Events
Nucletudes to the 2012 AP/S-URSI
Nucletudes will attend the 2012 IEEE International Symposium on Antennas and Propagation and USNC-URSI National Radio Science Meeting.
It will be held on July 8-14, 2012, in Chicago, IL, USA.
During the congress, Nucletudes will present the following topic :
A Rationale for Using Huygens Absorbing Boundary Conditions in Particle-in-Cell Codes

http://s15.a2zinc.net/clients/IEEE/APSURSI2012/Public/MainHall.aspx?ID=70
Nucletudes to the 2012 CEM congress
Nucletudes will attend the next 2012 International Symposium on Electromagnetic Compatibility on April 25-27, and will present within the framework of "Numerical Methods", the following topic :
Use of Huygens Absorbing Boundary Conditions (HABC) in a Maxwell/Vlasov code

Nucletudes to the 2012 IEEE NSREC conference
Nucletudes will attend the 2012 IEEE Nuclear and Space Radiation Effects conference in Florida on July 16-20, 2012

Nucletudes to the 2011 RADECS conference
Nucletudes attended the 12th European Conference on Radiation and its Effects on Components and Systems in Sevilla.
Conference APS SCCM 2011
Nucletudes to the Seventeenth Biennial International Conference of the APS Topical Group on Shock Compression of Condensed Matter from June 26th through July 1st, 2011.
http://www.marquette.edu/aps2011/
Nuclétudes au RADECS Austria 2010
11th European Conference on Radiation and its Effects on Components and Systems

The AIT - Austrian Institute of Technology organises in collaboration with the University of Montpelier 2 and partners the 11th European Conference on Radiation and its Effects on Components and Systems, RADECS 2010.
The conference features a Technical Program dedicated to the latest developments and experimental observations related to radiation effects on electronic and photonic components as well as on devices and systems. The working language of the conference is English.
New at RADECS 2010
New conference topic: "Ground Level Effects".
Thematic Workshops
The conference theme is Effects in Micro- and Nanometer Site Sizes due to Radiation Exposure.