THE LARGEST INTERNATIONAL EARTH AND SPACE SCIENCE MEETING IN THE WORLD
26,000 energized and passionate scientists from around the globe will gather at the AGU Fall Meeting to connect with colleagues, broaden their knowledge base, learn about new products and services, and embrace the joy of science.
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NESDIS AGU Presentations
- Robert Redmon, 10:18-10:23 am: NOAA's Center for Artificial Intelligence: Progress Towards an AI Ready Agency and Workforce
- Brian Meyer, 10:18-10:23 am: NOAA's Center for Artificial Intelligence: Progress Towards an AI Ready Agency and Workforce
- Tim Boyer, 12:45-12:48 pm: The World Ocean Database Cloud (WODc): International participation for cross-community open data accessibility
- Karin Gleason, 2:30-2:33 pm: Evaluation of the February 2021 South-Central Big Freeze
- Olivier Prat, 2:30-2:35 pm: Operational Near-real Time Drought Monitoring Using Global Satellite Precipitation Products (CMORPH) and In-situ Datasets (NClimGrid)
- Megan Cromwell, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: At-sea work from shore? Remote Sample Data Management Lessons Learned
- Laurel Rachmeler, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Data Mining for Science of the Middle Solar Corona
- Lindsey Wright, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Discovering Historical Tsunami Data Through Time-Lapse Animation
- Laurel Rachmeler, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: SWAP and the Middle Corona
- Olivier Prat, 1:23-1:28 pm: Learning about microphysical processes from polarimetric radar observations with BOSS
- Tim Boyer, 1:25-1:30 pm: Constraining uncertainty in Earth’s Energy Imbalance estimates
- Jay Lawrimore, 2:40-2:45 pm: Trends in short-duration precipitation extremes in the U.S.
- Richard Saltus, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Towards a Quantification of Uncertainty in Magnetic Maps and Models
- Richard Saltus, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Evaluating Data-driven Methods for Predicting Marine Geomagnetics from Disparate, Sparse Geophysical Data
- Brian Meyer, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Towards a Quantification of Uncertainty in Magnetic Maps and Models
- Michael MacFerrin, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: ETOPO 2022: An Updated NOAA Global Relief Model
- Ebenezer Nyadjro, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Bio-physical Changes in the Gulf of Mexico During the 2018 Hurricane Michael
- Courtney Peck, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Science-Quality GOES X-Ray Measurements and Implications for Solar Flare Research
- Richard Saltus, 4:00 - 6:00 am: Can a Smartphone Magnetometer Capture Space Weather?
- Kenneth Casey, 4:00 - 6:00 am: NOAA’s Next-Generation Cloud Archive
- Nancy Ritchey, 4:00 - 6:00 am: NARA, the OAIS-RM, and NOAA’s Next-Generation Cloud Archive
- Eric Kihn, 8:03-8:06 am: Promoting NOAA Workforce Proficiency on Artificial Intelligence through Open Science and Partnership
- Stephanie Herring, 9:30 - 10:30 am: Climate Extremes: Mechanisms, Attribution, and Early Warning
- Zhankun Wang, 10:23-10:28 am: Heat Content Estimate and Warming Trend in the Gulf of Mexico between 1950 and 2020
- Kenneth Kunkel, 2:24-2:27 pm: Historical Perspective on the 2021 heat waves in western North America
- Paul Loto'aniu, 2:51-2:56 pm: Alfven wave observations in the solar wind during the September 2017 solar flares and coronal mass ejection events
- Christopher Amante, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Coastal Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) to Support the Consumer Option for an Alternative System To Allocate Losses (COASTAL) Act
- Daniel Groeneveld, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: The seasonal impact of climate on wildfire in the American Southwest
- Ebenezer Nyadjro, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Towards a Holistic Understanding of the Microplastic Problem - the NOAA NCEI Global Marine Microplastic Database
- Monica Youngman, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: NCEI Data Stewardship Enterprise: The Evolution of the NOAA Archive
- Patrick Hogan, 4:03-4:08 pm: An Overview of Ocean Science Activities at the National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI)
- Lauren Carroll, 4:27-4:30 pm: The Role of Current Events in Increasing Social Media Engagement with NOAA Science: A Case Study in Natural Hazards
- Megan Cromwell, 8:32 - 8:37 am: Remote Sensing in the Deep Ocean: Improving Ocean Exploration Video Data Accessibility and Use with Machine Learning Technologies
- Megan Cromwell, 9:00 - 10:15 am: OS51A - Machine Learning in Coastal and Oceanographic Remote Sensing I Oral
- Kristine Romich, 10:10 - 10:15 am: Validation of the DSCOVR Spacecraft Mission 1-Minute Resolution Space Weather Solar Wind Products
- Laurel Rachmeler, 10:33 - 10:38 am: Demonstration of Chromospheric Magnetic Mapping with CLASP2.1
- Carrie Morill, 2:52-2:57 pm: Possible constraints on future regional warming from past interglacial temperatures
- Terence Bullet, 2:55-3:00 pm: Bistatic measurements of vertical winds in the F-region thermosphere above Puerto Rico
- James Reagan, 2:55-3:00 pm: Enhancing the Quality of Ocean Observations by Leveraging Machine Learning
- Alessandra Pacini, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Characterization of the magnetospheric ULF waves at geostationary orbit using GOES-R series magnetometers
- Carrie Morrill, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Hot Takes on Hot Lakes: Refining Paleoclimate Reconstructions and Model Simulations of Past African Climate Change using Proxy System Modeling
- Carrie Morrill, 4:00 - 6:00 pm: Validation of lacustrine proxy system modeling for Arctic lakes
The time for these presentations is in North American Central Standard Time.