100 likes | 216 Views
Overview of NASA Biogeochemistry/Carbon Research and Charge to Afternoon Breakouts. Paula Bontempi, NASA Headquarters CC&E Joint Science Workshop 28 April 2008. Programmatic Foci. Terrestrial Carbon Cycle and Biogeochemistry Research: - Interagency North American Carbon Program (NACP)
E N D
Overview of NASA Biogeochemistry/Carbon Research and Charge to Afternoon Breakouts Paula Bontempi, NASA Headquarters CC&E Joint Science Workshop 28 April 2008
Programmatic Foci Terrestrial Carbon Cycle and Biogeochemistry Research: - Interagency North American Carbon Program (NACP) - Continental-scale satellite data products - Regional studies of fire, disturbance, freeze-thaw, etc. - Development of models and data assimilation approaches - Interim synthesis studies and support (mid-continent synthesis, thematic data center, up-scaling, uncertainty analysis) - Large Scale Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia (LBA) - Tropical forest conversion and regrowth effects on carbon storage and flux - Tropical forest conversion and regrowth effects on nutrient dynamics and trace gas fluxes - Regional-scale satellite data products and modeling - Global-scale observations and modeling studies (e.g., fire emissions, terrestrial NPP)
Programmatic Foci Land Cover/Land Use Change Carbon Cycle and Biogeochemistry Research: - The Northern Eurasia Earth Science Partnership Initiative (NEESPI) - Interactions of forest cover dynamics with carbon cycle in temperate and boreal zones - Interactions of biogeochemical and water cycles - Remote sensing and modeling of changes in land use (e.g. urban, agriculture) affecting biogeochemical cycles
Programmatic Foci Aquatic Carbon Cycle and Biogeochemistry Research - Ocean Carbon and Biogeochemistry Program (OCB) - Interagency North American Carbon Program (NACP) / Ocean Carbon and Climate Change Program (OCCC) - Continental-scale satellite data products - Regional studies of N. Pacific/N.Atlantic air/sea CO2 flux, land/ocean exchanges and transformations of biogeochemical species etc. - Development of models and data assimilation approaches - Technical development, synthesis studies, and modeling using existing time series or coastal locations - Southern Ocean Gas Exchange Experiment (SO GasEx) - Particle, bubble optics, pCO2 - Regional Process Studies - Land/sea interactions, exchanges, transformations, fluxes (water quality), air/sea gas exchange, CLIVAR - Ocean Acidification process studies - Global-scale observations and modeling studies (e.g., air/sea CO2 flux, NPP, ocean acidification, carbon-climate)
Session Charge(Meeting web site – Detailed Agenda – Purpose and Core Questions + Mission Description) Breakout Session I — Science Enabled by New Measurements 1. Science Enabled by New Measurements of CO2 (OCO, ASCENDS, etc.) - Part 1 [discussion forum] (2 files; 0 comments) Chairs: Berrien Moore, David Crisp Room: 2100 / 2102 / 2104 2. Science Enabled by New Measurements of Ocean Properties from Polar Orbit (ACE, etc.) 3. Science Enabled by New Measurements of Ocean Properties from Geostationary Orbit (GEO-CAPE, etc.) 4. Science Enabled by New Hyperspectral Observations Related to Physiology and Functional Types (HyspIRI) 5. Science Enabled by New Measurements of Vegetation Structure (ICESat-II, DESDynI, etc.) 6. Science Enabled by New Measurements of Soil Moisture (SMAP) 7. Opportunities for Science of Importance to CC&E Enabled by New Measurements from Other (non-NASA, non-U.S.) Satellite Missions
Session Charge(Meeting web site – Detailed Agenda – Purpose and Core Questions + Mission Description) Breakout Session I—Science Enabled by New Measurements Purpose: Consider scientific questions and issues that will be addressed by planned space-based observations. An opportunity to learn about what the Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) and the missions recommended in the NRC's Decadal Survey will enable through their measurements. Sessions will provide background on mission specifications and planning, but focus on science enabled by the measurements. Sessions will provide an opportunity to identify opportunities and recommend new studies plus raise issues or concerns to be addressed by the Focus Area. Most sessions will start with brief, invited presentations: Anticipated scientific uses and payoffs of the planned new measurement/mission (10-15 min.) New mission (or missions), what was learned in any relevant NASA mission concept studies (10-15 min.) Science Enabled by New Measurements of CO2- double session spanning Breakout Sessions I and II (2:30-6:00 pm)
Breakout Session I Discussion(2:30-4:00 PM, except CO2 session) Questions: What are the priority science uses of the new measurement(s)? (Participants may choose to confirm/validate existing science questions/applications and/or may identify new uses) What do we need to do scientifically to use these new measurements and/or to get ready for the mission? Are there any major issues to be resolved before this science is enabled, and if so, what are they and what needs to be done? Note: Co-chairs of each session should identify a Rapporteur One co-chair will be responsible for reporting out (5 minutes) from the Breakout the next day Please adhere to schedule as presented, only one Breakout session spans the afternoon Full breakout reports are to be posted on the breakout session's discussion forum when complete, ideally prior to the plenary presentation of the breakout summary
Session Charge(Meeting web site – Detailed Agenda – Purpose and Core Questions) Breakout Session II — Data Records and Related Observations 1. Science Enabled by New Measurements of CO2 (OCO, ASCENDS, etc.) - Part 2 2. Ocean Time Series Data Products from Systematic Satellite Missions: Moderate Resolution - AVHRR/SeaWiFS/MODIS/VIIRS 3. Land Time Series Data Products from Systematic Satellite Missions: Moderate Resolution - AVHRR/SeaWiFS/MODIS/VIIRS 4. Time Series Data Products from Systematic Satellite Missions: High Resolution - Landsat, LDCM, hyperspatial, etc. 5. Terrestrial Calibration & Validation Activities and Future Needs 6. Aquatic Calibration & Validation Activities and Future Needs 7. Field Programs, Campaigns, Airborne Science
Session Charge(4:30 – 6:00 PM) Breakout Session II — Data Records and Related Observations Purpose: Consider scientific questions and issues being addressed by existing space-based observations (mainly systematic observations) and other existing or new suborbital observations. Discuss current time series data products and their scientific applications, and consider their future as Climate Data Records (CDRs) and/or Earth System Data Records (ESDRs). Discuss calibration/validation, airborne science, in situ observational needs for the Focus Area and/or its program elements. Identify opportunities and recommend priorities, raise issues or concerns to be addressed by the Focus Area. Most sessions will start with brief, invited presentations on: Data products/records to be discussed and questions/issues to be addressed NOTE: A breakout session on CDRs/ESDRs that was originally scheduled for Breakout Session II has been moved to Breakout Session IV (Wednesday, 11:00 am) so that scientists interested in the time series data products that constitute the Focus Area's CDRs/ESDRs can attend both sessions.
Breakout Session II Discussion(4:30 – 6:00 PM) Questions: What does the carbon cycle and ecosystems community expect of this effort? What are our biggest challenges in this area, and how do we address them? Is our list of identified data records complete, or is something missing? Does the carbon cycle and ecosystems community need to establish priorities for these and other activities, and, if so, how should they be established? Note: Co-chairs of each session should identify a Rapporteur One co-chair will be responsible for reporting out (5 minutes) from the Breakout the next day Please adhere to schedule as presented Full breakout reports are to be posted on the breakout session's discussion forum when complete, ideally prior to the plenary presentation of the breakout summary The FORUM and how to use it