced its new calls: SONATA 13, SONATA BIS 7, MAESTRO 9 and HARMONIA 9.A new feature to the calls announced today is the interview with projects’ principal investigators in SONATA, SONATA BIS and MAESTRO. It may be held in English, which also makes the grants available to international researchers, a group in short supply in many Polish research centres. We are also making it a rule for the Expert Team in MAESTRO, the most prestigious among our call types, to be composed entirely of scholars based outside Poland. We hope that this will additionally improve the call's level, said professor Zbigniew Błocki, Director of the NCN.

It is the 13th time that proposals have been accepted under the SONATA funding scheme, welcoming applications from holders of a doctorate degree awarded within 2 to 7 years of applying. The call’s budget has been set at nearly € 17 million. The call’s objective is to support innovative research using state-of-the-art equipment and original methodologies. In the current edition of the call, the project’s principal investigator is required to have published (or have had accepted for publication) between one and ten papers, of which one should be attached to the project proposal.

This is already SONATA’s third consecutive edition where the principal investigator may apply to the NCN for a reduction of obligatory teaching hours by 50%. The research centre where the investigator is employed will receive funds from the NCN that will allow it to hire a substitute, allowing the principal investigator to be able to devote more time to the project itself.

SONATA BIS is a call announced to establish new research teams by researchers who have been awarded a doctorate within 5 to 12 years before the year of grant application. In this call there is also the possibility of applying for a reduction of obligatory teaching hours. The budget of the call’s 7th edition will amount to nearly € 29 million.

As in SONATA, here the project’s principal investigator is required to have published (or have had accepted for publication) academic papers. In this instance, the numbers are between three and seven. Three most important papers should be attached to the proposal.

MAESTRO is the most prestigious of NCN's calls, seeking participation from advanced researchers willing to carry out ground-breaking projects, surpassing the current boundaries of knowledge. More than € 9.5 million will be distributed among the awardees of the call’s 9th edition.

A prospective principal investigator in a MAESTRO project is a researcher with at least five papers published in quality scientific journals over the past 10 years (three of the most important papers should be attached to the proposal), has served as principal investigator to at least two projects under national or international funding opportunities, and who has otherwise been academically active.

Some of the call’s evaluation criteria have been made more specific. For a principal investigator to receive the highest possible score, it is required from them to document, among others, their participation in expert panels on international calls, a high citation rate, and an award or at least an admission of their research proposal in the second stage of an ERC funding opportunity.

This time researchers applying for this grant of excellence will face an international panel of experts even in the first stage of the merit-based evaluation. It is therefore required that, unlike in the call’s previous editions, the project’s short description be written in English.

HARMONIA, announced for the 9th time, is a call for research projects carried out as international collaboration, non-co-financed from international resources. This year, its budget will exceed € 9.5 million.

Apart from projects carried out in direct collaboration with a partner from abroad, the funding may be also given to research conducted under international programmes for bi- or multilateral collaboration, and also to Polish research teams using large-scale international research infrastructure.

Both the Polish principal investigator and the leading partner are required to back their application with 3 to 7 published (or accepted for publication) papers, of which three should be attached to the proposal. The project’s short description should be written in Polish.

The call closes on 15th September 2017, and the publication of results is scheduled for 15th March 2018. For detailed information see the National Science Centre’s webpage.

Information about the call for proposals for Post-Doctoral Fellowships

Tue, 06/06/2017 - 13:18

On behalf of the Research Council of Lithuania we would like to inform you about the call for proposals for Post-Doctoral Fellowships. The Research Council of Lithuania, the main RTD project funding body in the country, on April 14th, 2017, launched the first call for proposals for project funding under the measure No 09.3.3-LMT-K-712 “Strengthening the Skills and Capacities of Public Sector Researchers for Engaging in High Level R&D Activities,” activity “Promotion of Post-Doctoral Fellowships” of the Operational Programme for European Union fund investments in 2014–2020.The purpose of the measure is to support post-doctoral fellowship studies, to enhance the scientific skills of young researchers through practical activities and the exchange of scientific ideas, as well as promoting the setting-up and development of scientific communication and networking.

The budget of the call is up to € 4.35 million.

Eligible applicants are  universities, Lithuanian state research institutes holding the right to carry out doctoral programmes in arts or science, and (or) state research institutes for researcher training alongside universities included in the open vocational information, counselling, and guidance AIKOS system. Postdoctoral research fellows may apply from all over the world and are expected to hold a doctoral degree awarded by a research and study institution, provided no more than five years have lapsed from the doctoral degree award date to the deadline for submission of applications indicated in the call for proposals (the period does not include maternity leave, paternity leave or child raising leave until the child is three years of age); they must be engaged in the research activity provided in the project.

The maximum amount of the project budget is up to € 72,450. The amount of eligible costs is determined for each project individually, and will be reimbursed according to unit costs and flat rates. The maximum funding intensity may exceed up to 100 % of all eligible costs.

The duration of a project shall be 24 months. In the course of the project implementation, the postdoctoral research fellow must be enrolled and attend a fellowship programme at a foreign research and study institution, a research centre, a laboratory, an enterprise, an institution, a library, an archive, an expedition, etc. at least for one month (this may be divided into two parts at least for 15 days).

The call closes at 17:00 (local time) on July 5th, 2017.

The procedure for application submission, information for applicants and call documents can be found at http://www.lmt.lt/en/news/call-for-proposals-gw2j.html