
			 ***************************
			 **   THE GEM MESSENGER   **
			 ***************************
						     Volume 5, Number 30
						     November 1, 1995

-------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement for GEM GGCM Campaign/SEC Space Weather Workshop
-------------------------------------------------------------
From: George Siscoe  (SISCOE at buasta.bu.edu)

GEM GGCM Campaign/SEC Space Weather Workshop
January 11-12, 1996
Space Environment Center
Boulder, Colorado

This is an announcement of the 3nd annual winter workshop of the
GEM GGCM Campaign and an invitation for all persons interested 
to participate in it.  The winter workshops emphasize the 
applications side of developing a Geospace General Circulation 
Model.  The pure science side is emphasized at the summer, 
Snowmass workshops.  Thus, the winter workshops relate closely 
to the activities at SEC, the 50th Weather Squadron, and the 
National Space Weather Program.  Accordingly the first morning 
will be dedicated to reports from officials at 50th Weather 
Squadron, SEC, and the National Space Weather Program.  The goal 
of this winter's workshop, aside from being a forum for reporting 
progress and relevant developments, is to mesh GGCM activities 
with the Implementation Plan of the National Space Weather 
Program.  To this end, there will be five panel discussions 
covering ongoing GGCM topics and magnetospheric topics from 
the Implementation Plan.  A sixth panel will discuss 
transitioning GGCM research into operations.  The questions to 
the panels are, where should we be in 2 to 5 years? (the 
Implementation Plan gives default answers to the question), 
where we are now? and what different or more should GEM do to 
help get us from here to there?

Agenda (Somewhat tentative--not everyone yet contacted)

Thursday, January 11

08:30 Welcoming Remarks...Ernest Hildner, Director SEC
08:35 Meeting logistics...Howard Singer
08:40 Meeting goals..George Siscoe
08:45 The National Space Weather Program Implementation Plan
      and GEM...Rich Behnke, Director, Upper Atmosphere 
      Research Section, NSF
09:10 Directions for magnetospheric models and sensors:
      An Air Force Perspective...Lt. Col. C. Tschan (50 WS)
09:35 MSM performance at 50th Weather Squadron...Kevin Scro
10:00 Break
10:30 Using & distributing real-time SWIM data & thinking ahead 
      to ACE...Kent Doggett (SEC)
10:55 Comparing prediction with eventuality: A case study...
      J. Kunches (SEC)
11:10 Harvesting the low hanging fruit: The 1 to 2 year 
      perspective...Howard Singer (SEC)
11:35 Getting ready for Solar Max 23: GEM community 
      opportunities...JoAnn Joselyn (SEC)
12:00 Lunch
01:00 Panel discussion on boundary position specification and 
      forecasts
      Panelists: M. Heinemann (Moderator); K. Doggett;
        J. Lyon; C. Russell; H. Singer; P. Song; 
        S. Stahara/J. Spreiter; D. Vassiliadis
02:30 Break
03:00 Panel discussion on radiation belts
      Panelists:M. Hudson (Moderator); T. Cayton; M. Chen; 
        G. Ginet; X. Li; D. Speich
04:30 Panel discussion on disturbance index forecasts (Kp, K, A, 
      AU, AL, AE, Dst, PC)
      Panelists:R. Wolf (Moderator), T. Detman; J. Fedder; J. Freeman; 
        J. Hirman; J. Joselyn; J. Kozyra; A. S. Sharma
05:30 Adjourn

Friday, January 12

08:30 Panel discussion on auroral electrojet and GIC forecasts
      Panelists: H. Singer (Moderator); C. Balch; G. Erickson; 
        J. Fedder; J. Kappenman; G. Lu; N. Maynard; V. Papitashvili; 
        J. Raeder; D. Vassiliadis; J. Walker; L. Zanetti
10:00 Break
10:30 Panel discussion on models
      Panelists: G. Siscoe (Moderator); T. Detman; M. Hesse; 
        J. Fedder; B. Sonnerup; R. McPherron; T. Onsager; J. Raeder; 
        F. Toffoletto; W. White; R. Wolf
12:00 Lunch
01:00 Panel discussion on implementation
      Panelists: R. Behnke (Moderator); R. Carovillano; G. Heckman; 
      E. Hildner; L. Lanzerotti, H. Petschek; K. Scro; 
      Lt. Col. C. Tschan
02:30: Closing discussion...R. Zwickl (Moderator)
03:00 End

Panel discussion format: Each discussion will comprise 5-minute, 
2-vugraph presentations by panelists followed by 5-minute, 2-
vugraph contributions from the floor followed by panel discussion 
with questions and comments from the floor.  Each panel will 
address the questions: where do we want to be in the panel's topic 
area in 2 years and 5 years? where are we now? and what needs to 
happen to get from here to there?  The question, where are we 
now?, will likely be the subject of the opening contributions from 
the panel and the floor.  There will be additional questions specific 
to each panel, as follows:

Panel on boundary position specification and forecasts: How do we 
build reliable prediction algorithms for extreme events?

Panel on radiation belts: What roles do diffusion, convection,
and surfing play in populating the radiation belts?  What is 
the physics behind the energetic outer electron belt?

Panel on disturbance index forecasts: How do we move beyond the
historical indices to indices appropriate to now?

Panel on auroral electrojet and GIC forecasts: How can we measure
spatiotemporal forecast reliability so that users will know 
when they are reliable enough to justify taking costly actions to 
avoid predicted problems?  Is it useful to think of an optimal mix
of forecast approaches?

Panel on models: What are the prospects for MSFM upgrades--e.g. 
incorporating a Toffoletto/Hill-like module and radiation belt 
modules?  Ditto for Drift-orbit/MHD hybrids?  How do we regulate 
solar wind coupling and substorm dynamics?  Is regulation neces-
sary?  How do we treat real-time data assimilation?  What are the 
operational roles of analytical, semi-empirical, statistical, and 
numerical models?

Panel on implementation: Is there a procedure by which algorithm 
developers (science types) and space weather service officers 
(forecaster types) can bring about diagnosing, specification and 
forecast algorithms that are tested, certified, and transitioned 
into operation?  How can two-way information flow between these 
two groups be established and fostered?  What steps will lead to 
increasing the value of space weather services?

A note on logistics:  Howard Singer will be sending soon via the 
GEM Newsletter a list of hotels and other pertinent information.


+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|To add name to the mailing list, send a message to: editor at igpp.ucla.edu |
|For message to whole GEM mailing list, send to:   gem at igpp.ucla.edu      |
|For message to a specific working group (BL Campaign), send to:          |
| gem_field at igpp.ucla.edu (WG1);    gem_boundary at igpp.ucla.edu (WG2);     |
| gem_current at igpp.ucla.edu (WG3);  gem_data at igpp.ucla.edu (WG4)          |
| gem_ggcm at igpp.ucla.edu (WG5)                                            |
| gem_chair at igpp.ucla.edu (WG chairs, Odile and W. J. Hughes)             |
|                                                                         |
|URL of GEM Home Page: http://igpp.ucla.edu/gem/Welcome.html              |
|Please update your e-mail address.                                       |
|CAUTION: Do not send messages to gem at igpp.ucla.edu unless you want       |
|         your message to go to everyone in the GEM mailing list!         |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
