The QUADMARTS workshop will take place from the morning of Tuesday, 18 November, to the afternoon of Thursday, 20 November, at ISMO.
It will provide the best possible coverage of the network’s research themes through six half-day sessions, grouped by major application areas or instrumental methods:

  • astrophysics / astrochemistry

  • atmospheric chemistry

  • combustion

  • high-precision measurements

Invited Speakers
Megan Bentley, University of Florida – USA
Bernadette Broderick, University of Missouri – USA
Hélène Fleurbaey, Université Grenoble Alpes – France
Stephen Klippenstein, Argonne National Laboratory – USA
François Lique, University of Rennes – France
Craig Taatjes, Sandia National Laboratories – USA
Piotr Wcisło, Nicolaus Copernicus University – Poland
Gérard Wysocki, Princeton University – USA

QUADMARTS is an International Research Network (IRN) organized between French and international partners, funded by the CNRS as well as all partner institutions. Its main objective is to organize joint seminars, workshops, and mobility programs among the partners.

QUADMARTS is dedicated to developing new methods and applications for determining the products of elementary reactions and photodissociation processes, with applications at both low and high temperatures in astrochemistry, atmospheric chemistry, and combustion.
In recent years, experimental setups as well as theoretical tools have been developed to quantitatively address the question of product branching ratios under a wide range of physical conditions across the scientific communities mentioned above.
From an experimental standpoint, quantitative information can be obtained using several approaches, including photoionization or electronic spectroscopy combined with mass spectrometry, as well as optical spectroscopy and microwave spectroscopy.