© 2024 IAU General Assembly 2024 – Cape Town

Each Symposium is published as an issue of the IAU Proceedings Series by Cambridge University Press (CUP), which aims to publish in a timely fashion, so edited material is required within three months after the Meeting. An issue should serve as a valuable record for future reference and be pitched at a level that is useful to researchers newly entering the field. Lead editors will be responsible for deciding how the content is distributed amongst contributors, given a total page limitation, and they will communicate this information with authors in the first instance. General instructions for authors and editors for the publication of the proceedings of IAU Symposia will be available online.
The proceedings of Focus Meetings will be combined into a single volume and published by CUP in the IAU series Astronomy in Focus. This is under the editorial authority of the IAU GS, who will agree with the lead editor of each Focus Meeting the material to be included within page limitations. Guidelines and Instructions will be provided. Complete manuscripts of individual FMs must have been submitted by lead editors before the end of the year of the GA.
IAUS 390 A Multi-Point view of the Sun: Advances in Solar Observations and in Space Weather Understanding Marco Romoli marco.romoli@unifi.it
IAUS 391 The first chapters of our cosmic history with JWST Themiya Nanayakkara themiyananayakkara@gmail.com
IAUS 392 Neutral hydrogen in and around galaxies in the SKA era D.J. Pisano dj.pisano@uct.ac.za
IAUS 393 Planetary Science and Exoplanets in the Era of James Webb Space Telescope Zouhair Benkhaldoun zouhair@uca.ac.ma
IAUS 394 All inclusive AGN Prof. Mirjana Pović [she] mpovic@iaa.es
Focus Meetings
FM1 – Harnessing ground-based optical telescopes: an opportunity for emerging astronomy in Africa Yosry Azzam yosryahmed@yahoo.co.uk
FM2 – A Coherent View of Atomic and Molecular Gas from Infrared to Radio Wavelengths Dr. Eva Schinnerer schinner@mpia.de
FM3 – Follow-up observations of small bodies in the Solar System in the era of large discovery surveys Nicolas Erasmus nerasmus@saao.ac.za
FM4 – Bridging the final stages of massive stars to supernovae and transients Hanindyo Kuncarayakti kuncarayakti@gmail.com
FM5 – The future of radio astronomy in an increasingly crowded spectrum Gyula I. G. Józsa gjozsa@mpifr-bonn.mpg.de
FM6 – History of Astronomy in South Africa: The Late Modern Period Christiaan Sterken csterken@vub.ac.be
FM7 – New Horizons at the interface between Computational Astrophysics and Big Data Shazrene Mohamed shazrene@saao.ac.za
FM8 – Advances and Challenges in Understanding the Solar and Stellar Dynamos Alexander Kosovichev
alexander.g.kosovichev@njit.
FM9 – Measures of luminous and dark matter in galaxies across time Gauri Sharma gsharma@uwc.ac.za
FM10 – Teaching capacity of remote observing facilities for the Universities and High Schools Abdelmajid Benhida a.benhida@uca.ac.ma
FM11 – Multi-wavelength Astrometry Chris Jacobs Chris.Jacobs@jpl.nasa.gov
FM12 – The High-Energy Gamma-ray Universe: Results and perspectives with wide-field ground-based facilities Ulisses Barres de Almeida ulisses@cbpf.br