2008 Workshop:The Second AMISR Science Planning Meeting: Tutorial II
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The Second AMISR Science Planning Meeting: Tutorial II
Contents |
Location
Matterhorn
Date/Time
1030-1230 Saturday 21 June 2008
Conveners
Format of the Workshop
tutorial
Duration
2 hours
Estimated attendance
40
Conflicts with other workshops
We request Saturday morning, Session B
Special technology requests
LCD projector and internet
Forum
Comments, Questions, Discussion Forum
Brief Initial Description
This session will discuss user access to AMISR data starting with the proposal process and experiment set up, and continuing to science data manipulation using the Madrigal database.
Presentation Resources
Upload presentation and link to it here. Links to other resources.
Workshop Summary
The second AMISR science planning workshop was held June 20–21, 2008 in conjunction with the CEDAR/GEM meetings. The purpose of this AMISR workshop was to highlight results from the first year of operations at Poker Flat AMISR (PFISR), provide an incoherent scatter basics tutorial, explain user access to AMISR data, and discuss plans for future operations at the Resolute Bay AMISR (RISR). This AMISR science planning workshop was the second in a series of workshops planned to explore the range of science objectives that can be achieved with this new NSF facility. The first AMISR science planning workshop was held in 2006 (prior to the start of PFISR operations) at Asilomar Conference Grounds near Monterey, California. Information on the first meeting, and other AMISR news, can be found at http://www.amisr.com
An AMISR Tutorial workshop was held on Saturday morning (June 21) chaired by Anthea Coster (MIT Haystack), Phil Erickson (MIT Haystack), and Elizabeth Kendall (SRI). The workshop began with a general introduction to the ISR facilities by Bob Robinson (NSF). The chairpersons followed this talk with an introduction of some key participants in the AMISR program to allow students to place a face with a name. Anja Stromme (SRI) continued with a summary of AMISR science discoveries thus far. Phil Erickson and Josh Semeter (Boston University) then presented a quick introduction to incoherent scatter theory and measurable parameters. Craig Heinselman (SRI) discussed data reduction and analysis using material provided by Michael Nicolls (SRI). Elizabeth Kendall presented an AMISR “User’s Guide” which encompassed access to the radar and how experiments are scheduled and data is disseminated. In the final presentation, Anthea Coster discussed the MADRIGAL database and how it can be used to find AMISR data. The tutorial wrapped up with questions from the audience.
The AMISR tutorials are located at the following web site:

