Felix Vogel, Environment and Climate Change Canada
Background evaluation for an urban study: Washington DC and Baltimore
Anna Karion, NIST
Exploring urban methane emissions from TROPOMI CH4 and CO observations
Genevieve Plant, University of Michigan
Evaluating public-transit platforms as a cost-effective component of urban monitoring and initial observations during the Covid-19 lockdown
Logan Mitchell, University of Utah
Quantifying Mobile Source Nitrogen Oxides Emissions during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Brian McDonald, NOAA Chemical Sciences Laboratory
Friday, July 17
Observing the Stratosphere in an Era of Rapid Change 1
Title
Author
Slides
Overview of ozonesondes networks, observational needs and outstanding science questions
David Tarasick, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canada
SHADOZ Project Update: 2020 Archive and the ASOPOS Activity
D. E. Kollonige, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, USA
A Post-2013 Drop-off in Total Ozone at a Third of Global Ozonesonde Stations: ECC Instrument Artifacts?
Ryan M. Stauffer, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
Trends in Tropical Ozone and Convection (1998-2018) Based on v06 SHADOZ Profiles
Anne Thompson, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, USA
A unified analysis of stratospheric and tropospheric ozone anomalies above western North America and Europe
Kai-Lan Chang, CIRES, NOAA Chemical Sciences Division, USA
South Pole ozonesonde record and anomalous years
Bryan Johnson, NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory, USA
Monday, July 20
Observing the Stratosphere in an Era of Rapid Change 2
Title
Author
Slides
Determining the Strength of the Stratospheric Circulation from Satellite Observations of Trace Gases
Marianna Linz, Harvard University
Vertical Profile Observations of Greenhouse Gases and Their Isotopic Compositions Using AirCore & LISA
Huilin Chen, University of Groningen
Investigating Stratospheric Changes Between 2009 and 2018 with Aircraft, AirCores, and a Global Model Focusing on CFC-11
Johannes Laube, Institute of Energy and Climate Research
NOAA/GML Stratospheric Sampling Using AirCores: RoutineMeasurements, Satellite Validation and Model Evaluation
Bianca Baier, NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory and CIRES
Recent Advances in Stratospheric Monitoring Using Balloon-borne Sondes
Dale Hurst, NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratoryand CIRES
The Portable Optical Particle Spectrometer and the Value for Stratospheric Aerosol Research
Lizzy Asher, NOAA Chemical Sciences Laboratory and CIRES
From the Upper Troposphere Through the Stratosphere: How Satellite Measurements Help Us Decode the Past to Better Project the Future
Luke Oman, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Tuesday, July 21
Updates on Carbon Cycle Research From Partners in Asia, Australia, and New Zealand
Title
Author
Slides
CO Measurements as a Biomass Burning Carbon Emission Tracer at the Amazon Basin
Lucas Domingues, National Isotope Centre, GNS Science, Lower Hutt, New Zealand
CarbonWatchNZ: Regional to National Scale Inverse Modelling of New Zealand’s Carbon Balance
Beata Bukosa, NIWA
The 2019/20 Australian Bushfires
Ray Langenfelds, CSIRO
The CONTRAIL commercial aircraft monitoring CO2 emissions from cities
Taku Umezawa, NIES
14C observations of atmospheric CO2 at Anmyeondo GAW station, Korea: Implications for fossil fuel CO2 and emission ratios
Haeyoung Lee, KMA
High precision greenhouse gases measurement in China
Yao Bo, CMA
Measurements of major greenhouse gases at three background sites in the East Asia
Chang-Feng Ou-Yang, Department of Atmospheric Sciences, National Central University
Friday, July 31
Advances in Measurement Methods
Title
Author
Slides
New NOAA/GML techniques for evaluation of remote sensing greenhouse and trace gas retrievals using the AirCore
Bianca Baier, NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory
Development of a pressurized AirCore for low altitude trace species profiling
Isaac Vimont, NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory
European perfluorocarbon emissions inferred through atmospheric measurements
Dan Say, University of Bristol
A Cavity-Enhanced Ultraviolet Absorption Instrument for High-Precision, Fast Time-Response Ozone Measurements
Tom Hanisco, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Single photon LIF: A newbenchmark for atmospheric measurements of nitric oxide
Andrew Rollins, NOAA Chemical Sciences Laboratory
Development Efforts Toward Increasing Density and Coverage of Vertical Profile Measurements of Greenhouse Gases through Ride-along and Commercial Flight Opportunities