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The Global Positioning System for the Geosciences: Summary and Proceedings of a Workshop on Improving the GPS Reference Station Infrastructure for Earth, Oceanic, and Atmospheric Science Applications (1997)
Commission on Engineering and Technical Systems (CETS)

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. "E Workshop Agenda." The Global Positioning System for the Geosciences: Summary and Proceedings of a Workshop on Improving the GPS Reference Station Infrastructure for Earth, Oceanic, and Atmospheric Science Applications. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 1997.

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The Global Positioning System for the Geosciences: Summary and Proceedings of a Workshop on Improving the GPS Reference Station Infrastructure for Earth, Oceanic, and Atmospheric Science Applications

POSTER PAPER AUTHORS

 
 

Jeff Behr, Scripps Institution of Oceanography — Scripps Orbit and Permanent Array Center (SOPAC) and Southern California Precision GPS Geodetic Array (PGGA)

 

Seth Gutman and Russ Chadwick, NOAA Forecast Systems Laboratory — Shared Use of DGPS Data for NOAA Weather Forecasting and Climate Monitoring

 

William Prescott, U.S. Geological Survey — Southern California Integrated GPS Network (SCIGN), and related USGS GPS-Based Research

 

Nancy King, U.S. Geological Survey — Bay Area Regional Deformation (BARD) Network

 

Christian Rocken, University Navstar Consortium — Nationwide GPS Array in Japan

 

Neil Westin, National Geodetic Survey (NOAA) — CORS Data Archiving and Access System

 

Maurice Dube, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center — Flow, Distribution, and Archiving of Global GPS Data and Products for the IGS and the Role of the Crustal Dynamics Data Information System (CDDIS)

 

James Zumberg, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory — Worldwide IGS Data Archiving and Communications

 

Ulf Lindqwister and Keith Stark, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory — GPS Operations and Data Handling at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory

11:00

SITE, NETWORK, AND DATA REQUIREMENTS FOR GPS-BASED REMOTE SENSING OF THE ATMOSPHERE

Robert Serafin

SPEAKERS

 
 

Ronald McPherson, National Center for Environmental Protection (National Weather Service) —Potential for Improved Weather Forecasting through the Use of Ground-Based GPS Sensing and GPS Occultation Satellites

 

Richard Anthes, University Consortium for Atmospheric Research — Potential Atmospheric Research Uses of GPS-Based Refractivity Sounding Data

 

Judith Curry, University of Colorado, Boulder — Precipitable Water Vapor Data Requirements for Climate Modeling

 

Michael Bevis, University of Hawaii — Site, Network, and Ancillary Data Requirements for GPS Sensing of Precipitable Water Vapor

 

Bill Kuo and Larry Cornman, National Center for Atmospheric Research — Precipitable Water Vapor and Slant-Path Water Vapor Data Assimilation into Forecast Models, Defining Humidity Field Structure with Ground-Based GPS Arrays, Real-Time Data Requirements

AFTERNOON SESSION

1:15 pm

SITE, NETWORK, AND DATA REQUIREMENTS FOR GPS-BASED REMOTE SENSING OF THE ATMOSPHERE (CONTINUED)

E. Ann Berman

SPEAKERS

 
 

Tom Runge, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory — Meteorological and GPS Data Requirements for GPS-Based Sensing of Precipitable Water

 

Frederick Solheim and Chris Alber, University Navstar Consortium — Antenna, Site, and Ancillary Data Requirements for GPS-Based Slant-Path Water Vapor Sensing

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