Monthly Research colloquia of ASI

The Monthly Research Colloquia of ASI (MoRe-ASI) are a series of informal and short scientific talks held monthly on line by the Italian Space Agency (ASI). Each month one speaker presents latest interests and findings in one of the following thematic areas related to the study of the Universe:

- Space Astrophysics and High Energy Astrophysics

- Solar System Sciences

- Cosmology

- Exoplanetary Sciences

- Life Sciences

This series provides an opportunity to get updated with the science and progress going on in the international scientific community. Among the speakers, postdocs and young researchers are also given the opportunity to present their own research and get feedback about their ongoing projects. The seminars aim also to encourage interdisciplinary collaboration across teams and within the scientific communities at large.

The MoRe-ASI colloquia are given remotely. The duration of each talk is about 45 min. A Q&A session of max 30 min is also foreseen.

 

Information on the next MoRe-ASI webinar will be announced on this webpage soon.

 

Webpage background image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/ASI/INAF/JIRAM

List of speakers and abstracts from past seminars
MoRe-ASI Scientific Organizing Committee
Request more information

‣ News

TUESDAY 22 APRIL 2025

Earth Day – Celebrate it with a “Your Turn” on Instagram ‣

April 22 celebrates world earth day MORE...

SUNDAY 20 APRIL 2025

The Italian Space Agency at the official inauguration ceremony of the African Space Agency ‣

On the occasion of the inauguration ceremony of the African Space Agency (AfSA), the Italian Space Agency (ASI) was represented by the Director General, Luca Salamone, who brought the Italian greetings on a historic day for the African continent and for the international space community. MORE...

MONDAY 07 APRIL 2025

ASI at the 40th Space Symposium ‣

Colorado Springs (CO, USA) from April 7-10, 2025 MORE...

MONDAY 07 APRIL 2025

COSMO-SkyMed monitoring of Santorini volcano ‣

ASI and Aristotle University of Thessaloniki have started a scientific collaboration to monitor Santorini volcano in Greece MORE...