Difference between revisions of "2014 Summer Workshop Sessions"

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Conveners: ''Alan Weatherwax'', ''Robert Clauer''
 
Conveners: ''Alan Weatherwax'', ''Robert Clauer''
  
NSF has requested that the National Academy of Science develop a consensus recommendation on the most compelling research that can be supported in the coming decade and outline steps forward to implement this research. This meeting is to engage the space science community to participate in the development of this consensus recommendation.
+
NSF has requested that the National Academy of Science develop a consensus recommendation on the most compelling research that can be supported in the coming decade and outline steps forward to implement this research. This meeting is to engage the space science community to participate in the development of this consensus recommendation. The Antarctic can be a platform for measurements and investigation of space weather phenomena and several measurement programs are presently active. How should funding priorities be set for this research during the coming decade? Please help to establish these priorities. Very broad key scientific questions have been identified in the 2011 NRC report “Future Science Opportunities in the Antarctic and Southern Ocean”. The relevant question for our community is “What can the Antarctic platform reveal about the interactions between the Earth and the space environment”. The results from the NAS committee established to develop funding priorities will have an important impact on funding decisions at NSF and our research community needs to be strongly represented.
  
 
==== [GGCM/Tail] Magnetic Reconnection in the Magnetosphere/Tail-inner Magnetosphere Interactions (Ports Ballroom I-III) ====
 
==== [GGCM/Tail] Magnetic Reconnection in the Magnetosphere/Tail-inner Magnetosphere Interactions (Ports Ballroom I-III) ====

Revision as of 10:58, 9 June 2014

June 15-20, 2014

Renaissance Portsmouth Hotel & Conference Center, Portsmouth, Virginia

Information about the GEM Student Workshop on Sunday, June 14 is available at GEM Student Forum.

Contents

Monday, June 16, 2014

0815-1000 AM: Planery Session (Ports Ballroom IV-V)

  • IMS tutorial by Drew Turner -- Probing the tempest: Current concepts and recent relevations concerning the nature of Earth's inner magnetosphere and geomagnetic storms
  • MIC tutorial by Joe Huba -- Modeling the ionosphere/plasmasphere system: Quiet and stormtime conditions

1030 AM-1215 PM: Splinter Sessions

[GGCM] Magnetic Reconnection in the Magnetosphere (Ports Ballroom I-III)

[IMS] Radiation Belts & Wave Modeling (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[IMS/MIC] Storm-time Inner Magneotsphere-Ionosphere Convection (Amphitheater)

1330-1500 PM: Splinter Sessions

[GGCM] Magnetic Reconnection in the Magnetosphere (Ports Ballroom I-III)

[IMS] Radiation Belts & Wave Modeling (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[IMS/MIC] Storm-time Inner Magneotsphere-Ionosphere Convection (Amphitheater)

1530-1700 PM: Splinter Sessions

[Special] Strategic Priorities for Funding in the NSF Antarctic Program (Ports Ballroom IV-V)

Conveners: Alan Weatherwax, Robert Clauer

NSF has requested that the National Academy of Science develop a consensus recommendation on the most compelling research that can be supported in the coming decade and outline steps forward to implement this research. This meeting is to engage the space science community to participate in the development of this consensus recommendation. The Antarctic can be a platform for measurements and investigation of space weather phenomena and several measurement programs are presently active. How should funding priorities be set for this research during the coming decade? Please help to establish these priorities. Very broad key scientific questions have been identified in the 2011 NRC report “Future Science Opportunities in the Antarctic and Southern Ocean”. The relevant question for our community is “What can the Antarctic platform reveal about the interactions between the Earth and the space environment”. The results from the NAS committee established to develop funding priorities will have an important impact on funding decisions at NSF and our research community needs to be strongly represented.

[GGCM/Tail] Magnetic Reconnection in the Magnetosphere/Tail-inner Magnetosphere Interactions (Ports Ballroom I-III)

[IMS] Radiation Belts & Wave Modeling (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[IMS/MIC/GGCM] Storm-time Inner Magneotsphere-Ionosphere Convection/Geospace System Science (Amphitheater)

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

0815-1000 AM: Planery Session (Ports Ballroom IV-V)

  • Tail tutorial by Jim Klimchuk -- Onset conditions for impulsive magnetic energy release
  • GGCM tutorial by Jian Yang -- Effects of plasma-sheet bubble injections

1030 AM-1215 PM: Splinter Sessions

[GGCM] The Ionospheric Source of Magnetospheric Plasma-Measuring, Modeling and Merging into the GEM GGCM (Ports Ballroom I-III)

  • Bob Schunk -- Overview of Ion Outflow (invited)
  • Dan Welling -- Merged Ionosphere/Magnetosphere Modeling of the GEM Idealized Storm Period Using GPW and BATSRUS
  • Nick Perlongo -- PWOM Results as Input to MHD Models for the Idealized and First Real Storm Periods
  • Dan Welling and Nick Perlongo -- Merged Ionosphere/Magnetosphere Modeling of the GEM Idealized Storm Period Using PWOM and BATSRUS (invited)
  • Roger Varney and Mike Wiltberger -- Merged Modeling of the GEM Idealized Storm Period Using an Ionosphere/Polar Wind Model (IPWM) and the LFM-MIX/CMIT (invited)

[IMS] Radiation Belts & Wave Modeling/Quantitative Assessment of Radiation Belt Modeling (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[Tail] Tail-Inner Magnetosphere Interactions (Amphitheater)

1330-1500 PM: Splinter Sessions

[GGCM] The Ionospheric Source of Magnetospheric Plasma-Measuring, Modeling and Merging into the GEM GGCM (Ports Ballroom I-III)

  • Vince Eccles -- Ionospheric Dynamics During the 8-day GEM First Real Storm Study Period (invited)
  • Abdallah Barakat -- Ion Outflow Predicted by the Generalized Polar Wind Model During the GEM First Real Storm Period (invited)
  • Dan Welling and Abdallah Barakat -- Merged Ionosphere/Magnetosphere Modeling of the First Storm Period Using GPW and BATSRUS
  • Naritoshi Kitamura -- FAST Ion Outflow Measurements—Flux, Velocity, Temperature, Current Density and Characteristics of Electron Precipitation During the GEM First Storm (invited)
  • Tom Moore and Rick Chappell -- Polar Measurements of Low Energy Ion Outflow and Lobal Wind During the GEM First Storm Period (invited)

[IMS] Quantitative Assessment of Radiation Belt Modeling (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[Tail] Tail-Inner Magnetosphere Interactions (Amphitheater)

1530-1700 PM: Splinter Sessions

[GGCM] The Ionospheric Source of Magnetospheric Plasma-Measuring, Modeling and Merging into the GEM GGCM (Ports Ballroom I-III)

  • Stein Haaland -- Cold Ion Outflow: Cluster Measurements During the GEM First Storm Period (invited)
  • Lynn Kistler -- Cluster Measurements of O+ During the GEM First Storm Period (invited)
  • Elena Kronberg -- Cluster RAPID Energetic Ion and Electron Measurements During the GEM First Storm Period (invited)
  • Joe Borovsky -- LANL Plasma Measurements During the GEM First Storm Period (invited)
  • Naritoshi Kitamura -- FAST Observations of the Solar Zenith Angle Dependence on Relations Between Energy Input and Outflowing H+ and O+ Ion Fluxes >3000 km

[IMS] Quantitative Assessment of Radiation Belt Modeling (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[Tail] Tail-Inner Magnetosphere Interactions (Amphitheater)

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

0815-1000 AM: Planery Session (Ports Ballroom IV-V)

  • Agency Reports from NSF, NASA and NOAA
  • Dayside tutorial by Jim Burch -- The science of the MMS mission

1030 AM-1215 PM: Splinter Sessions

[GGCM] The Ionospheric Source of Magnetospheric Plasma-Measuring, Modeling and Merging into the GEM CCGM (Ports Ballroom I-III)

  • Jonathan Krall -- SAMI 3 Modeling of Post-Storm Plasmasphere Filling and Comparisons With Measurements (invited)
  • Joe Borovsky -- Long-lived Drainage Plumes—Where Does the Plasma Come From? (invited)
  • GENERAL DISCUSSION OF FUTURE COLLABORATIVE STUDIES

[IMS] Quantitative Assessment of Radiation Belt Modeling (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[GGCM] Geospace System Science (Amphitheater)

"Timescales, Time Lags, and Feedback Loops in the M-I System". This is an audience-participation discussion about the time lags in the solar-wind-driven magnetosphere-ionosphere system, about the characteristic timescales in the dynamics of the system, and about feedback loops affecting the system.The discussion will involve the solar wind, geomagnetic current systems, the plasmas of the magnetosphere, the radiation belt, substorms, the ionosphere, and the atmosphere.

1330-1500 PM: Splinter Sessions

[Dayside] Transient Phenomena at the Magnetopause and Bow Shock and Their Ground Signatures (Ports Ballroom I-III)

[IMS] Quantitative Assessment of Radiation Belt Modeling (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[GGCM] Geospace System Science (Amphitheater)

"Part1 -- Long-Running Measurements of the State of the System: What Can Be Done?". This is an audience-participation discussion about creating new geomagnetic indices from measurements besides magnetometers. The discussions will involve wave measurements, plasma measurements, composition measurements, radiation-belt measurements, substorm measurements, radar measurements, precipitation measurements, etc. A number of researchers have agreed to comment on ideas.

1530-1700 PM: Splinter Sessions

[Dayside] Transient Phenomena at the Magnetopause and Bow Shock and Their Ground Signatures (Ports Ballroom I-III)

[IMS] Quantitative Assessment of Radiation Belt Modeling (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[GGCM] Geospace System Science (Amphitheater)

"Part2 -- Long-Running Measurements of the State of the System: What Can Be Done?". This is an audience-participation discussion about creating new geomagnetic indices from measurements besides magnetometers. The discussions will involve wave measurements, plasma measurements, composition measurements, radiation-belt measurements, substorm measurements, radar measurements, precipitation measurements, etc. A number of researchers have agreed to comment on ideas.

Thursday, June 19, 2014

0815-1000 AM: Planery Session (Ports Ballroom IV-V)

  • Dayside tutorial by Antonius Otto -- Dayside solar wind-magnetosphere coupling
  • GGCM tutorial by Jimmy Raeder -- Prospects for data assimilation in global magnetosphere models

1030 AM-1215 PM: Splinter Sessions

[Dayside] Transient Phenomena at the Magnetopause and Bow Shock and Their Ground Signatures (Ports Ballroom I-III)

[MIC] Scientific Magnetic Mapping & Techniques (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[GGCM] Geospace System Science (Amphitheater)

"Planning Session for the Geospace Systems Science Focus Group". An open discussion to select the topics for the GSS sessions for the next few GEM Summer Workshop. We want to consider new systems-science questions to ask, future joint sessions with other focus groups, new problems and new techniques, and data analysis methods.

1330-1500 PM: Splinter Sessions

[Special] THEMIS Training Session (Ports Ballroom IV-V)

Convener: Jim Lewis

This session is intended for developers who are interested in contributing plugin modules to support new missions or data sets within the SPEDAS framework and analysis tools. SPEDAS (Space Physics Environment Data Analysis Software) has evolved from a THEMIS-specific set of tools, to a more general multi-mission framework. We will present newly released features and capabilities of the framework, followed by an open discussion and Q&A regarding the road map for future development.

[Dayside/GGCM] The Magnetosheath/Geospace System Science (Ports Ballroom I-III)

[MIC/GGCM] Scientific Magnetic Mapping & Techniques/Metrics and Validation (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[IMS] Inner Magnetosphere Cross-Energy/Population Interactions (Amphitheater)

1530-1700 PM: Splinter Sessions

[Special] THEMIS Training Session (Ports Ballroom IV-V)

Convener: Jim Lewis

This session is intended for users who are interested in using SPEDAS for loading, plotting, and analyzing data from THEMIS and other supported missions. We will present a variety of data analysis scenarios, focused mostly on THEMIS data, but touching on some of the other multi-mission capabilities. The formal presentation will be followed by an open Q&A, help session, and installation clinic.

[Dayside/GGCM] The Magnetosheath/Geospace System Science (Ports Ballroom I-III)

[GGCM] Metrics and Validation (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[IMS] Inner Magnetosphere Cross-Energy/Population Interactions (Amphitheater)

Friday, June 20, 2014

0815-1000 AM: Planery Session (Ports Ballroom IV-V)

  • Tail tutorial by Mike Wiltberger -- Determination of the global conductance pattern and its influence on the dynamics of the geospace
  • Student-selected tutorial by Robyn Millan -- Radiation belts: Lost and found in Antarctica

1030 AM-1215 PM: Splinter Sessions

[Dayside] The Magnetosheath (Ports Ballroom I-III)

[GGCM] Metrics and Validation (Ports Ballroom VI-VIII)

[IMS] Inner Magnetosphere Cross-Energy/Population Interactions (Amphitheater)

1330-1500 PM: Plenary Wrap-up Session (Ports Ballroom IV-V)