From bramha at iisc.ac.in Tue Nov 22 06:34:11 2022 From: bramha at iisc.ac.in (Bramha Vishwakarma) Date: Tue, 22 Nov 2022 06:34:11 +0000 Subject: [IGSMAIL-8280] EGU 2023, session G 3.1: Geodesy for climate research Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, Greetings on behalf of the conveners of Geodesy for Climate Research session (G3.1) at EGU 2023 ( https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU23/session/46287). We owe you all a huge thanks for making the session popular over the years via your active participation. We have now added a few more topic/directions to include some of the upcoming research areas at the interface of Geodesy and Climate research. We invite you to consider submitting your latest and exciting research work to the Geodesy for Climate Session in EGU 2023. Please feel free to forward it to your colleagues and to other relevant mailing lists. Here is a short description of the session: G3.1 invites innovative Earth system and climate studies employing geodetic observations and methods. Modern geodetic observing systems have been instrumental in studying a wide range of changes in the Earth?s solid and fluid layers at various spatiotemporal scales. These changes are related to surface processes such as glacial isostatic adjustment, the terrestrial water cycle, ocean dynamics and ice-mass balance, which are primarily due to changes in the climate. To understand the Earth system response to natural climate variability and anthropogenic climate change, different time spans of observations need to be cross-compared and combined with several other datasets and model outputs. Geodetic observables are also often compared with geophysical models, which helps in explaining observations, evaluating simulations, and finally merging measurements and numerical models via data assimilation. We look forward to contributions that: 1. Utilize geodetic data from diverse geodetic satellites including altimetry, gravimetry (CHAMP, GRACE, GOCE and GRACE-FO), navigation satellite systems (GNSS and DORIS) or remote sensing techniques that are based on both passive (i.e., optical and hyperspectral) and active (i.e., SAR) instruments. 2. Cover a wide variety of applications of geodetic measurements and their combination to observe and model Earth system signals in hydrological, ocean, atmospheric, climate and cryospheric sciences. 3. Show a new approach or method for separating and interpreting the variety of geophysical signals in our Earth system and combining various observations to improve spatiotemporal resolution of Earth observation products. 4. Work on simulations of future satellite mission (such as SWOT and GRACE-2) that may advance climate sciences. 5. Work towards any of the goals of the Inter-Commission Committee on "Geodesy for Climate Research" (ICCC) of the International Association of Geodesy (IAG). We are committed to promoting gender balance and ECS in our session. With author consent, highlights from this session will be tweeted with a dedicated hashtag during the conference in order to increase the impact of the session. The deadline for submitting your abstract is 10th of January 2023. There is some travel support available for Early career researchers and senior researchers from low to middle income countries. For those looking for travel support, the abstract submission deadline is 01 Dec 2022. Best Wishes and looking forward to your contributions. -Bramha -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr.-Ing. Bramha Dutt Vishwakarma Assistant Professor, Interdisciplinary Centre for Water Research & Centre for Earth Science, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India. https://twitter.com/Bramha_tweets -------------- next part --------------