Conveners
Data usage and applications
- Quentin Errera (BIRA-IASB)
- Simon Chabrillat (BIRA-IASB)
Dr
Michel Van Roozendael
(BIRA-IASB)
03/05/2017, 11:00
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,geneva,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:20px">Data usage and application</span></span></p>
Invited speaker
Observations from space are essential to assist the successful understanding and management of climate change, one of the biggest challenge facing mankind in this century. Establishing the necessary accurate long-term data records requires coordinated activities involving all relevant parties, i.e. environmental and space agencies, climate science community and measurement experts. Over the...
Dr
Antje Inness
(ECMWF)
03/05/2017, 11:20
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,geneva,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:20px">Data usage and application</span></span></p>
Invited speaker
ECMWF has been entrusted to operate the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) on behalf of the European Commission until the end of 2020. CAMS provides continuous data
and information on atmospheric composition. The global service combines a state-of-the art transport and chemistry model with satellite data from various sensors to provide
global daily analyses and 5-day forecasts...
Dr
Rolf Müller
(Forschungeszentrum Jülich)
03/05/2017, 11:40
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,geneva,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:20px">Data usage and application</span></span></p>
Invited speaker
This talk will describe the evolution of global ozone including ozone
in the polar regions. Conclusions will be largely based on the
WMO/UNEP Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion: 2014.
There are now several indications that the ozone layer is beginning to
recover from ODS-induced depletion. Nonetheless, the Antarctic ozone
hole will continue to occur at least until mid-century....
Dr
Michaela Hegglin
(University of Reading)
03/05/2017, 12:20
<p><span style="font-family:verdana,geneva,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:20px">Data usage and application</span></span></p>
Invited speaker
The last few decades represent a “golden age” of stratospheric composition measurements that were crucial in advancing our understanding of atmospheric processes and their role in climate. The SPARC Data Initiative carried out a comprehensive inter-comparison of these observations obtained from up to 18 multi-national satellite instruments and including 25 different chemical trace gas species...
Quentin Errera
(BIRA-IASB),
Simon Chabrillat
(BIRA-IASB)
03/05/2017, 12:40