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[IGSMAIL-4995]: Fall AGU SF10: Emerging Science Applications Of Measurements From GPS/GNSS...



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IGS Electronic Mail      19 Aug 16:35:11 PDT 2004      Message Number 4995
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Author: Jim Zumberge

Dear Colleagues,

Cinzia Zuffada (JPL), Jim Anderson (Harvard University), and I are convening a Special Focus Session (SF10) at the Fall AGU in San Francisco, called

   Emerging Science Applications Of Measurements From GPS/GNSS And
   GPS-like Signals: Recent Results And Future Possibilities

The description is:

   Over the past two decades, the value of GPS measurements to solid
   Earth Science, Atmospheric Science, Ocean Science, Space Physics,
   and other areas has in some cases been firmly established and in
   others is only emerging or potential. This session solicits
   contributions that showcase the impact of emerging and potential
   applications to science. Some examples are real-time seismic
   hazard mitigation, assessment of climate change, ocean or ice
   surface height variability, magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling
   during storms, and the response of the Earth's ionosphere to solar
   flares and astronomical X-ray sources. Recent results from the
   global terrestrial GPS network and/or dense regional GPS networks,
   and from on-orbit satellites carrying GPS receivers (for example,
   CHAMP, SAC-C, GRACE, and JASON), are welcome. Descriptions of what
   is expected from upcoming projects/missions (for example, PBO,
   COSMIC) are also welcome. Additionally, new GPS signals (L2C, L5)
   and satellites (Block IIF and III), together with newer Global
   Navigation Satellite Systems (Russian GLONASS and European GALILEO)
   are ushering in a new opportunity to exploit these navigation
   signals for science. Contributions from science disciplines that
   have or will benefit from GPS/GNSS, and from GPS/GLONASS/GALILEO
   experts who can describe what is to be expected from multiple GNSS
   systems and their potential benefits to science, directly or
   indirectly, are also encouraged. Finally, contributions that
   describe GPS-like high-frequency active transmitters and receivers
   for applications like atmospheric sounding or in situ measurements
   of electron density in the ionosphere are sought. This session will
   be followed by a mini-workshop to consolidate and highlight the key
   ideas that will have emerged, and document them in a white paper.
   The workshop objective is to identify and articulate the key
   scientific questions that are optimally, or perhaps uniquely,
   addressed by GPS or GPS-like observations, and determine their
   relevance to existing or planned national Earth-science research
   programs.

Please consider submitting an abstract for this Session. The deadlines are September 9 for web submissions, September 1 for postal submission.

For details on how to submit, go to http://www.agu.org/meetings/fm04/ .

Thank you.