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Scientific Programme


 Invited talks: 20 min + 5 min questions .
 Contributed talks: 12 min + 3 min questions.

 The ELSA 2010 programme with timing is available here.
 The poster list is here. A complete list of the talks (invited and contributions) and posters, along with the abstracts, is available here.
 The booklet of abstracts is available here.

Monday 7 June

Welcome

Session 1: ELSA and Gaia: context and status

ELSA and Gaia: Four years of fruitful European collaboration L. Lindegren
General status of the mission and expected performance T. Prusti
The Gaia satellite: presentation & status of development P. Charvet

Sessions 2 and 3: Modelling Gaia

Gaia data simulations: a powerful tool to prepare for scientific exploitation X. Luri & C. Babusiaux
Testing instrument capabilities from simulations D. Gardiol
Long term analysis for the BAM device D. Bonino & D. Gardiol (contribution)
Modelling the attitude: lessons learnt from Hipparcos F. van Leeuwen

Sessions 3 and 4: Detectors and radiations

Modelling the attitude of the Gaia satellite D. Risquez
Radiation effects on Gaia CCDs T. Prod’homme
Native and irradiated Charge Transfer Inefficiency characterization J.F. Pasquier
Implementation of models for Charge Transfer Inefficiency (CTI) in the Gaia pixel-level data simulator M. Weiler & C.Babusiaux
Next generation of light detectors in Astronomy R. Kohley

Session 4: Gaia data processing: harware and network side

Hardware and networks for Gaia data processing W. O’Mullane et al.
The CNES role in the GAIA data processing X. Passot & O. La Marle (contribution)

Welcome drink

Dessert talk: The Depth of Heavens: belief and knowledge during 2500 years, E. Høg

Tuesday 8 June

Session 1: Processing massive data flows

Processing massive datasets in genomics F. Artiguenave
Gaia data analysis and mutual dependencies between the three data flows F. Mignard
Java-based communication in a High Performance Computing environment A. Fries

Sessions 1 and 2: Gaia astrometry

The astrometric solution of Gaia: A hard problem L. Lindegren & U. Bastian
Monitoring the quality of the astrometric solution A. Bombrun
Characterizing the astrometric errors in the Gaia catalogue B. Holl et al.
News on Seeking Gaia’s Astrometric Core Solution with AGIS U. Lammers & L. Lindegren (contribution)
Global Sphere Reconstruction in the Astrometric Verification Unit U. Abbas

Session 3: Space astrometry: from milli- to micro-arcsec astrometry

Nano-JASMINE: use of AGIS for the next astrometric satellite Y. Yamada
Space Interferometry Mission (SIM)-Lite Status M. Shao et al. (contribution)
The Joint Milli-Arcsecond Pathfinder Mission Gaume et al. (contribution)

Sessions 3 and 4: Gaia photometry and variability analysis

Gaia photometry (G and BP/RP): methods, performance and problems C. Jordi et al.
Gaia spectro-photometry calibration and comparison to ground-based systems C. Cacciari
The variable Universe through Gaia’s eyes L. Eyer et al.
Study of short period variables and small amplitude periodic variables M. Varadi & L. Eyer
Real-time classification of astronomical transients A. Mahabal

Wednesday 9 June

Session 1: Gaia spectroscopy and stellar parameter determination

The Gaia spectroscopic instrument (RVS): a technical challenge M. Cropper & D.Katz
Gaia spectroscopy: methods, performances and scientific returns D. Katz et al.
Ground-based RVS standard stars G. Jasniewicz et al.

Session 2: Ground-based spectroscopy

Hunting for stellar streams in the solar neighbourhood with the SDSS and GSC-II kinematic survey P. re Fiorentin
Tests of MATISSE on large spectral datasets from the ESO archive C. Worley et al. (contribution)
Prospects for wide field multi-object spectroscopic instrumentation K. Freeman
GYES, a multifibre spectrograph for the CFHT, and European context P. Bonifacio et al. (contribution)

Session 3: Solar system objects

New perspectives in Solar System science: Gaia in the 2015 context P. Tanga & F. Mignard
Inverse methods for asteroid orbit computation D. Oszkiewicz et al.
Complementary ground-based observations for Solar System applications W. Thuillot & D. Hestroffer

Visit of the Department of the definition of the atomic time, BIPM (20 people max)

Gala dinner

Thursday 10 June

Sessions 1 and 2: Stars: basic elements of the Universe

New perspectives in stellar physics: Gaia in the 2015 context Y. Lebreton
Perspectives for determining stellar surface parameters H. Ludwig
Stellar rotation and the age of star determination L. Santoro
Limits in astrometric accuracy induced by surface brightness asymmetries E. Pasquato et al.
Variable stars, powerful tools for galactic structure and evolution G. Clementini
Astrometry and Exoplanets: the Gaia Era, and Beyond A. Sozzetti

Sessions 3 and 4: The Galaxy and its neighbours

The Galaxy with Large Surveys: Successes and Future Analysis Challenges M. Juric
Prospect for dynamical modelling of the Galaxy: Gaia in the 2015 context D. Pfenniger
The chemical evolution of the Galactic thick and thin disks C. Chiappini
A New Mechanism for Galactic Disc Mixing: Implications to the Milky Way Evolution I. Minchev (contribution)
Preparing the Besancon Galaxy Model for the comparison with Gaia data M.A. Czekaj et al.
Can we use the nearby velocity distribution to constrain the properties of the bar and the spiral arms of the MW? Gaia capabilities T. Antoja et al. (contribution)
Gaia: new perspectives in understanding the galactic bulge C. Babusiaux
Dynamical inference from a kinematic snapshot J. Bovy & D. Hogg (contribution)

Friday 11 June

Session 1: The Galaxy and outside

New perspectives from the Galactic halo A. Helmi
Modelling stellar populations in galaxies resolved in stars by Gaia M. Belcheva et al.
Synthetic and Observed Spectra of Stars and Stellar Populations as Templates for Gaia T. Saguner et al.
The unresolved galaxies with Gaia M. Kontizas et al.

Session 2: Gaia and beyond

QSO survey and reference frame with Gaia P. Charlot
How I expect to access the GAIA catalogue D. Hogg
Gaia outreach features available to the scientific community C. Blasco
Concluding remarks A. Brown