Call for abstracts
Deadline 24th of April 2008The Organising Committee welcomes the submission of abstracts for oral and poster presentation at the International Workshop on Photoionization 2008 (IWP).
Accepted abstracts will be published in the programme book given to all delegates.
If payment is made before the notification and the abstract is not accepted, the registration fee is refundable.
Submission guidelines:
- Abstracts should be submitted electronically no later than 24 April 2008. Enter the submission by completing this form.
- Acknowledgement of receipt of your submission will be sent within 24 hours to the e-mail address stated under section "contact details".
- Notification on acceptance of the abstracts will be e-mailed to the contact person in mid May 2008.
- The contact person will receive all correspondence concerning the abstract. The contact person is responsible for informing the authors of the status of the abstract. The e-mail address of the contact person will be printed in the programme book.
- Abstracts must be written in English.
- Maximum 300 words (ca. 2300 characters including spaces but excluding title and author details).
- Make the abstract as informative as possible, including a brief statement of the purpose of the study, the method used, the result obtained, and the conclusion based upon the result. You may subtitle the paragraphs in bold format in the following order: Background, Method, Results and Conclusion.
- It is the author?s responsibility to submit a correct abstract; any errors in spelling, grammar, or scientific fact will be reproduced as typed by the author.
- You can follow the progress of your abstract online by using your Personal Page. Your personal page makes it possible for you to:
- make changes/updates until the submission deadline
- read and print your abstract
- follow the status of your submitted abstract
Topics
- One of the following topics that best describes the abstract should be indicated upon submission:
- Photoionization of atoms and molecules
- Spectroscopy of biological molecules in gas phase
- Resonant/Normal Auger spectroscopy
- Multicoincidence spectroscopy
- Partial Cross section measurements
- Atto and femtosecond spectroscopy
- New light sources, including free electron lasers
- Doppler free spectroscopy
(COLTRIMS and MOTRIMS) - Circular/linear dichroism
