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![]() January 14, 2002 EXTREME WEATHER SCIENCE AND FORECASTING, NEW EARTH SCIENCE INSIGHTS, HIGHLIGHT NASA PRESENTATIONS AT AAAS SYMPOSIUM NASA scientists and other researchers will present four symposiums this weekend concerning the latest advances in severe weather detection, the complex changes in global snow and ice, global environmental monitoring and the interactions of aerosols and climate. These presentations will take place as part of the 2002 American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Boston, beginning Friday, February 15, 2002. Summaries of the subjects to be covered in each presentation, a list of the participants, the title of their research paper and with the time and place for each symposium are listed here. In addition to the material presented at the AAAS conference, NASA will broadcast visualizations of extreme weather, and the science behind it, on NASA-TV at 12 noon, 3 p.m., 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. EST on Friday, February 15. NASA-TV is broadcast on the GE2 satellite located on Transponder 9C, at 85 degrees West longitude, frequency 3880.0 MHz, audio 6.8 MHz. For more information, contact Rachel Weintraub, Associate TV Producer at the Goddard Space Flight Center at 301-286-0918 or by email at: Rachel.A.Weintraub.1@gsfc.nasa.gov Additional information is also available at:
http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/topstory/20020215aaas.html
As the global climate changes, nations around the world face more frequent and severe tornadoes, hurricanes, El Niño and La Niño related extreme weather, droughts and flooding. NASA satellites, technology and research are all helping people to better understand and forecast extreme weather and related climate events. Speakers and lectures for this symposium include:
"Predicting El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and Its Effects" Shripad Deo, NOAA/NWS Central Region Hydrologic Services Division, Kansas City, Mo.
Timothy Liu, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Steven J. Goodman, NASA's Marshall Spaceflight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
Marshall Shepherd, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Edward Gutro, E.A. Kelley Insurance, Quincy, Mass.
DECIPHERING THE COMPLEX CHANGES IN GLOBAL SNOW AND ICE Saturday, February 16, 3:00 - 6:00 p.m., Sheraton Back Bay Ballroom D The ice caps, snow cover and glaciers that make up the global cryosphere, or regions of the Earth where the surface is perennially frozen, have shown signs of decline in recent decades. There is a downward trend in the amount of sea-ice that extends into the ocean, accompanied by sea-ice thinning. Negative snow cover anomalies have dominated both Northern Hemisphere continents since the late 1980s. Small Arctic glaciers have declined in size as well. At the same time there has been pronounced winter and spring warming over the northern continents and a significant change in Arctic atmospheric circulation. But whether these climate changes can be interpreted as signals of enhanced greenhouse warming is open to debate. This session brings together scientists studying different aspects of the global cryosphere to look at what the data is telling them about why snow and ice cover are changing around the world. The speakers for this symposium include:
"The Northern Hemisphere's Spring Snow Drought'" Mark F. Meier, University of Colorado
Claire L. Parkinson, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Robert Bindschadler, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Ted Scambos, National Snow and Ice Data Center
Mark C. Serreze, National Snow and Ice Data Center
THE CHALLENGES AND PROMISE OF GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING Sunday, February 17, 9:00-12:00 p.m., Hynes Convention Center, Room 111 The era of intensive study of the Earth from space has arrived, with terabytes of data being collected every day from a growing and more capable constellation of Earth-observing spacecraft. But are scientists ready for this onslaught of data? This session takes a look at some of the major new scientific accomplishments of global environmental monitoring and the challenges that this new capability presents to the international scientific community. New spaceborne observations, coupled with data collected on the ground, are being used to tackle complex, multidisciplinary topics such as the flow of carbon through the atmosphere and biosphere and monitoring the health of tropical forests around the world. The data are also being used to address local issues such as land use and urban planning. The huge volume of data from these new Earth-observing satellites and networks presents scientists with the challenge of turning this flood of information into scientific knowledge. There is also an increasing need to train new Earth system scientists who can speak the "languages" of multiple disciplines and develop the technical tools to handle the flood and variety of data. The speakers and lectures for this symposium include:
"New Views of the Earth: Recent Results from Space-Based Remote Sensing" Richard W. Reynolds, National Environmental Satellite, Data and Information Service
Mark R. Abbott, Oregon State College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences
David L. Skole, Michigan State University, Basic Science and Remote Sensing
THE BIG CLIMATE IMPACT OF TINY PARTICLES Sunday February 17, 3:00-6:00 p.m. Hynes Convention Center, Room 110 Aerosols, the tiny atmospheric particles well known as a human health hazard in air pollution, are increasingly being studied for their contribution to changes in the environment. The recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change highlighted the various complex effects that different types of aerosols have on climate ? from adding to the greenhouse effect to changing the reflective properties of clouds ? and the great uncertainties in how large those effects are on climate warming. Recent studies have also shown how aerosols from massive fires and air pollution can suppress regional rainfall. The realization that anthropogenic aerosols can substantially alter precipitation patterns raises the issue of our impact on one of the most economically important climate factors: water availability and quality. Scientists have had difficulty measuring aerosols on a global basis because of their diverse physical characteristics and relatively short residence times in the atmosphere. To counter this problem, researchers have recently conducted large-scale experiments to study the complex interactions of aerosols and climate. Along with new global observations from a new generation of sensors on such missions as NASA's Terra spacecraft, new insights are emerging. This session presents the latest results from major field campaigns in Africa, South America and the Indian Ocean; new observations from space; and the implications of aerosol research on climate change policy strategies. The speakers for this symposium include:
"Remote Sensing of Aerosols and Their Impact on Climate" Harold J. Annegarn, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
Paulo Artaxo, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil
V. Ramanathan, Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Daniel Rosenfeld, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
James Hansen, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies
### Contacts: Cynthia M. O'Carroll / Krishna Ramanujan
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