Welcome >  Mailing Lists >  SLR-Mail No.2261

SLR-Mail No.2261

Back to Overview

Date:2014-07-24 21:48:17
Sender:&#8221;Gross, Richard S (335N)&#8221; <richard.s.gross@jpl.nasa.gov>
Subject:[SLR-Mail] No.2261: GGOS Session at AGU
Author:unknown
Content:Dear Colleagues -

As part of the 2014 Fall Meeting of the AGU that will be held in San Francisco, California during 15-19 December 2014 there will be a session on ”The Global Geodetic Observing System: Improving Geodetic Observations for Science and Society”. The description of the session is given below.

On behalf if the conveners I would like to draw your attention to this session and encourage you to participate in it. We are developing a rich session that will showcase the improvements to the geodetic observing systems that are being planned or that are currently underway. I hope that you will be able to join us in San Francisco for this exciting session. More information about the 2014 Fall Meeting can be obtained from its web site at .

Please note that abstracts must be submitted to AGU by August 6, 2014.

Hope to see you in San Francisco!

Best regards,
Richard

-------------------------------------

Session ID# 2600: The Global Geodetic Observing System: Improving Geodetic Observations for Science and Society.

The IAG´s Global Geodetic Observing System (GGOS) provides the fundamental ground- and space-based geodetic observations needed for numerous scientific and societal applications. Current efforts to modernize existing ground-based systems and to develop future space-based systems will lead to improvements in the accuracy, latency, and resolution of these observations. This session is a forum for discussing improvements to the geodetic observing systems and for their use by science and society.

Conveners:

Richard Gross
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Richard.Gross@jpl.nasa.gov

Erricos Pavlis
Goddard Earth Science and Technology Center
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
epavlis@umbc.edu

Chopo Ma
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Chopo.Ma-1@nasa.gov

------------------------------------
Sent from my iPhone




Dear Colleagues -



As part of the 2014 Fall Meeting of the AGU that will be held in San Francisco, California during 15-19 December
2014
 there will be a session on "The Global Geodetic Observing System: Improving Geodetic Observations for Science and Society". 
The description of the session
is given below. 




On behalf if the conveners I would like to draw your attention to this session and encourage you to participate in it.  We are developing a rich session
that will showcase the improvements to the geodetic observing systems that are being planned or that are currently underway. I hope that you will be able to join us in San Francisco for this exciting session. More
 information
about the 2014 Fall Meeting can be obtained from its web site at <
http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2014>.



Please note that abstracts must be submitted to AGU by August 6, 2014.



Hope to see you in San Francisco!



Best regards,

Richard



-------------------------------------



Session ID# 2600: The Global Geodetic Observing System: Improving Geodetic Observations for Science and Society.



The IAG´s Global Geodetic Observing System (GGOS) provides the fundamental ground- and space-based geodetic observations needed for numerous scientific and societal applications. Current efforts to modernize existing ground-based systems and to develop future
space-based systems will lead to improvements in the accuracy, latency, and resolution of these observations. This session is a forum for discussing improvements to the geodetic observing systems and for their use by science and society.



Conveners:



Richard Gross

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Richard.Gross@jpl.nasa.gov



Erricos Pavlis

Goddard Earth Science and Technology Center

University of Maryland, Baltimore County

epavlis@umbc.edu



Chopo Ma

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

Chopo.Ma-1@nasa.gov



------------------------------------

Sent from my iPhone


Find more topics on the central web site of the Technical University of Munich: www.tum.de