Saturday, 28 January 2006 |
| 7:30 AM-7:31 AM, Saturday Short Course and Student Conference Registration |
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Sunday, 29 January 2006 |
| 7:30 AM-9:00 AM, Sunday Short Course Registration |
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| 9:00 AM-6:00 PM, Sunday Conference Registration |
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Monday, 30 January 2006 |
| 7:30 AM-6:00 PM, Monday Registration Continues through Thursday, 2 February |
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| 9:00 AM-12:00 PM, Monday, A406 Session 1 All aspects of space weather with a preference for those that address "impacts": Part 1 |
Chairs: Robert McCoy, Office of Naval Research, Arlington, VA; Genene Fisher, AMS Policy Program, Washington, DC
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| 9:00 AM | 1.1 | Space weather effects and human technology D. N. Baker, Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO |
| 9:30 AM | 1.2 | Decadal assessment of the National Space Weather Program Louis J. Lanzerotti, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ |
| 10:00 AM | 1.3 | The NSF view of space weather Richard Behnke, NSF, Arlington, VA |
| 10:15 AM | | Coffee Break in Meeting Room Foyer
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| 10:45 AM | 1.4 | Space science, space weather, and space exploration Richard Fisher, Earth-Sun System Division, NASA Headquarters, Washington, DC |
| 11:00 AM | 1.5 | NOAA Space Environment Center—exciting changes and challenges Ron Zwickl, NOAA Space Environment Center, Boulder, CO; and J. Kunches |
| 11:15 AM | 1.6 | DoD Perspectives on Space Weather Col. Harold Elkins, U.S. Department of Defense, Pentagon, DC |
| 11:30 AM | 1.7 | Space weather hazards to satellite systems Joe H. Allen, SCOSTEP, Denton, TX; and H. J. Singer |
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| 12:00 PM-1:10 PM, Monday Plenary Session 1 AMS Forum Kick-Off Luncheon (Cash & Carry available in the Meeting Room Foyer) |
Chairs: Sue Grimmond, King's College, London United Kingdom; Steven Hanna, Harvard Univ., Boston, MA; Mark Andrews, NOAA/NWS, Silver Spring, MD
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| 12:00 PM | PL1.1 | Forum opening Gregory S. Forbes, The Weather Channel, Atlanta, GA; and M. Andrews, C. S. B. Grimmond, and S. R. Hanna |
| 12:10 PM | PL1.2 | How should we compare and evaluate urban land surface models? Martin Best, Met Office, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom |
| 12:40 PM | PL1.3 | THUNDERSTORM IMPACTS: A MIX OF CURSES AND BLESSINGS Stanley Changnon, Changnon Climatologist, Mahomet, IL |
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| 1:30 PM-2:30 PM, Monday, A406 Session 2 ALL ASPECTS OF SPACE WEATHER WITH A PREFERENCE FOR THOSE THAT ADDRESS "IMPACTS": Part 2 |
Chairs: Richard Behnke, NSF, Arlington, VA; Robert McCoy, Office of Naval Research, Arlington, VA
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| 1:30 PM | 2.1 | Space weather effects on United's polar operations Mike Stills, United Airlines |
| 1:45 PM | 2.2 | Operational space radiation analysis on ISS and monitoring update Mark Weyland, NASA - Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX |
| 2:00 PM | 2.3 | Telecommunication system vulnerabilities to space-weather events John Michael Goodman Sr., Radio Propagation Services, Inc., Alexandria, VA |
| 2:15 PM | 2.4 | Solar Activity and Economic Fundamentals: The Case of the Electricity Market in Texas Kevin F. Forbes, Catholic Univ., Washington, DC; and O. C. St. Cyr |
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| 2:30 PM-4:00 PM, Monday Formal Poster Viewing with Coffee Break (M2) |
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| 4:00 PM-5:00 PM, Monday, A402 Joint Session 1 Educational Outreach Activities for Space Weather (Joint with 15th Symposium on Education and 3rd Symposium on Space Weather) |
Cochairs: Genene Fisher, AMS Policy Program, Washington, DC; David R. Smith, United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, MD
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| 4:00 PM | J1.1 | Space Weather in CPR classes? From Science to Practice! Margaret Lynn Fowke, NOAA, Silver Spring, MD |
| 4:15 PM | J1.2 | Where and Why Does Space Weather Occur? Patrick S. Market, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO; and D. J. Knipp |
| 4:30 PM | J1.3 | Using NASA Space Data in K-12 Education Arthur I. Poland, George Mason Univ., Fairfax, VA; and G. Colon and E. Felicite-Maurice |
| | J1.4 | The Space Public Outreach Team: A model for K-12 public outreach in Montana Henry D. Winter III, Montana State Univ., Bozeman, MT; and D. E. McKenzie |
| 4:45 PM | J1.4A | Space Weather Education on Windows to the Universe Randy Russell, UCAR, Boulder, CO; and R. M. Johnson, S. Q. Foster, J. Bergman, E. Gardiner, J. Genyuk, and M. LaGrave |
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| 5:30 PM, Monday Sessions end for the day (M) |
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| 5:30 PM-7:30 PM, Monday Formal Opening of Exhibits with Reception (Cash Bar) |
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| 7:30 PM, Monday Holton Symposium Banquet |
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Tuesday, 31 January 2006 |
| 8:30 AM-12:30 PM, Tuesday, A406 Session 3 New space weather data sources, products, and developments with forecast models |
Chairs: Robert McCoy, Office of Naval Research, Arlington, VA; Joseph Kunches, NOAA/Space Environment Center, Boulder, CO
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| 8:30 AM | 3.1 | Space Weather Modeling Services at the Community Coordinated Modeling Center Michael Hesse, NASA/GSFC, Greenbelt, MD |
| 8:45 AM | 3.2 | Space weather applications from the NOAA GOES satellites Howard J. Singer, NOAA/NWS, Boulder, CO; and S. Hill, T. Onsager, R. Viereck, and D. Biesecker |
| 9:00 AM | 3.3 | Integrated frameworks for Earth and space weather simulation Timothy L. Killeen, NCAR, Boulder, CO; and C. Deluca, T. Gombosi, C. Goodrich, G. Toth, Q. Stout, A. Sussman, and M. Hesse |
| 9:15 AM | 3.4 | The first Space Wx Forecast Models from the Center for Integrated Space Weather Modeling Michael Gehmeyr, Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO; and C. N. Arge, L. Mayer, D. Odstrcil, M. J. Owens, H. S. Spence, D. Vassiliadis, and R. S. Weigel |
| 9:30 AM | 3.5 | Space weather for the DoD Warfighter: Current operations and planned improvements John M. Lanicci, U.S. Air Force, Omaha, NE |
| 9:45 AM | | Formal Poster Viewing with Coffee Break
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| 11:00 AM | 3.6 | A first-principles approach to forecasting solar eruptive events C. Richard DeVore, NRL, Washington, DC; and S. K. Antiochos |
| 11:15 AM | 3.7 | Forecasting Interplanetary Space Weather for Operations Craig D. Fry, Exploration Physics International, Inc., Huntsville, AL |
| | 3.8 | Spaceweather.com: public interest in weather in space, a vendor perspective Tony Phillips, Spaceweather.com, Bishop, CA |
| 11:30 AM | 3.9 | NASA's Living with a Star Geospace Missions Joseph M. Grebowsky, NASA, Greenbelt, MD; and D. G. Sibeck |
| 11:45 AM | 3.10 | Analysis of IMF fluctuations during solar energetic particle and magnetic storm events Tak David Cheung, City Univ. of New York, Queensborough Community College, Bayside, NY; and D. E. Cotten, P. J. Marchese, and G. Tremberger |
| 12:00 PM | 3.11 | Optical Imaging Techniques of Ionospheric Weather Jonathan Makela, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Urbana, IL |
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| 11:00 AM-6:00 PM, Tuesday Exhbits Open (T) |
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| 12:15 PM, Tuesday Plenary Session Presidential Forum with Boxed Lunch (Lunch will be available for purchase outside the meeting room.) |
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| 1:45 PM-3:00 PM, Tuesday, A405 Joint Session 2 Progress and Challenges Related to the Assimilation of Ionospheric Measurements into Space Weather Models (Joint between the 10th Symposium on Integrated Observing and Assimilation Systems for the Atmosphere, Oceans, and Land Surface (IOAS-AOLS) and the 3rd Symposium on Space Weather) |
Organizers: Robert McCoy, Office of Naval Research, Arlington, VA; Thomas W. Schlatter, CIRES/ESRL, Boulder, CO
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| 1:45 PM | J2.1 | Exploring Ionospheric Modeling Methods: Towards a Global Ionospheric Monitor Lukas Mandrake, JPL, Pasadena, CA; and A. Mannucci and B. D. Wilson |
| 2:00 PM | J2.2 | Application of Measured Parameters to Large-Scale Numerical Modeling of Solar-Terrestrial Systems: An Overview S. C. Solomon, NCAR, Boulder, CO; and G. Siscoe |
| 2:15 PM | J2.3 | A data assimilation model of the ionosphere Robert W. Schunk, Utah State University, Logan, UT; and L. Scherliess, J. Sojka, D. Thompson, and L. Zhu |
| 2:30 PM | J2.4 | Total Electron Content (TEC) Processing from GPS Observations to Facilitate Ionospheric Modeling Angeline G. Burrell, AER, Lexington, MA; and N. A. Bonito and C. S. Carrano |
| 2:45 PM | J2.5 | Assimilation of GPS radio occultation data for weather prediction Ying-Hwa Kuo, NCAR, Boulder, CO |
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| 3:00 PM-3:30 PM, Tuesday Coffee Break in Exhibit Hall (T2) |
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| 3:30 PM-4:45 PM, Tuesday, A406 Session 4 ALL ASPECTS OF SPACE WEATHER WITH A PREFERENCE FOR THOSE THAT ADDRESS "IMPACTS": Part 3 |
Chairs: Joseph Kunches, NOAA/Space Environment Center, Boulder, CO; Marsha Korose, NorthropGrumman IT/TASC, Arlington, VA
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| 3:30 PM | 4.1 | The 1859 geomagnetic superstorm James Green, NASA/GSFC, Greenbelt, MD; and S. Boardsen, S. Odenwald, and E. Cliver |
| 3:45 PM | 4.2 | Estimating the economic impact of an 1859-calibre superstorm on satellite resources Sten Odenwald, QSS Group, Inc., Lanham, MD; and J. Green |
| 4:00 PM | 4.3 | The Disturbed Ionosphere and Effects on GPS and GNSS Systems Paul M. Kintner Jr., Cornell University, Ithaca, NY; and B. Ledvina, J. Makela, A. Mannucci, and A. Saito |
| 4:15 PM | 4.4 | Electrodynamic effects of lightning discharges on the ionosphere and the radiation belts Umran S. Inan, Stanford University, Stanford, CA |
| 4:30 PM | 4.5 | Space weather impacts on WAAS Patricia Doherty, Boston College, Boston, MA |
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Wednesday, 1 February 2006 |
| 11:00 AM-7:30 PM, Wednesday Exhibits Open (W) |
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| 5:30 PM-7:30 PM, Wednesday Reception in the Exhibit Hall (Cash Bar) |
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| 7:30 PM, Wednesday AMS Annual Awards Banquet |
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Thursday, 2 February 2006 |
| 12:00 AM, Thursday Symposium Ends |
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| 11:00 AM-4:00 PM, Thursday Exhibits Open (Th) |
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| 3:00 PM, Thursday Registration Desk Closes |
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| 4:00 PM, Thursday Exhibit Close |
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| 6:00 PM, Thursday Lilly Symposium Banquet |
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