[ESIP-all] AGU Session: Near Real-Time/Low Latency Data for Earth Science and Space Weather Applications

Goodman, Michael (MSFC-ST10) michael.goodman at nasa.gov
Wed Jun 19 10:30:43 EDT 2019


Colleagues,

We would like to draw your attention to the following Earth and Space Science Informatics session at the 2019 Fall AGU Meeting, 9-13 December 2019 in San Francisco CA.

Session Title: IN038 Near Real-Time/Low Latency Data for Earth Science and Space Weather Applications
Section: Earth and Space Science Informatics
Session Viewer Link: https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm19/prelim.cgi/Session/79577
Conveners: Michael Goodman/NASA Marshall, Gerald Bawden/NASA Headquarters, Diane Davies/Trigg-Davies Consulting NASA Goddard, and Rob Redmon/NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information

Session Description: Near real time/low latency data and new big data techniques applied to satellite, airborne (including uninhabited aerial vehicles-UAV), and surface sensors are transforming existing end-user applications and spawning new ones. These applications demonstrate the utility of timely data and advanced analyses in diverse Earth and space science disciplines including weather prediction, river forecasting, natural and human-caused hazards, public health, agriculture, marine, early warning, and space weather applications. In addition to traditional and emerging computer analyses, the use of apps for smartphones and tablets presents an opportunity to improve and expand the timely usage of data products and services. This session seeks contributions that demonstrate the benefit of near real time/low latency scientific or social media data, discuss innovative real time analysis approaches including machine learning and big data strategies, decrease data delivery latency, or identify gaps in current capabilities.

We held this session last year (2018) and it was a popular session within the Earth and Space Science Informatics (IN) track and we anticipate it to be as popular this year.  The session is cross listed in Natural Hazards, Atmospheric Sciences, SPA-Solar and Heliospheric Physics, and Geodesy,

We encourage you to contribute to our discussion on near real-time and low latency data for Earth science and space weather applications.

Index Terms:
1964    Real-time and responsive information delivery [INFORMATICS]
3360    Remote Sensing [ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES]
4315    Monitoring, forecasting, prediction [NATURAL HAZARDS]
7924    Forecasting [SPACE WEATHER]

Please note that the abstract deadline is Wednesday, 31 July 2019 (2359 EDT), so please plan accordingly and submit your abstract soon. The first author must be an AGU member.  To submit an abstract, please follow this link: https://www2.agu.org/Fall-Meeting/Pages/Submit-an-abstract

If you are not a member, then you can join at: https://membership.agu.org/join-renew/

Visit the 2019 Fall AGU website at: https://www2.agu.org/Fall-Meeting for the most up to date information about the meeting.  Authors will be informed in September regarding the date and format (oral or poster) of their presentation.

We look forward to hearing from you and thank you for considering this opportunity to share your research and science application insights.  You may receive multiple postings of this email as we are seeking to distribute the announcement broadly to reach as many disciplines as appropriate.

Finally, if you have questions about our session, please do not “reply all”, rather send your questions to Michael Goodman, Gerald Bawden, Diane Davies, and/or Rob Redmon at the email addresses immediately below.

Sincerely,

Gerald Bawden, NASA Headquarters gerald.w.bawden at nasa.gov<mailto:gerald.w.bawden at nasa.gov>
Diane Davies, Trigg Davies Consulting, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center diane.k.davies at nasa.gov<mailto:diane.k.davies at nasa.gov>
Rob Redmon, NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information rob.redmon at noaa.gov<mailto:rob.redmon at noaa.gov>
H. Michael Goodman, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center michael.goodman at nasa.gov<mailto:michael.goodman at nasa.gov>




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