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2006 JCSDA Seminars

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Title

Early Results from the COSMIC / FORMOSAT-3 Missionthis link pops up in a new window

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Speakers Dr. Bill Kuo
University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
Boulder, Colorado
Date Tuesday, November 14, 2006 at 10:00 a.m.
Abstract

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The atmospheric limb sounding technique making use of radio signals transmitted by the Global Position System (GPS) has emerged as a promising approach for global atmospheric measurements. As demonstrated by the proof-of-concept GPS Meteorology (GPS/MET) experiment and more recently by the CHAMP and SAC-C missions, the GPS radio occultation (RO) sounding data are shown to be of high accuracy and high vertical resolution. On 15 April 2006, the joint U.S.-Taiwan COSMIC/FORMOSAT-3 mission, a constellation of six microsatellites, was launched into a 500 km polar orbit from the Vandenberg Air Force Base. These satellites are being deployed to their final orbits at 800 km, which would take about a year. During the early phase of the deployment, the satellites are closely located. This offers a unique opportunity to examine the precision of the GPS RO measurements.

Since mid-August, COSMIC/FORMOSAT-3 has been providing large number (averaging ~1,350 GPS RO soundings per day, and at times exceeding 1,600 GPS RO soundings per day) of GPS radio occultation (RO) soundings to support the research and operational communities. The number of GPS RO soundings will be increased as the satellites are further separated and deployed into their final orbits. Preliminary evaluation study has shown that the GPS RO data from COSMIC/FORMOSAT-3 are of better quality than those from the previous missions. Several global operational centers (e.g. NCEP, ECMWF, CMC and UKMO) have already started testing the COSMIC/FORMOSAT-3 data for operational use, and have already reported encouraging results. The COSMIC/FORMOSAT-3 data have been shown to be very useful for evaluating weather prediction and ionospheric models. With the ability to penetrate deep into the lower troposphere with the advanced open-loop tracking technique, FORMOSAT-3/COSMIC data have shown capability to detect tropical atmospheric boundary layer. Such information is very useful for weather prediction and climate studies. This presentation will review the status of the COSMIC/FORMOSAT-3 mission, and present highlights of scientific research making use of GPS RO observations obtained over the first six months of the mission.


Title

Aerosol Optical Depth: Combining Different Data-sets From Remote Sensing To A "Recommended" Composite

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Speakers Stefan Kinne
Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany
& NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Date October 24, 2006
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abstract TBD


Title

NASA's Land Information System as a Testbed for JCSDA Partners and Investigators

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Speakers Dr. Christa D. Peters-Lidard
NASA / Goddard Space Flight Center, Head, Hydrological Sciences Branch
Date Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Title

Observation Impact Monitoring For NRL Atmospheric Variational Data Assimilation System (NAVDAS) - Navy Operational Global Atmospheric Prediction System (NOGAPS)

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Speakers Rolf Langland
Nancy Baker
Naval Research Laboratory Global Modeling Center
Date Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Title

Error Estimates for Assimilation of Satellite Sea Surface Temperature Data in Ocean Climate Models

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Speaker James G. Richman, College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences
Oregon State University
Date September 13, 2006

Title

Future Use and Challenges of Physics-Based Space Weather Data Assimilation

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Speaker Mihail Codrescu
NOAA, NWS, NCEP, Space Environment Center, Boulder, Colorado
Date September 13, 2006

Title

Space Weather in the Upper Atmosphere and Current Data Assimilation at SEC and possible use of COSMIC

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Speakers Tim Fuller-Rowell
University of Colorado, CIRES
NOAA, NWS, NCEP, Space Environment Center, Boulder, Colorado
Date August 15, 2006

Title

Alignment Errors and Ensemble-Based Data Assimilation

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Speaker James Hansen
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Date June 21, 2006

Title

Atmospheric Wind Sensing With Doppler Lidar: Results of Impact Studies of Airborne Wind Lidar Observations and Progress Towards the Space Mission ADM-Aeolus

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Speaker Oliver Reitebuch
German Aerospace Center, Institute of Atmospheric Physics
Date May 15, 2006

Title

The Exploitation of Satellite Data at the U.K. Met Office

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Speaker Roger Saunders
UK MET Office
Date April 19, 2006

Title

Comparison Between Local Ensemble Transform Kalman Filter And PSAS In NASA Finite Volume GCM

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Speakers Elana Fertig, Hong Li, Junjie Liu, et al (students at University of Maryland) with Eugenia Kalnay
Date March 15, 2006

Title

GOES-R Hyperspectral Environmental Suite (HES) Evolution and Current Requirement Studies

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Speaker Monica Coakley
Date February 16, 2006

Title

Snow And Vegetation: Remote Sensing And Modeling

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Speaker Michael Barlage
Date February 9, 2006
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