The African Astronomical Society (AfAS)
is a Pan-African Professional Society of Astronomers.
Latest News
The African Network of Women in Astronomy (AfNWA) is inviting nominations for the 2024 Women in Astronomy in Africa awards.…...
Are you ready to innovate and tackle astronomical challenges using data science? As part of the African Astronomical Society (AfAS)…...
The African Astronomical Society (AfAS) invites bids from institutions on the African continent to host the AfAS Annual Conference in…...
The African Astronomical Society (AfAS) invites bids from institutions in South Africa to host the AfAS Annual Conference in 2027.…...
abstract submission: Closed We are excited to inform you that the third annual conference of the African Astronomical Society…...
The “The Beauty of Astronomy” online art competition, a collaborative effort between the International Astronomical Union General Assembly 2024 (IAU…...
APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS GUIDELINES APPLICATION DEADLINE: 25 December 2024 The African Astronomical Society (AfAS) is the primary pan-African professional society representing…...
Application deadline: 25 December 2024 The African Astronomical Society (AfAS) is the primary pan-African professional society representing astronomers from across…...
Join the African Astronomical Society (AfAS) as an Accounting and Administration Officer! Take the next step in your finance career…...
Astronomy
- Development of Astronomical Observing Facilities conference puts forward the case for UK supported Astronomical Observatory in Kenya
- MeerKAT radio telescope inaugurated in South Africa – reveals clearest view yet of centre of the Milky Way
- Inauguration of the MeerLICHT telescope
- Ghana telescope heralds first pan-African array
- SALT helps international team to discover major supercluster of galaxies hidden by Milky Way
Astronomy
- South African Student Constructed Indlebe Radio Telescope
- The African Data Intensive Research Cloud
- Broadening Participation in the Sciences within and from Africa: Purpose, Challenges, and Prospects
- National Astrophysics and Space Science Programme
- ‘The first philosophers were astronomers’: Curiosity and innovation in higher education policy
- ‘The first philosophers were astronomers’: Curiosity and innovation in higher education policy