NASA Presents at the 2007 American Geophysical Union Meeting

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May 17, 2007

Grey Hautaluoma/Dwayne Brown
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-3895/0668

MEDIA ADVISORY: M07-57

NASA PRESENTS AT THE 2007 AMERICAN GEOPHYSICAL UNION MEETING

WASHINGTON - NASA researchers will present findings on a variety of 
Earth and space science topics at the 2007 Joint Assembly Meeting of 
the American Geophysical Union. The meeting runs May 22-25 at the 
Acapulco Convention Center, Acapulco, Mexico. Sessions are open to 
registered news media.

Following are noteworthy NASA presentations, in chronological order 
(all times CDT):

Using Time Series of Impervious Cover and Tree Cover to Study Urban 
Dynamics in the Upper Delaware River Basin 
TIME: Tuesday, May 22, 11:40 a.m., Room ACC 04
SESSION: H22B-06
Scientists using satellite data to examine recent urban growth 
patterns in the Upper Delaware River Basin will discuss results that 
are helping to simulate future urban growth, an important tool for 
urban planning in the watershed.

Development, Implementation and Evaluation of a Real-Time Ocean 
Forecasting System off the California Coast 
TIME: Tuesday, May 22, 2:30 p.m., Room ACC 07
SESSION: OS23H-03
Scientists will discuss ongoing work to develop and implement a 
real-time ocean forecast system based on the Regional Ocean Modeling 
System off the coast of California.

Intercontinental Transport of Aerosols: Implication for Regional Air 
Quality
TIME: Tuesday, May 22, 4:50 p.m., Room ACC 02
SESSION: A24A-03
Researchers will discuss findings from a NASA computer model that 
estimates the hemispheric impact of anthropogenic sulfate aerosols 
and dust from major air pollution sources.

Mars News from Ground Level and From Orbit
TIME: Wednesday, May 23, 10:20 a.m. and 11:20 a.m., Room ACC 13
SESSION: P32A and P32A-05
NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter mission science team members will 
present initial results from the orbiter's composition-mapping 
spectrometer and its high-resolution camera, including information 
about layers of minerals that form under wet conditions. NASA's Mars 
Exploration Rovers science team will discuss past environmental 
conditions from exposed layers of bedrock viewed by Opportunity at 
Victoria Crater and from soil and rocks examined by Spirit in Gusev 
Crater.

Insights into Mega-City Ozone Pollution from the INTEX Ozonesonde 
Network Study, 2004 and 2006
TIME: Wednesday, May 23, 11:35 a.m., Room ACC 02
SESSION: A32A-06
NASA-led field campaigns have observed highly variable levels of ozone 
throughout the lower atmosphere. Researchers will show how this 
variability is due to complex interactions between weather and 
chemistry and natural and human-made contributions to ozone. 

Linking Aerosol Source Activities to Present and Future Climate 
Effects
TIME: Thursday, May 24, 5:00 p.m., Room ACC 03
SESSION: A44A-03
NASA's Dorothy Koch discusses a global model to connect specific 
aerosol emission sectors (transport, power, industry, residential, 
biomass burning) to climate effects for recent and future special 
reports on emission scenarios from the Intergovernmental Panel on 
Climate Change.

A Trend in the Northward Transport of Saharan Dust and its Links to 
the Trend in North Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Energy
TIME: Friday, May 25, 12:05 p.m., Room ACC 02
SESSION: A52A-08
NASA computer simulations show how a decline in Saharan dust during 
the past two decades, combined with warming sea surface temperatures 
related to the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, may be working in 
concert to increase tropical cyclone formation in the Atlantic.

The Role of Irrigation in North American Hydroclimates
TIME: Friday, May 25, 3:15 p.m., Room ACC 05
SESSION: H53F-06
Researchers will discuss new insights in improving weather and climate 
predictions by including land irrigation in operational prediction 
systems, using advanced computer simulations.

Drought, Wetland and Flood Monitoring with Satellite Scatterometer
TIME: Friday, May 25, 3:20 p.m., Room ACC 01
SESSION: U53B-05
NASA's QuikScat satellite detects surface soil moisture changes and 
corresponding changes in vegetation. Scientists will show how 
QuikScat data are being used to monitor droughts, wetlands and 
floods.

Mechanistic Response of Terrestrial Plant Productivity and Surface 
Energy Budget to Routine Aerosol Loading over the Eastern United 
States
TIME: Friday, May 25, 4:35 p.m., Room ACC 02
SESSION: A54B-02
Aerosols created from air pollution and other human-made and natural 
sources can act to cool or warm Earth. Researchers will present 
findings suggesting that moderate air pollution may help reduce 
greenhouse warming by trapping more carbon dioxide in forests.

For more information about the 2007 Joint Assembly Meeting, visit:

http://www.agu.org/meetings/ja07/ 

For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov

	
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