Near Field Cosmology in the Era of Big Data: Local Group and Beyond
Description
Update: We have now notified all abstract submitters of their results, and all those offered a talk or poster have confirmed. If you did not receive an email, please check your spam folder -- unfortunately, we are unable to offer additional presentation slots at this time. In-person attendance is limited to invited speakers (including reviews and tutorials), SOC members, and contributors selected for oral or poster presentations; due to venue capacity, we cannot accommodate additional in-person participants. We are pleased to announce that remote participation via Zoom will be available. Online registration is expected to open from June 1 to June 15. Please check the website during that period for details.
The next wave of astronomical surveys -- including the Rubin Observatory, Euclid, DESI, 4MOST, Gaia DR4, and more -- will transform near-field cosmology into a precision laboratory. Billions of stars and hundreds of faint galaxies will soon be available with full six-dimensional phase-space information and detailed chemical “fingerprints,” while new simulations make it possible to follow galaxy assembly down to galactic and sub-galactic scales.
At the same time, long-standing tensions in the ΛCDM paradigm on small scales (including the missing-satellites, cusp–core, and too-big-to-fail problems), together with discoveries of rich dwarf galaxy populations, dynamically cold stellar streams, and extremely metal-poor relics in the Milky Way, M31, and beyond, demand new data-driven approaches to understand the structure and evolution of galaxies and the nature of dark matter.
This workshop will focus on near-field cosmology in the Local Group and beyond, with particular emphasis on:
- dwarf galaxies with resolved stellar populations in the Milky Way and M31 systems
- stellar streams as probes of galaxy assembly, the Galactic potential, and dark matter substructure;
- constraints on dark matter physics from nearby galaxies and their satellites;
- “first-star archaeology” using metal-poor stars in the halo, dwarf galaxies, and streams;
- extending near-field techniques to galaxies beyond the Local Group.
We aim to bring together three overlapping communities:
- observers exploiting current and upcoming surveys;
- theorists and numerical astrophysicists developing galaxy and dark-matter simulations;
- data-science specialists creating machine-learning and statistical tools capable of handling petabyte-scale data.
Program Structure
The meeting will take place at the Fields Institute on July 20–24, 2026. Mornings and early afternoons will feature a blend of invited review talks and shorter contributed presentations, with ample time for open discussion. Each afternoon will include 1-2 hour hands-on tutorials designed to teach participants -- especially early-career researchers -- how to work directly with the newest observational (e.g., Rubin, Euclid, DESI, SDSS) or simulation data sets.
All presentations are expected to be delivered in person. We expect approximately 70 in-person participants.
The workshop will include ~20 posters and 1-2 flash-talk sessions.
Coffee breaks and lunch will be provided.
Submit your abstract at this link by March 1st, 2026.
Schedule details found here.
Key Dates:
- Dec 1, 2025: First announcement; abstract submission opens (including travel support requests)
- March 1, 2026: Abstract submission deadline
- April 1, 2026: Abstract and travel support decisions announced
- April 15, 2026: Speaker acceptance deadline; registration opens
- May 15, 2026: Registration closes (or earlier if capacity is reached)
- July 20, 2026: Workshop begins
Registration Fee
Registration for this workshop is free of charge. Please note that space is limited due to the workshop format. Priority will be given to oral and poster presenters whose abstract is accepted, with remaining spots opened to the broader community on a first-come, first-served basis in early-to-mid April. Due to the free registration model, our ability to provide travel support for early career scientists will be limited.
Invited Speakers (Review Talks)
- Michelle Collins (U. Surrey) -- Dwarf Galaxy
- Kathryn Johnston (Columbia) -- Stellar Stream
- Ethan Nadler (UC San Diego) -- Dark Matter
- Kim Venn (U. Victoria) -- First Star Archaeology
- Annette Ferguson (U. Edinburgh) -- Beyond the Local Group
Tutorial Instructors and Topics:
We are pleased to announce the following tutorial sessions:
- Peter Ferguson (University of Washington) — Rubin/LSST
- Eduardo Balbinot (Leiden Observatory) — Euclid
- Sergey Koposov (University of Edinburgh) — DESI
- Ilija Medan (Vanderbilt University) — SDSS
- Robyn Sanderson (University of Pennsylvania) — FIRE
- Alex Riley (Lund University) — Auriga
SOC:
Jo Bovy -- University of Toronto
Denis Erkal -- University of Surrey
Azadeh Fattahi -- Stockholm University
Alex Ji -- University of Chicago
Ting Li -- University of Toronto (Chair)
Alan McConnachie -- NRC Herzberg / University of Victoria
Sarah Pearson -- University of Copenhagen
Nora Shipp -- University of Washington
LOC:
Ting Li -- University of Toronto
Shane Liu -- University of Toronto, Fields Institute
Gustavo Medina -- University of Toronto
Nasser Mohammed -- University of Toronto
Gabriel Pfaffman -- University of Toronto
Nathan Sandford -- University of Toronto
Akshara Viswanathan -- University of Victoria / CITA
Sponsors
We gratefully acknowledge support from our sponsors:
The Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics
The Faculty of Arts & Science, University of Toronto
The Dunlap Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, University of Toronto
The Fields Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences
Schedule
| 09:00 to 09:20 |
Registration
|
| 09:20 to 09:30 |
Welcome & Logistics
|
| 09:30 to 10:00 |
Review Talk - Dwarf Galaxies
Michelle Collins, University of Surrey |
| 10:00 to 10:15 |
Uniform Kinematics and Metallicities of Milky Way versus M31 Satellite Galaxies
Marla Geha, Yale University |
| 10:15 to 10:30 |
Probing Dark Matter and the Galaxy–Halo Connection through the DELVE Census of Milky Way Satellites
Chin Yi Tan, University of Chicago |
| 10:30 to 11:00 |
Coffee Break
|
| 11:00 to 11:15 |
Results from the Fornax 10k survey: the first spectroscopic survey to obtain over 10,000 radial velocities in a Milky Way Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy
Andrew Pace, University of Virginia |
| 11:15 to 11:30 |
Galactic Ghosts: Diffuse Milky Way Satellites and their Faint Stellar Structures
Kaia Atzberger, University of Virginia |
| 11:30 to 11:45 |
Binary systems and their impact on kinematic studies in the era of big data
Xiaowei Ou, University of Virginia |
| 11:45 to 12:00 |
The Effect of the Large Magellanic Cloud on Orbits of Milky Way Satellite Galaxies in a Time-Dependent Potential
Ekta Patel, Villanova University |
| 12:00 to 13:30 |
Lunch (provided)
|
| 13:30 to 14:30 |
Tutorial 1: Euclid
Eduardo Balbinot |
| 14:30 to 15:00 |
Flash Talks for Posters
(Group 1) |
| 15:00 to 15:30 |
Coffee Break
|
| 15:30 to 16:00 |
Discussions
Alan McConnachie (TBC) & Alex Drlica-Wagner (TBC) |
| 16:00 to 17:00 |
Tutorial 2: Rubin/ LSST
Peter Ferguson, University of Washington, Seattle |
| 09:00 to 09:30 |
Review Talk - Stellar Streams
Kathryn Johnston, Columbia University |
| 09:30 to 09:45 |
The Galactic Sidekick: Quantifying the LMC’s Disruption of Stellar Streams in the FIRE Simulations
Adriana Dropulic, Niels Bohr Institute |
| 09:45 to 10:00 |
The end of hierarchical galaxy formation
Alexander Riley, Lund University |
| 10:00 to 10:15 |
Hunting starless dark matter subhaloes and wandering intermediate-mass black holes through parallel stellar streams
Yuka Kaneda, The University of Tokyo |
| 10:15 to 10:30 |
A complete census of Northern Milky Way satellites and streams using UNIONS
Andrew Li, University of Victoria |
| 10:30 to 11:00 |
Coffee Break
|
| 11:00 to 11:15 |
Characterizing the Andromeda Dark Matter Halo with Stellar Streams Observed by DESI
Sergey Koposov, University of Edinburgh |
| 11:15 to 11:30 |
The Cetus-Palca Stream’s Interaction with Segue 2 in the DESI Milky Way Survey
Mika Lambert, University of California, Santa Cruz |
| 11:30 to 11:45 |
Chemical Cartography of the Sagittarius Stream with Gaia
Emily Cunningham, Boston University |
| 11:45 to 12:00 |
Ancient debris of the Magellanic Stream as tracers of tidal disruption
Akshara Viswanathan, University of Victoria |
| 12:00 to 13:30 |
Lunch (provided)
|
| 13:30 to 13:45 |
Rapid Modeling of Tidal Tails in CDM and Alternatives: Many streams, Many impacts
Jacob Nibauer, Princeton University |
| 13:45 to 14:00 |
Using Simulation Based Inference to Constrain the Dark Matter
Ella Marin, University of Washington, Seattle |
| 14:00 to 14:15 |
Can pre-accretion tidal heating produce gaps, spurs and cocoons in a GD-1-like stream?
Brigette Segovia, University of Michigan |
| 14:15 to 14:30 |
A Census of Milky Way Stellar Streams with DESI DR2
Nasser Mohammed, University of Toronto |
| 14:30 to 15:00 |
Flash Talks for Posters
(Group 2) |
| 15:00 to 15:30 |
Coffee Break
|
| 15:30 to 16:00 |
Discussions
Nora Shipp, University of Washington, Seattle, Denis Erkal, University of Surrey |
| 16:00 to 17:00 |
Tutorial 3: DESI
Sergey Koposov, University of Edinburgh |
| 18:00 to 20:00 |
Conference Dinner
|
| 09:00 to 09:30 |
Review Talk -- Metal-Poor Stars & First Star Archaeology
Kim Venn |
| 09:30 to 09:45 |
Understanding Population III feedback using SFHs and elemental abundances of Local Group galaxies
Pratik Gandhi, Yale University |
| 09:45 to 10:00 |
Early Science with the DECam MAGIC Survey: Mapping the Ancient Galaxy in CaHK
Anirudh Chiti, Stanford University |
| 10:00 to 10:15 |
Early neutron-capture production channels revealed by extremely metal-poor stars in the inner Galaxy
Hillary Diane Andales, University of Chicago |
| 10:15 to 10:30 |
Near-field Cosmology from Faint Milky Way Satellites to the Magellanic Clouds
Guilherme Limberg, University of Chicago |
| 10:30 to 11:00 |
Coffee Break (Poster Viewing for Group 1)
|
| 11:00 to 11:15 |
Connecting Stellar Halos from Cosmological Simulations to the Milky Way and Nearby Galaxies
Madeline Lucey, University of Pennsylvania |
| 11:15 to 11:30 |
Chemical decoding the Galactic halo through large-scale surveys
Alice Mori, University of Florence |
| 11:30 to 11:45 |
Type Ia Supernovae Enrichment in Low-Mass Galaxies: Implications for Galactic Archaeology
Mairead Heiger, University of Toronto |
| 11:45 to 12:00 |
Data-Driven Stellar Abundances from All The Spectra
Josh Speagle, University of Toronto |
| 12:00 to 12:30 |
Free Discussion
|
| 12:30 to 14:00 |
Free Afternoon (no lunch provided)
|
| 09:00 to 09:30 |
Review Talk -- Dark Matter
Ethan Nadler, UC San Diego |
| 09:30 to 09:45 |
EDGE: Constraining Dark Matter with the Smallest Dwarf Galaxies
Stacy Kim |
| 09:45 to 10:00 |
Probing Atomic Dark Matter with Stellar Streams in Milky Way-Mass Galaxies
Lucas Seiji Mandacaru Guerra, Princeton University |
| 10:00 to 10:15 |
Probing the Nature of Dark Matter in Ultra-Faint Galaxies with LYRA
Claudia Muni, Stockholm University |
| 10:15 to 10:30 |
Differences in Stellar Stream Populations in Self-Interacting Dark Matter and Cold Dark Matter using Cosmological Simulations
Maya Silverman, University of Copenhagen |
| 10:30 to 11:00 |
Coffee Break
|
| 11:00 to 11:15 |
Collisional Dynamics in the Faintest Galaxies
Raphael Errani, Carnegie Mellon University |
| 11:15 to 11:30 |
Resolving the Local Dark Universe through the lens of Machine Learning
Tri Nguyen, Northwestern University |
| 11:30 to 11:45 |
The effect of the Large Magellanic Cloud close passage on the shape of Tucana IV
Aliaksandra Senkevich, University of Surrey |
| 11:45 to 12:00 |
Probing Halo Substructure and the Milky Way Potential with RR Lyrae Stars in the DESI survey
Gustavo Medina Toledo, University of Toronto |
| 12:00 to 13:30 |
Lunch (provided)
|
| 13:00 to 13:30 |
(Poster Viewing for Group 2)
|
| 13:30 to 14:30 |
Tutorial 4: Auriga
Alexander Riley, Lund University |
| 14:30 to 14:45 |
Modeling Subhalo Mass Evolution and Enabling Inference with Disrupting Satellites in the Milky Way
Tara Dacunha, Stanford University |
| 14:45 to 15:00 |
Rise of the forsaken relics: connecting present-day stellar streams and phase-mixed galaxies to the Epoch of Reionization
Aritra Kundu, University of Pennsylvania |
| 15:00 to 15:30 |
Coffee Break
|
| 15:30 to 16:00 |
Discussions
Jo Bovy, University of Toronto, Azadeh Fattahi, Stockholm University |
| 16:00 to 17:00 |
Tutorial: FIRE
Robyn Sanderson, University of Pennsylvania |
| 09:00 to 09:30 |
Review Talk -- Beyond the Local Group
Annette Ferguson, University of Edinburgh |
| 09:30 to 09:45 |
Mapping Gravity with Extragalactic Streams and Citizen Science
Nathaniel Starkman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
| 09:45 to 10:00 |
The luminous and dark matter content of Ultra-Diffuse Galaxies
Maria Luisa Buzzo |
| 10:00 to 10:15 |
The Merian Survey: An Emission-Line Census of Star-Forming Dwarf Galaxies Beyond the Local Group
Shany Danieli, Tel Aviv University |
| 10:15 to 10:30 |
A comprehensive study of dwarf galaxies with Euclid
Yimeng Tang, University of California, Santa Cruz |
| 10:30 to 11:00 |
Coffee Break
|
| 11:00 to 11:15 |
Contextualizing the Evolution of Wide-Field Survey Dwarf Galaxy Discoveries with JWST Resolved Star Spectroscopy
Katie Sharpe, University of California Berkeley |
| 11:15 to 11:30 |
Is the Dwarf Galaxy–Halo Connection Universal?
Inbar Havilio, Tel Aviv University |
| 11:30 to 11:45 |
First constraints on a population of Dark Matter halos using extragalactic stellar streams
David Chemaly, University of Cambridge |
| 11:45 to 12:00 |
Statistical Predictions of the Accreted Stellar Halos around Milky Way-Like Galaxies
Sebastian Monzon, Yale University |
| 12:00 to 13:30 |
Lunch (provided)
|
| 13:30 to 14:30 |
Tutorial 6: SDSS-V
Ilija Medan, Vanderbilt University |
| 14:30 to 14:45 |
The Future of Precision Astronomy: The Best Telescope is All the Telescopes
Kevin McKinnon, University of Toronto |
| 14:45 to 15:00 |
Non-parametric modelling in Galactic Dynamics
Timothy Hapitas, Queen's University |
| 15:00 to 15:30 |
Coffee Break
|
| 15:30 to 16:00 |
Discussions
Sarah Pearson, The Technical University of Denmark, Shany Danieli, Tel Aviv University |
| 16:00 to 16:15 |
We Can See Your Halo: Deciphering the Milky Way’s Accretion History with the S5 and OzArch Surveys
Daniel Zucker, Macquarie University |
| 16:15 to 16:30 |
Ground-based Imaging Surveys for Near Field Cosmology: from DECam to Rubin LSST
Alex Drlica-Wagner |
| 16:30 to 17:00 |
Closing Remark
Josh Simon |

