89th AMS Annual Meeting
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89th Annual Meeting Call for Papers

Phoenix, AZ
11—15 January 2009

 

AMS 89th Annual Meeting, 11–15 January 2009, Phoenix Civic Plaza Convention Center, Phoenix, Arizona
     The theme for the 2009 AMS Annual Meeting is “Urban Weather and Climate: Now and the Future.” The relevance and timeliness of the urban theme cannot be overemphasized. Recent events – Hurricane Katrina; urban floods in Europe and China; heat waves in London, Paris and Chicago; homeland security concerns and industrial chemical accidents; to name a few – point out the vulnerability of urban populations to high-impact weather of all types. In the U.S. today, approximately two-thirds of the population live in cities that occupy less than two percent of the U.S. land mass. This past year, the global population may have reached a tipping point with the world’s urban population equaling its rural population; by 2030, the urban population fraction is predicted to surpass 60% globally and exceed 82% in the more developed countries. Most of the urban population growth results from migration from the rural areas as birth rates tend to decline in the urban areas. The nexus of urbanization and population growth, coupled with anthropogenic urban weather influences and global climate changes, portend an impending ‘perfect storm’ for the urban environment.
      The 2009 Annual Meeting aims to highlight advances and challenges in urban-related science, applications, observations, modeling and operations. The specialty conferences, symposia and special sessions that comprise the annual meeting will focus attention on six cross-cutting urban themes: (a) measurement systems and networks; (b) modeling and forecasting; (c) observations and studies of high-impact weather; (d) geographic influences on urban weather and climate; (e) human and environmental impacts; and (f) implications of climate change and population growth. “High-impact” weather is considered in its broadest sense, and includes severe weather, high wind events, precipitation, floods, icing, lightning, poor visibility, adverse air quality, and temperature extremes.
      The meeting will also feature workshops and short courses, numerous town hall meetings, the Sunday WeatherFest, a Monday Presidential Policy Forum on the role of weather and climate in urban affairs, and two special named symposia honoring Prof. Timothy Oke and the late Dr. Tony Hollingsworth. Calls for Papers follow for the various specialty conferences, symposia and special sessions. For additional information on the organization of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting, please contact meeting co-chairpersons Sue Grimmond, King’s College London (Sue.Grimmond@kcl.ac.uk) or Rita Roberts, National Center for Atmospheric Research (rroberts@ucar.edu). (2/08)

Call for Papers

The Eighth Annual AMS Student Conference and Career Fair, 10–11 January 2009
Phoenix, Arizona

      Join us for the Eighth Annual AMS Student Conference and Career Fair, “Weathering Your Career--Now and in the Future”, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, 10–11 (Sat–Sun) January 2009 as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Registration, hotel, and general information will be posted on the AMS Web site (www.ametsoc.org) in late-September 2008. A registration fee of $25 has been set for this conference.
      In addition to presentations and group discussions featuring both noted professionals and fellow students, we encourage students to submit papers about a wide range of topics. All accepted abstracts will be scheduled as a poster. Students should create a poster (reference the AMS “Poster Presentation” guidelines here: http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/speakersupport.pdf) that will be up for display during the Sunday evening poster session. Students will not need to formally present their poster but they are encouraged to stand by their poster and answer questions during the ‘formal poster-viewing hours’, which will be released at a later date."
Abstracts for this conference should cover a wide range of student interest and activities. Suggested topics include overviews of ongoing student research projects and/or student applications of emerging technologies. The poster session will be held in conjunction with the 18th Symposium on Education’s poster session. We expect to have plenty of space so you can anticipate your abstract to be accepted and receive significant visibility as a poster!
The student conference is intended for junior and senior undergraduates and all graduate students, and will focus on interdisciplinary topics and wide-ranging opportunities in the atmospheric and related sciences. Important eligibility requirement: You must be an AMS member or student member in order to attend the conference.
      Sessions will include invited speakers from the private, academic, and government sectors. A career fair and networking evening is scheduled to provide a forum for students to personally interact with professionals who represent potential employers and graduate institutions.
Please submit your abstract electronically via the Web by 15 October 2008 (refer to the AMS Web page at www.ametsoc.org for instructions). There is no abstract fee for the student conference. When completing the submission form, please note payment by purchase order, and indicate “Student Conference” in the box marked “Purchase Order Number”. This will allow you to proceed with your submission without payment information. Authors of accepted presentations will be notified via e-mail in late-October.
      For additional information please contact the program chairpersons Kathy Strebe, kstrebe@weather.com, Kim Klockow, kklockow@ou.com, or Scott Mackaro, mackaro@nsstc.uah.edu. (6/08)

Call for Papers

The Timothy R. Oke Symposium, 12 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
      The Oke Symposium is an event organized to celebrate the contributions of Professor T.R. Oke to the field of urban climatology and meteorology. Professor Oke has been a visionary leader in urban climatology and meteorology for four decades, during which time he has helped to foster the emergence and maturation of the scientific study of urban atmospheres. The theme of the symposium is “Contributions to Urban Meteorology and Climatology by Professor T.R. Oke”. The symposium will include both invited and solicited contributions, with a particular focus on the urban climate system, urban energy balance and urban heat islands.
      The Oke Symposium will be held at the 2009 AMS Annual Meeting, which has the theme of “Urban Weather and Climate: Now and the Future.” The Oke Symposium will be organized in conjunction with the Eighth Symposium on the Urban Environment, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, and organized by the AMS Board on the Urban Environment. Authors planning to submit abstracts in these topic areas should follow the instructions in the call for the Eight Symposium on the Urban Environment and should indicate that their presentation is to be considered for the Joint Sessions with the Oke Symposium.
      A luncheon in Tim Oke’s honor will be held on Monday, 12 January. The Oke luncheon ticket is not included in the conference registration package and must be purchased separately. Attendees may purchase tickets when registering, both before the conference and on site at the registration desk.
      For more information, contact the organizing committee: James Voogt (tel: 519-661-2111x85018; email javoogt@uwo.ca), Hans Peter Schmid (tel ++49-(0)8821 183100 email: HaPe.Schmid@imk.fzk.de)
      Please submit your abstract electronically via the Web by 1 August 2008 (refer to the AMS Web page at http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/online_submit.html.) An abstract fee of $90 (payable by credit card or purchase order) is charged at the time of submission (refundable only if abstract is not accepted).
      Authors of accepted presentations will be notified (via e-mail) by late-September 2008. All extended abstracts are to be submitted electronically and will be available on-line via the Web, Instructions for formatting extended abstracts will be posted on the AMS Web site. Manuscripts (up to 3MB) must be submitted electronically by 7 January 2009. All abstracts, extended abstracts and presentations will be available on the AMS Web site at no cost. (2/08; r4/08)

Call for Papers

The Anthony J. Hollingsworth Symposium, 15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
      The Hollingsworth Symposium, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, will be held on 15 January 2009, as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Hotel information will be posted to the AMS Web site (http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/annual/) in the spring; registration and general information will be posted starting over the summer; and the preliminary programs will be posted in late-September 2008.
      The Hollingsworth Symposium is an event organized to celebrate the contributions of Dr. Anthony Hollingsworth (1943–2007) to the field of forecasting and data assimilation. Dr. Hollingsworth has made important contributions to the identification of serious systematic model errors as a major component of the total error of the ECMWF’s first forecasts. This work set the agenda; it provided the tools and even set the style for modeling work for the whole of the 1980s. He also made important contributions to the study of the errors of the observing system and of short-range forecasts. This provided tools, which are in use today, to monitor the performance of the observing system and the basis for the improvement of data analysis and data assimilation, thereby increasing the accuracy of initial conditions
      The theme of the symposium is “Contributions to Numerical Weather Prediction by Dr. Anthony Hollingsworth”. The symposium will consist of invited oral presentations and solicited poster presentations, with a particular focus on historical and modern numerical weather prediction. The Hollingsworth Symposium will be held in conjunction with the 21st Conference on Climate Variability and Change, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, and organized by the Committee on Climate Variability and Change and the Committee on Weather Analysis and Forecasting. A luncheon in Tony Hollingsworth’s honor will be held on Thursday 15 January. The Hollingsworth luncheon ticket is not included in the conference registration package and must be purchased separately. We encourage you to purchase tickets when preregistering, since a limited number will be available on-site.
      Please submit your abstract electronically via the Web by 1 August 2008 (refer to the AMS Web page at http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/online_submit.html.) An abstract fee of $90 (payable by credit card or purchase order) is charged at the time of submission (refundable only if abstract is not accepted).
      Authors of accepted presentations will be notified (via e-mail) by late-September 2008. All extended abstracts are to be submitted electronically and will be available on-line via the Web, Instructions for formatting extended abstracts will be posted on the AMS Web site. Manuscripts (up to 3MB) must be submitted electronically by 7 January 2009. All abstracts, extended abstracts and presentations will be available on the AMS Web site at no cost.
      For more information, contact the organizing committee: Jerry Potter (email jpotter@ucdavis.edu), David Burridge (email: d.m.burridge@btinternet.com) , or Peter Neilley (tel: 978-983-6554; e-mail: pneilley@wsi.com) (2/08)

Call for Papers

25th Conference on International Interactive Information and Processing Systems (IIPS) for Meteorology, Oceanography, and Hydrology, 11–15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
      The 25th IIPS Conference, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, and organized by the AMS Executive Committee, will be held 11–15 January 2009, as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Preliminary programs, registration, hotel, and general information will be posted on the AMS Web site (http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/annual/) in mid-September 2008.

     The 2009 Annual Meeting is being organized around the broad theme of “Urban Weather and Climate: Now and the Future.” The relevance and timeliness of the urban theme cannot be overemphasized. Recent events – Hurricane Katrina; urban floods in Europe and China; heat waves in London, Paris and Chicago; homeland security concerns and industrial chemical accidents; to name a few – point out the vulnerability of urban populations to high-impact weather of all types. In the U.S. today, approximately two-thirds of the population live in cities that occupy less than two percent of the U.S. land mass. This past year, the global population may have reached a tipping point with the world’s urban population equaling its rural population; by 2030, the urban population fraction is predicted to surpass 60% globally and exceed 82% in the more developed countries. Most of the urban population growth results from migration from the rural areas as birth rates tend to decline in the urban areas. The nexus of urbanization and population growth, coupled with anthropogenic urban weather influences and global climate changes, portend an impending ‘perfect storm’ for the urban environment. The specialty conferences, symposia and special sessions that comprise the annual meeting will focus attention on six cross-cutting urban themes:

(a) Measurement systems and networks;
(b) Modeling and forecasting;
(c) Observations and studies of high-impact weather;
(d) Geographic influences on urban weather and climate;
(e) Human and environmental impacts; and
(f) Implications of climate change and population growth.

     Papers for this conference are solicited on all aspects of IIPS related to Global Meteorological and Hydrological Service Updates; International Applications; Satellite IIPS and Applications; Radar IIPS and Applications, including Multifunction Phased Array Radar (MPAR); Interactive Processing Systems; Applications in Meteorology, Oceanography, Hydrology and Climatology; GIS Applications; Internet Applications and Cyberinfrastructure; Challenges in Data Access, Distribution, and Use; and Advances and Applications in Transportation Weather, Surface and Aviation. A special session will address recent developments in Virtual Globe technology and applications.
      The 25th IIPS will feature five joint sessions as follows.


• One with the 13th Integrated Observing and Assimilation Systems for Atmosphere, Oceans, and Land Surface (IOAS-AOLS) Conference a session related to global environmental observing systems including, but not limited to, the Global Climate Observing System (GCOS), Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS), and Global Terrestrial Observing System (GTOS). Abstracts for this session may be submitted either to the IIPS or to the IOAS-AOLS conference.
• One with the 18th Symposium on Education.
• One with the 21st Conference on Climate Variability and Change titled "Distributed Earth Science Information Systems." Abstracts for this session may be submitted either to the IIPS or to the Climate Variability and Change Conference.
• A new one in conjunction with the Policy & Socioeconomic Research Committee on Transportation issues
• Another new one with the Satellite committee on Virtual Globe applications; this new joint session will be in addition to the standalone Virtual Globes sessions that IIPS will continue to host

     There are also two special sessions for this year as follows:
• In 2007 and 2008, IIPS has hosted a session on the Linked Environments for Atmospheric Discovery (LEAD). However, this year the LEAD session is evolving into an exciting new session entitled Cyberinfrastructure for Mesoscale Research. Recent advances in information, computing and networking technologies have produced an array of cyberinfrastructure and conceptual frameworks to enable /real time, on-demand, and dynamically-adaptive/ nature of mesoscale weather analysis, prediction and research; the complexities associated with its disparate, high volume data sets and streams; and the immense computational demands of numerical models and data assimilation systems. Innovative approaches have been developed for collecting, managing and providing access to large amounts of data, as well as new computing paradigms and information frameworks for the design, execution of modeling and assimilation systems to predict and understand multi-scale atmospheric processes, mine and visualize observations and model output, and provide novel opportunities for integrating such approaches in education and outreach. This session on invites papers that will present the status and results from ongoing efforts in this nascent area of information technology, and provides a forum to share and discuss ideas and common issues.
• Finally, a special retrospective half day session celebrating the 25th anniversary of the IIPS Conference will be held which will provide a review of significant accomplishments over the past quarter of a century that have occurred with respect to advancements in IIPS applications and services.
     In an effort to improve the formal poster viewing experience there will be two distinct poster series, each two days long. The first is Sunday evening through Tuesday morning and the second is Wednesday morning through Thursday evening. All posters must be removed at the end of the first series in order to set posters for the second series. More information will be available once the program has been finalized.

     Please submit your abstract electronically via the Web by 1 August 2008 (refer to the AMS Web page at http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/online_submit.html.) An abstract fee of $90 (payable by credit card or purchase order) is charged at the time of submission (refundable only if abstract is not accepted).

     Authors of accepted presentations will be notified (via e-mail) by mid-September 2008. As begun in 2008, no preprint CD-ROM will be prepared. However, authors of invited and accepted papers will still be asked to contribute to the web-based proceedings of the conference. All extended abstracts are to be submitted electronically and will be available on-line via the Web. Instructions for formatting extended manuscripts for the extended abstract will be posted on the AMS Web site. Manuscripts (up to 3MB) must be submitted electronically to AMS 7 January 2009. Furthermore, beyond the abstract fee of $90 there will be no charge for the extended abstract. All extended abstracts and presentations will be freely available on the AMS Web site.

     For additional information please contact the program co-chairpersons, Howard Diamond, NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center, 301-427-2475, howard.diamond@noaa.gov; or Ward Seguin from NOAA/Oceanic and Atmospheric Research, 301-734-1198, ward.seguin@noaa.gov. (2/08; r7/08)

Call for Papers

23rd Conference on Hydrology, 11–15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
    The 23rd Conference on Hydrology, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, and organized by the AMS Committee on Hydrology, will be held 11–15 January 2009, as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Preliminary programs, registration, hotel, and general information will be posted on the AMS Web site (http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/annual/) in late-September 2008.
      Papers for this conference are solicited on advances in hydrology and hydrometeorology, both from a scientific and operational perspective. Topics of interest include:


1) Hydrologic forecasting, in particular the development and operation of weather and climate forecasts in end user sectors; the conveying and presentation of risk in hydrologic forecasts to the public; and hydrologic forecast verification.

2) Drought prediction, monitoring and mitigation, in particular novel approaches for the early detection of drought using remotely sensing and/or hydrologic modeling; the implementation of effective drought mitigation procedures, and the development of modeling and/or analysis techniques to improve the forecasting of drought conditions. Submissions describing activities associated with the National Integrated Drought Information System (NIDIS) are particularly encouraged.

3) Remote sensing, in particular applications of GEOSS to the hydrological cycle (see below); remote sensing of high impact hydrometeorological events; validation of remotely sensed hydrometeorological observations; and the state of the art in radar precipitation estimation.

4) Hydrological impacts of land use change, both at a local scale as well as regional scale impacts.

5) Data assimilation techniques and their applications to land surface state and parameter estimation in hydrology, in particular advances in bias, error and parameter estimation in the coupled land-atmosphere system.

     In addition, we are considering joint sessions in the following areas:

1) Advances in atmospheric reanalysis, in particular the study of extreme events in reanalyses, as well as hydrometeorological research with reanalyses (joint with the AMS Committee on Climate Variability and Change).

2) Water in the West (joint with the 4th Symposium on Policy and Socio-Economic Research).

3) Remote sensing applications of GEOSS to the hydrological cycle (joint with the 16th Conference on Satellite Meteorology and Oceanography).

4) Applications of artificial intelligence techniques in hydrology (joint with the 7th Seventh Conference on Artificial Intelligence and its Applications to the Environmental Sciences).
Finally, the AMS Committee on Hydrology co-organizes the Symposium on Urban High Impact Weather jointly with the AMS Committee on Radar Meteorology and the AMS Committee on Severe and Local Storms. This symposium will be held during the 89th Annual Meeting in Phoenix. See the Symposium’s Call for Papers for details.
     The Hydrology Committee will host a student paper competition. We will make awards for exemplary student poster and oral presentations.
      Please submit your abstract electronically via the Web by 1 August 2008 (refer to the AMS Web page at http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/online_submit.html.) An abstract fee of $90 (payable by credit card or purchase order) is charged at the time of submission (refundable only if abstract is not accepted).
      The $90 abstract fee will now include the submission of your abstract, the posting of your extended abstract, and the uploading and recording of your presentation which will be archived on the AMS Web site. We will no longer be producing a CD-ROM, allowing us to extend the deadline date for extended abstracts.
      Authors of accepted presentations will be notified (via e-mail) by late-September 2008. All extended abstracts are to be submitted electronically and will be available on-line via the Web, Instructions for formatting extended abstracts will be posted on the AMS Web site. Manuscripts (up to 3MB) must be submitted electronically by 7 January 2009. All abstracts, extended abstracts and presentations will be available on the AMS Web site at no cost.
      For additional information please contact the program chairperson(s), Bart Nijssen, 3TIER, 2001 Sixth Avenue, Suite 2100, Seattle, WA 98121, (P) 206 708 8424, (F) 206 708 8425, bnijssen@3tiergroup.com. (2/08); r7/08)

Call for Papers

21st Conference on Climate Variability and Change, 11–15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
      The 21st Conference on Climate Variability and Change (CVC), sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, and organized by the AMS Committee on Climate Variability and Change, will be held 11–15 January 2009, as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Hotel information will be posted to the AMS Web site (http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/annual/) in the spring; registration and general information will be posted starting over the summer; and the preliminary programs will be posted in late-September 2008.
      The theme for the 2009 AMS Annual Meeting is “Urban Weather and Climate: Now and the Future.” The relevance and timeliness of the urban theme cannot be overemphasized. Recent events – Hurricane Katrina; urban floods in Europe and China; heat waves in London, Paris and Chicago; homeland security concerns and industrial chemical accidents; to name a few – point out the vulnerability of urban populations to high-impact weather of all types. In the U.S. today, approximately two-thirds of the population live in cities that occupy less than two percent of the U.S. land mass. This past year, the global population may have reached a tipping point with the world’s urban population equaling its rural population; by 2030, the urban population fraction is predicted to surpass 60% globally and exceed 82% in the more developed countries. Most of the urban population growth results from migration from the rural areas as birth rates tend to decline in the urban areas. The nexus of urbanization and population growth, coupled with anthropogenic urban weather influences and global climate changes, portend an impending ‘perfect storm’ for the urban environment.
      Papers for this conference are solicited on:

* Climate and weather extremes affecting urban areas (the symposium on urban high impact weather lists urban climate as one of its themes but the example is "urban heat island effect on storm phenomena)

* Prediction of climate on seasonal to decadal timescales

* Observed seasonal-interannual variability

* Global climate modeling: new frontiers

* Regional climate modeling, especially with urban applications

* Detection and attribution of climate changes

    The following joint sessions are being planned for this year: 23rd Conference on Hydrology on reanalyses. Reanalyses have provided a valuable source of data for water cycle climate and variability. This year, the reanalysis session will focus on the study of extreme events in reanalyses, as well as hydrometeorological research with reanalyses. Joint Sessions are also planned; 25th Conference on International Interactive Information and Processing Systems (IIPS) for Meteorology, Oceanography, and Hydrology: Distributed Earth Science Information Systems; and Seventh Conference on Artificial Intelligence and its Applications to the Environmental Sciences: Applications of artificial learning techniques in climate variability, especially as it relates to the urban environment. Named sessions will be developed and suggestions are welcome.
      The $90 abstract fee will now include the submission of your abstract, the posting of your extended abstract, and the uploading and recording of your presentation which will be archived on the AMS Web site. We will no longer be producing a CD-ROM, allowing us to extend the deadline date for extended abstracts.
Please submit your abstract electronically via the Web by 1 August 2008 (refer to the AMS Web page at http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/online_submit.html.) An abstract fee of $90 (payable by credit card or purchase order) is charged at the time of submission (refundable only if abstract is not accepted).
      Authors of accepted presentations will be notified (via e-mail) by late-September 2008. All extended abstracts are to be submitted electronically and will be available on-line via the Web, Instructions for formatting extended abstracts will be posted on the AMS Web site. Manuscripts (up to 3MB) must be submitted electronically by 7 January 2009. All abstracts, extended abstracts and presentations will be available on the AMS Web site at no cost.
      For additional information please contact the Climate Variations and Change Committee chairpersons, Phil Mote (e-mail: philip@atmos.washington.edu); David R. Easterling (e-mail: David.Easterling@noaa.gov); or Ed Olenic (e-mail: ed.olenic@noaa.gov). (2/08; 5/08; r7/08)

Call for Papers

18th Symposium on Education, 11–15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
      The 18th Symposium on Education, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, and organized by the AMS Commission on Education and Human Resources, will be held 11–15 January 2009, as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Hotel information will be posted to the AMS Web site (http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/annual/) in the spring; registration and general information will be posted starting over the summer; and the preliminary programs will be posted in late-September 2008.
      Papers for this conference are solicited on all aspects of educational outreach in the atmospheric, oceanic and hydrologic sciences, including topics on K-12, university, informal, and professional education. There will be a special session on the educational activities of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. In addition, there will be a joint session with one of the scientific sessions with an emphasis on the education applications of that scientific specialty (topic to be announced later).
      The $90 abstract fee will now include the submission of your abstract, the posting of your extended abstract, and the uploading and recording of your presentation which will be archived on the AMS Web site. We will no longer be producing a CD-ROM, allowing us to extend the deadline date for extended abstracts.
      Please submit your abstract electronically via the Web by 1 August 2008 (refer to the AMS Web page at http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/online_submit.html.) An abstract fee of $90 (payable by credit card or purchase order) is charged at the time of submission (refundable only if abstract is not accepted).
Authors of accepted presentations will be notified (via e-mail) by late-September 2008. All extended abstracts are to be submitted electronically and will be available on-line via the Web, Instructions for formatting extended abstracts will be posted on the AMS Web site. Manuscripts (up to 3MB) must be submitted electronically by 7 January 2009. All abstracts, extended abstracts and presentations will be available on the AMS Web site at no cost.
      For additional information please contact the program chairperson(s), David R. Smith, Oceanography Dept., United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, MD 21402 (tel: 410-293-6553; fax: 410-293-2137; email: drsmith@usna.edu) or Rajul Pandya, UCAR/SOARS, P.O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307-3000 (tel: 303- 497- 2650; fax: 303-497-8629; email: pandya@ucar.edu). (2/08)

Call for Papers

16th Conference on Air-Sea Interaction, 11–15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
      The 16th Conference on Air-Sea Interaction, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society and organized by the AMS Committee on Air-Sea Interaction, will be held 11–15 January 2009, as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Hotel information will be posted to the AMS Web site (http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/annual/) in the spring; registration and general information will be posted starting over the summer; and the preliminary programs will be posted in late-September 2008.
      The 89th Annual Meeting is being organized around the broad theme of “Urban Weather and Climate: Now and in the Future,” with an emphasis on the vulnerability of urban society to high-impact weather of all types. Relevant events include Hurricane Katrina, urban floods in Europe and China, and coastal homeland security. Three integrating sub-themes to be highlighted are “Modeling and Forecasting Urban Areas,” “Observations and Studies of High-Impact Weather,” and “Geographic Influences on Urban Weather and Climate.”
      In terms of air-sea interaction, coastal areas in the U.S. include some of the most developed areas in the nation. The narrow coastal fringe that makes up 17 percent of the nation’s contiguous land area is home to more than half of its population. Coastal air-sea interaction processes thus mesh well with the broad theme of the Annual Meeting.
Papers for this conference are solicited on all aspects of air-sea interaction across a wide spectrum of time and spatial scales. General sessions for the conference will be based on the number and topics of abstracts received. Although not an exhaustive list, we welcome abstracts covering the following topics:
• Remote sensing applied to air-sea interaction
• In situ turbulent air-sea flux measurements, including gas exchange
• Development and use of global air-sea data sets
• Laboratory studies of air-sea exchange processes
• Air-sea interaction research transitioned to operational capabilities
• Sea-surface physics, including waves, whitecaps, and aerosol generation

• Air-Sea interaction over eddies
• Air-sea interaction over tropical and Southern Hemisphere fronts
• Coupled ocean-atmosphere interactions and their contribution to climate variability on all time scales
• Ocean-atmosphere interactions and influences on tropical and extratropical storms
• Ocean-atmosphere interactions and predictability in the climate system
• High-latitude air-sea coupling in the presence of sea ice and results from the International Polar Year

In addition to these general sessions, we are considering special or joint sessions that address the Annual Meeting theme of urban weather and climate. Potential sessions might address some of the following:
• Coastal mesoscale circulations in the atmosphere and ocean
• Near-shore scatterometry
• Sea-level issues
• Ocean wave processes at the shoreline
• Basin-scale forcing of synoptic weather patterns
• Ocean wave, current, and temperature effects on the shoreline recreation industry

     Participants with additional suggestions for general, special, or joint sessions are encouraged to contact the program chairpersons. To encourage interdisciplinary interaction among attendees, an invited talk as an introductory overview is planned for each session.
      As usual, the Air-Sea Interaction Conference will host a student paper competition. We will make awards for exemplary student poster and oral presentations. Also, we traditionally give students who enter this competition a complimentary copy of the AMS Glossary of Meteorology or a comparable AMS book.
      Please submit your abstract electronically via the Web by 1 August 2008 (refer to the AMS Web page at http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/online_submit.html). A $90 abstract fee (payable by credit card or purchase order) is charged at the time of submission (refundable only if the abstract is not accepted).
      This $90 abstract fee will now cover the submission of your abstract, the posting of your extended abstract, and the uploading and recording of your presentation, which will all be archived on the AMS Web site. Because we will no longer be producing a CD-ROM, we can extend the deadline for authors to submit extended abstracts.
Authors of accepted presentations will be notified (via e-mail) by late September 2008 and asked to submit an extended abstract (up to 3 MB) by 7 January 2009. All extended abstracts are to be submitted electronically via the Web; instructions for formatting extended abstracts will be posted on the AMS Web site. All abstracts, extended abstracts, and presentations will be available on the AMS Web site at no cost. There is also no cost for color graphics in the abstract or the extended abstract.
      For additional information, please contact the program chairperson or the co-chairs: Will Perrie (chairperson); Bedford Institute of Oceanography; Dartmouth, Nova Scotia B2Y 4A2, Canada (tel: 902-426-3985; fax: 902-425-3985; email: perriew@dfo-mpo.gc.ca). Ed Andreas (co-chair); NorthWest Research Associates; Lebanon, NH (tel: 603-448-3555; e mail: eandreas@nwra.com). Ralph Foster (co-chair, for the student competition); University of Washington, Applied Physics Laboratory; Seattle, WA (tel: 206-685-5201; e-mail: ralph@apl.washington.edu). (2/08)

Call for Papers

16th Conference on Satellite Meteorology and Oceanography, 11 January–15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
     The 16th Conference on Satellite Meteorology and Oceanography, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, and organized by the AMS Committee on Satellite Meteorology and Oceanography, will be held 11–15 January 2009, as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Preliminary programs, registration, hotel, and general information will be posted on the AMS Web site (http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS) in late-September 2008.
      Papers for this conference are solicited on all aspects of satellite meteorology and oceanography. General session topics include 1) Retrievals; 2) Cloud Products; 3) Climatology and Long-Term Satellite Studies; 4) Environmental Applications and Decision Support Systems; 5) Operational Products and the Transition from Research to Operations; 6) Data Assimilation; 7) New and Future Sensors, Applications, and Systems; 8) Use of Virtual and Digital Globes for Visualizing Satellite Data and “Mashups”; 9) Critical Aspects of Satellite Observations and Information in Emerging Systems of Systems; and 10) Education. Joint sessions are also planned with the 15th Conference on Interaction of the Sea and Atmosphere, the 25th Conference on Interactive Information Processing Systems (IIPS) for Meteorology, Oceanography and Hydrology, the 13th Symposium on Integrated Observing and Assimilation Systems for Atmosphere, Oceans, and Land Surface (IOAS-AOLS), the 5th Symposium on Future of National Operational Environmental Satellites (NPOESS), 18th Symposium on Education, and Fourth Symposium on Policy and Socio-economic Research.
      The $90 abstract fee will now include the submission of your abstract, the posting of your extended abstract, and the uploading and recording of your presentation that will be archived on the AMS Web site. We will no longer be producing a CD-ROM, allowing us to extend the deadline date for extended abstracts.
     Please submit your abstract electronically via the Web by 1 August 2008 (refer to the AMS Web page at http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS for instructions.) An abstract fee of $90 (payable by credit card or purchase order) is charged at the time of submission (refundable only if abstract is not accepted).
      Authors of accepted presentations will be notified (via e-mail) by late September 2008. All extended abstracts are to be submitted electronically and will be available on-line via the Web. Manuscripts (up to 3MB) must be submitted electronically by 7 January 2009 to AMS Headquarters. All abstracts, extended abstracts and presentations will be available on the AMS web site at no cost.
      For additional information please contact a program chairperson, Philip Ardanuy, Chief Scientist, Raytheon Information Solutions, 12220 Sunrise Valley Drive, Reston, VA 20191-3402 (Tel: 301-785-6026; email: philip_e_ardanuy@raytheon.com) or Wayne Feltz, Research Scientist, SSEC/CIMSS University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1225 W. Dayton St, Madison, Wisconsin, 53706 (Tel: 608-265-6283; email: wayne.feltz@ssec.wisc.edu). (2/08; r6/08)

Call for Papers

13th Conference on Integrated Observing and Assimilation Systems for Atmosphere, Oceans, and Land Surface (IOAS-AOLS), 11–15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
      The 13th Conference on Integrated Observing and Assimilation Systems for Atmosphere, Oceans, and Land Surface (IOAS-AOLS), sponsored by the American Meteorological Society will be held 11–15 January 2008, as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Hotel information will be posted to the AMS Web site (http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/annual/) in the spring; registration and general information will be posted starting over the summer; and the preliminary programs will be posted in late-September 2008.
      The IOAS-AOLS Symposium recognizes that observing the atmosphere, ocean, and land surface is crucial for understanding the interactions among all three and that assimilation of the observed information into models is crucial for weather and climate monitoring and forecasting. The symposium cuts across several allied disciplines and encourages interaction and collaboration among specialists in each. Papers emphasizing integrating aspects will be given preference, namely: How does a particular observing system mesh with others? What purposes does it serve uniquely? What other systems complement its capabilities? How does it advance environmental understanding, monitoring, and prediction? What assimilation methods ensure that the observational data will be fully exploited in numerical weather prediction models? What can assimilation and prediction systems tell us about the impact of current and future observing systems on forecast accuracy?
      Sessions will be organized around the following topics. 1) Ocean observations: How does a particular observing system complement other systems and contribute to a viable composite observing system appropriate for the ocean environment? What do the observations tell us about the ocean environment? 2) Atmospheric observations, in situ and remote, including from satellites: Advantages and shortcomings compared with other observing systems. 3) Land-surface observations, including urban areas: surface characteristics, surface fluxes and their effect on boundary layer depth; applications in public health, transport models, and emergency response. 4) Assimilation of observations (ocean, atmosphere, and land surface) into models: assimilation methods; minimization techniques; forward models and their adjoints; incorporation of constraints; error statistics; 5) Experiments involving observations, real or hypothetical: data impact tests (sensitivity of forecasts to a particular source of observations); observing system simulation experiments (OSSEs); and 7) Field experiments: observational results from past field experiments; potential relevance of the field observations to operational prediction.
      Please submit your abstract electronically via the Web by 1 August 2008 (refer to the AMS Web page at http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/online_submit.html.) An abstract fee of $90 (payable by credit card or purchase order) is charged at the time of submission (refundable only if abstract is not accepted).
      Authors of accepted presentations will be notified (via e-mail) by late-September 2008. All extended abstracts are to be submitted electronically and will be available on-line via the Web, Instructions for formatting extended abstracts will be posted on the AMS Web site. Manuscripts (up to 3MB) must be submitted electronically by 7 January 2009. All abstracts, extended abstracts and presentations will be available on the AMS Web site at no cost.
      For additional information please contact the program chairpersons, Robert Atlas, NOAA Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory, 4301 Rickenbacker Causeway, Miami FL 33149 (tel: 305-361-4300; email Robert.atlas@noaa.gov) or Eugenia Kalnay, Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science, University of Maryland, 3431 CSS Building, College Park, MD, 20742-2425 (tel: 301-405-5370/5391; email: ekalnay@atmos.umd.edu). (2/08)

Call for papers

12th Conference of Atmospheric Science Librarians International (ASLI): Taking the Temperature: Understanding Library Microclimates, 14–15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
      Much as the weather is subject to regional and seasonal variations, so too are libraries. Libraries vary in the populations they serve, the materials they collect and provide access to, their physical facilities, the expertise of their staff, and the services they provide. Each library has its own unique microclimate that works to support the needs of its user community. The purpose of this meeting, to be held on 14–15 January 2009 in Phoenix, Arizona, is to highlight some of the variations in how the library community is responding to the changing needs of the meteorological community vis a vis information resources and services of all types, from data curation to digital reference.
      We invite proposals for papers describing library microclimates, covering topics such as specialized library services, tools or collections, liaison and training programs, marketing and outreach programs, assessment and management tools, and innovative library spaces (physical or virtual). Submissions should include full contact information, a title, and brief abstract of less than 250 words. Poster submissions are also accepted as are proposals for a ‘lightning round’ session, consisting of back-to-back 5-minute talks on tips or tools of interest to the attendees. Students are particularly encouraged to submit proposals.
      The deadline for abstracts is 1 August 2008. Please submit proposals to: Linda Musser, ASLI Chair-elect, 105 Deike Bldg, University Park PA 16802 USA; 814-863-7073; Lrm4@psu.edu. (7/08)

 

Call for Papers

11th Conference on Atmospheric Chemistry, 11–15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
      The 11th Conference on Atmospheric Chemistry, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, and organized by the AMS Committee on Atmospheric Chemistry, will be held during 11–15 January 2009, as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Preliminary programs, registration, hotel, and general information will be posted on the AMS web site (http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/annual/) in late-September, 2008.
      The theme for the 2009 AMS Annual Meeting is “Urban Weather and Climate: Now and the Future.” The relevance and timeliness of the urban theme cannot be overemphasized. Recent events—Hurricane Katrina; urban floods in Europe and China; heat waves in London, Paris and Chicago; homeland security concerns and industrial chemical accidents; to name a few—point out the vulnerability of urban populations to high-impact weather of all types. In the U.S. today, approximately two-thirds of the population live in cities that occupy less than 2% of the U.S. land mass. The nexus of urbanization and population growth, coupled with anthropogenic urban weather influences and global climate changes, portend an impending ‘perfect storm’ for the urban environment. The 2009 Annual Meeting aims to highlight advances and challenges in urban-related science, applications, observations, modeling and operations. The specialty conferences, symposia, and special sessions will focus attention on six cross-cutting urban themes: (a) measurement systems and networks; (b) modeling and forecasting; (c) observations and studies of high-impact weather; (d) geographic influences on urban weather and climate; (e) human and environmental impacts; and (f) implications of climate change and population growth. “High-impact” weather is considered in its broadest sense, and includes severe weather, high wind events, precipitation, floods, icing, lightning, poor visibility, adverse air quality, and temperature extremes. The meeting will also feature workshops and short courses, numerous town hall meetings, the Sunday WeatherFest, a Monday Presidential Policy Forum on the role of weather and climate in urban affairs, and two special named symposia honoring Prof. Timothy Oke and the late Dr. Tony Hollingsworth.
      Papers are solicited on all aspects of Atmospheric Chemistry and Air Quality including field and laboratory measurements, theoretical studies, and multi-pollutant and multi-dimensional modeling from urban to global scales for regular sessions. We are particularly interested in hosting special field study results and results aimed at urban megacity impacts upon atmospheric chemistry and air quality. Sessions will be organized for the following topics: the effects of urban areas upon atmospheric chemistry and air quality; field, laboratory, and modeling studies of air quality; air quality and climate change; air quality forecasting; air pollution in mega cities in the world; the effects of meteorology on air quality; the use of surface and remote sensing measurements for air quality model evaluation; polar atmospheric chemistry; agricultural air quality and lightning, atmospheric chemistry, and air quality.
      Depending on the availability of external funds, the Atmospheric Chemistry Committee will support travel awards for post-doctorates, graduate students, and undergraduates to attend and participate in the conference. To apply for the travel award, please visit the AMS web site. Graduate and undergraduate students are highly encouraged to submit an abstract describing your research. Best student oral presentations and poster papers will be selected and awarded at the meeting.
      Please submit your abstract electronically via the web by 1 August 2008 (refer to the AMS web page at http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/online_submit.html). An abstract fee of $90 (payable by credit card or purchase order) is charged at the time of submission (refundable only if abstract is not accepted). The $90 abstract fee will include the submission of your abstract, the posting of your extended abstract, and the uploading and recording of your presentation which will be archived on the AMS web site. CD-ROM will no longer be produced.
      Authors of accepted presentations will be notified (via e-mail) by late-September 2008. All extended abstracts are to be submitted electronically and will be available on-line via the web. Instructions for formatting extended abstracts will be posted on the AMS web site. Manuscripts (up to 3MB) must be submitted electronically by 7 January 2009. All abstracts, extended abstracts, and presentations will be available on the AMS web site at no cost.
      For additional information please contact the program chairpersons, Dr. Yang Zhang, Dept. of Marine, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, North Carolina State University, Campus Box 8208, Raleigh, NC 27695-8208, (919) 515-9688, yang_zhang@ncsu.edu, and Dr. Brian Lamb, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-2910, (509) 335-5702, blamb@wsu.edu. (2/108; r4/08; r7/08; r8/08)

Call for Papers

Eighth Symposium on the Urban Environment, 11–15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
      The Eighth Symposium on the Urban Environment, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, and organized by the AMS Board on the Urban Environment, will be held 11–15 January 2009, as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Preliminary programs, registration, hotel, and general information will be posted on the AMS Web site (http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/annual/) in late-September 2008.
      Papers and posters are invited on all subjects dealing with urban atmospheres, including observational, modeling, theoretical, forecasting, and applied studies.
      Joint plenary-sessions with the Oke Symposium are planned on the topics of the urban climate system, urban energy balance and urban heat islands. Authors planning to submit abstracts in these topic areas should indicate if their work is related to Tim Oke’s legacy and if they want to have their abstract considered for the Joint Sessions with the Oke Symposium. Regular abstract submissions (not intended as being part of the Oke Symposium) in these topic areas are also strongly encouraged.
      A joint session on weather and climate in coastal areas is planned together with the Eighth Conference on Coastal Atmospheric and Oceanic Prediction and Processes. Additionally, joint sessions are planned with the Boundary Layers and Turbulence Committee on modeling and measurements of urban boundary layers and turbulence, with the Atmospheric Biogeosciences Committee on urban ecological monitoring networks, and with the Committee of Meteorological Aspects of Air Pollution on dispersion and air quality in cities (including emergency response). We also plan to offer a session co-sponsored by the Board on Societal Impacts focusing on the societal and economic impacts of urbanization, including weather and climate hazards in the urban environment. Joint Sessions on urban weather impacts on energy demand and atmospheric modeling tools for urban/complex terrain energy production are planned together with the Energy Committee.
      Other planned session-themes include: energy and water balances; urban canopy and roughness sublayers, global climate change and urbanization, biometeorology and public health in urban areas; precipitation; weather forecasting for urban areas; and urban planning. Persons with additional program suggestions are encouraged to contact the program chairs.
      The $90 abstract fee will now include the submission of your abstract, the posting of your extended abstract, and the uploading and recording of your presentation which will be archived on the AMS Web site. We will no longer be producing a CD-ROM, allowing us to extend the deadline date for extended abstracts.
      Please submit your abstract electronically via the Web by 1 August 2008 (refer to the AMS Web page at http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/online_submit.html.) An abstract fee of $90 (payable by credit card or purchase order) is charged at the time of submission (refundable only if abstract is not accepted).
      Authors of accepted presentations will be notified (via e-mail) by late-September 2008. All extended abstracts are to be submitted electronically and will be available on-line via the Web, Instructions for formatting extended abstracts will be posted on the AMS Web site. Manuscripts (up to 3MB) must be submitted electronically by 7 January 2009. All abstracts, extended abstracts and presentations will be available on the AMS Web site at no cost.
      For additional information please contact the program chairpersons, Anthony Brazel (abrazel@asu.edu), Petra Klein (pkklein@ou.edu) and Julie Lundquist (lundquist1@llnl.gov). (2/08; r4/08)

Call for Papers

Eighth Conference on Coastal Atmospheric and Oceanic Prediction and Processes, 11–15 January 2009, Phoenix, Arizona
      The Eighth Conference on Coastal Atmospheric and Oceanic Prediction and Processes, sponsored by the American Meteorological Society, and organized by the AMS Committee on Coastal Environment, will be held 11–15 January 2009, as part of the 89th AMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona. Preliminary programs, registration, hotel, and general information will be posted on the AMS Web site (http://www.ametsoc.org/meet/annual/) in late-September 2008.
      Papers for this conference are solicited for both basic and applied research issues involving the understanding, analysis, and prediction of the coastal atmosphere and ocean, with a special emphasis on coupling of atmospheric and oceanic processes and their effects on biological response, coastal urban effects, ocean and air quality, climate analysis and predictions, interdisciplinary field programs, remote sensing and in-situ observational networks, and advances in modeling and forecasting.
      At the AMS annual meeting in January 2009 a joint session is planned between the "8th Conference on Coastal Atmospheric and Oceanic Prediction and Processes" and the "8th Symposium on the Urban Environment". Invited presentations and topics for the session entitled “Weather and Climate in Coastal Urban Areas” will focus on all aspects of urban meteorology and oceanography in coastal regions, including:
- Observations and predictions of coastal urban heat islands
- Remote sensing of urban parameters and urban change in the coastal zone
- Operational and hindcast simulations and observations of coupled ocean-atmosphere processes impacting coastal cities
- Transport and dispersion datasets and modeling studies in coastal cities (including LES)
- Synoptic meteorology of urban coastal areas
- Air pollution studies focused on coastal urban corridors
- Coastal urban planning in future climates (e.g., high heat days and their impact on the population)

At the AMS annual meeting in January 2009 a joint session is planned between the "8th Conference on Coastal Atmospheric and Oceanic Prediction and Processes" and the "21st Conference on Climate Variability and Change". Invited presentations and topics for the session will focus on all aspects of climate change in coastal regions, including:
- Observations and predictions of climate change in coastal regions
- Climate variability at the land-ocean interface along coasts
- Long-term trends in storm systems in coastal areas