Class of 2021

  • Portrait photo of Alanna Goodell

    Alanna Goodell

    School: Northern Arizona University

    Major: Environmental Engineering

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Air Resources Lab

    Research Title

    Emissions of Greenhouse Gases and Short-lived Air Pollutants based on Aircraft and Surface Observations in New York City in 2020

    Abstract

    With New York City’s goal to reach carbon neutrality by 2050, there needs to be an understanding of the emissions within the metropolitan area. To determine how the emissions of some greenhouse gases and short-lived air pollutants changed in 2020, aircraft and surface observations of greenhouse gases (including carbon dioxide and methane) and short-lived air pollutants that were collected in New York City in 2020 will be analyzed. Enhancement ratios will be examined among these chemicals and compared to the ratios in a global emission inventory called Emission Database for Global Atmospheric Research (EDGAR). Ratios of some chemicals, such as methane, carbon monoxide, total reactive nitrogen, and black carbon, against carbon dioxide will be used with the well-known carbon dioxide emissions to calculate emissions of these chemicals from the urban area. The impact of COVID-19 on these emissions will also be analyzed

  • Portrait photo of Alex Hewett

    Alex Hewett

    School: University of Washington - Seattle

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Pacific Marine Environmental Lab

    Research Title

    Ocean-Atmosphere Interactions in the Tropics

    Abstract

    The Indian Ocean is home to many interesting weather and climate phenomena. The seasonal monsoon and associated rainfall variability is of great importance to cultures in the region. On year to year time scales, the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) plays a significant role in influencing the ocean-atmosphere system of the region. Moreover, the IOD and monsoon interact with other phenomena such as the Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) and the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO), which in turn influence weather and climate over North America and globally. Here we explore the ocean-atmosphere coupling in the Indian Ocean basin over the period 1979-2019, with emphasis on 2016-2019 when there was a strong negative IOD in boreal Fall of 2016 and a strong positive IOD in boreal Fall of 2019. We use the ERA5 monthly averaged data to present visualizations of the seasonal variations in monsoon winds, sea surface temperature (SST), and precipitation; and compare anomalies in these quantities for positive and negative phases of the IOD

  • Portrait photo of Alex Penunuri

    Alex Penunuri

    School: University of Colorado - Boulder

    Major: Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR/ESRL Physical Sciences Lab

    Research Title

    Air-Sea Boundary Layer Interactions during PISTON

    Abstract

    From August-October 2018, the Propagation of Intra-Seasonal Tropical OscillatioNs (PISTON) campaign collected meteorological data from ship by taking atmospheric soundings, and oceanic data by ship-towed vertical profilers. The data collection occurred onboard the R/V Thomas G. Thompson in the Philippine Sea, with more meteorological soundings taken from nearby islands. The objective of this study was to analyze temporal and land vs. ocean variations in the atmospheric and oceanic boundary layers. The minimum, maximum, and median values of the atmospheric mixed layer height sampled over ocean by the ship were 120, 969, and 729 meters. The maximum island-based atmospheric boundary layer height was much higher at 1583 m, which is attributed to greater surface temperatures on land. The oceanic mixed layer sampled by the ship had min, max, and median values of 15, 114, and 48 meters, respectively. The oceanic mixed layer depth reached its maximum between October 5-9 when the ship was located furthest north. During this time the ocean depth was consistently greater than 80 meters, at least double the median ocean mixed layer depth of the campaign. For all time periods, vertical salinity stratification determined the base of the ocean mixed layer (pycnocline), and a fresh isothermal barrier layer persisted below.

  • Portrait photo of Alexander Moxon

    Alexander Moxon

    School: University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP Weather Prediction Center

    Research Title

    Improving Heavy Rainfall Prediction in the Nowcast Period using Machine Learning

    Abstract

    Given the substantial risk to life and property that heavy precipitation events pose to the public, heavy rainfall events, particularly those that lead to flash flooding, are of great importance to atmospheric scientists. Accurate forecasting allows for emergency managers and the public to prepare for such dangers. Substantial improvements have been made to the short-term forecasting of such events through the implementation of the MetWatch Desk within the Weather Prediction Center (WPC). However, despite advances over the past several years in numerical weather prediction forecasting models, improvements can still be made to forecasting during the nowcast (0-6 hours) period. Meteorologists staffing the MetWatch Desk have identified limitations in forecasting models that include inaccurate determinations of sub-hourly rainfall rates as well as delayed convection initiation within Convective-Allowing Models (CAMs).

    This project aims to utilize machine learning techniques to better predict heavy precipitation events. Initially, the machine learning techniques being used in this project are being developed using the multi-model ensemble that drives the Probabilistic Quantitative Precipitation Forecast (PQPF) guidance issued by the Weather Prediction Center (WPC). Additional work will expand the project to use Multi-Radar/Multi-Sensor (MRMS) System data. This research project aims to develop a tool that can better predict the location and magnitude of high-QPF events that may lead to flash flooding. This tool can then be used by meteorologists, namely at the WPC MetWatch Desk, to assist in forecasting during the nowcast period and in issuing products such as Mesoscale Precipitation Discussions.

  • Portrait photo of Alexandra Pate

    Alexandra Pate

    School: Colorado School of Mines and Technology

    Major: Computational and Applied Math

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR/ESRL Physical Sciences Lab

    Research Title

    Cloud Fraction Estimates from Saildrone Sky Cameras during ATOMIC

    Abstract

    Cloudiness is an essential metric of the climate system yet it has previously been difficult to measure from autonomous ocean vehicles. To add more capability to the uncrewed surface vehicle (USV) Saildrone, we develop a cloud fraction algorithm that processes upward-looking visible sky camera images taken atop the Saildrone. Images were collected and tested during the 2020 Atlantic Tradewind Ocean–Atmosphere Mesoscale Interaction Campaign (ATOMIC) in the Northwest tropical Atlantic. The USV Saildrones were operating in the same region as the NOAA research ship Ronald H. Brown. Cloud fraction estimates were similar from the ship-basd ceilometer and processed sky camera images taken from the same region. Relationships between cloud fraction and surface radiation are similar between the ship and Saildrone. Therefore, the cloud fraction sky camera image processing technique appears robust for further application and analysis of Saildrone data during ATOMIC and other field campaigns focused on weather, climate, and cloudiness.

  • Portrait photo of Anna Dennis

    Anna Dennis

    School: University of Illinois – Urbana Champaign

    Major: Meteorology

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/OPPSD Central Processing AWIPS Office

    Research Title

    Enhancement of AWIPS Outreach via Increased Web Presence

    Abstract

    This project evaluates working with the Office of Central Processing (OCP) to build a web presence for the purposes of increasing interest and awareness of OCP activities. The Advanced Weather Interactive Processing System (AWIPS) is the key visualization and forecast system utilized by National Weather Service (NWS) forecasters to support their mission of saving lives and property. The purpose of this project is to enhance communication and awareness with AWIPS users, or organizations outside the NWS. The new web page is built from "the ground up" by learning web design basics (HTML code, CSS, etc) and practicing written and visual/graphical communications skills by working with mentors to develop content for various audiences.
  • Portrait photo of Anna Hall

    Anna Hall

    School: Washington College

    Major: Physics and Mathematics

    NOAA Affiliation: NESDIS STAR

    Research Title

    Validation of Satellite Measured Tropospheric Ducting over Ocean Site

    Abstract

    An atmospheric duct is a band of stratified air found in the lower atmosphere that has a strong temperature inversion, deviating from the usual decrease in temperature with altitude. In this Lapenta summer intern project, we performed validation and analysis of tropospheric ducting by comparing independent ducting predictions with respect to satellite, European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecast (ECMWF) model, and in situ data over a selected site near the Baja coast over ocean, considered to have frequent ducting. In particular, using temperature profile data from the second Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere, and Climatology (COSMIC-2) satellite mission, the ECMWF model output, and La Paz, Mexico radiosondes, our study attempted to corroborate the existence of Tropospheric ducts off the West Coast of Baja California. Ducts occurring in the lower Troposphere at this site, especially during the summer months of June, July, and August, are predicted to be associated with strong temperature inversions with altitude. Utilizing three different sounding sources gives us insight into the nature of temperature profiles of the region, and the ability to characterize the performance of each of these sounding sources relative to each other. Implementing Python programming techniques allows us to plot a temperature versus mean-sea-level altitude figures from multiple days to visualize temperature inversions and provide evidence to support the presence of ducts.

    Through analyses and comparisons of the different soundings, we were able to show a strong temperature inversion below two kilometers. The COSMIC-2 radio occultation data and the ECMWF data produce almost identical temperature profiles. However, there are cases where the profiles from COSMIC-2 may disagree with the model near the surface. The radiosonde data shows a strong temperature inversion near the surface. The findings of this study will not only contribute to a better understanding of the tropospheric ducting weather phenomena, but also identify potentially reliable thermally stable validation sites for comparison. These findings can be used for an algorithm validation for satellite retrieval of temperature profiles, as well as, facilitating the assimilation of satellite measurements in numerical weather prediction models.

  • Portrait photo of Anna Jensen

    Anna Jensen

    School: Oregon State University

    Major: Geographic Information Systems

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP Ocean Prediction Center

    Research Title

    Formation of a Living Snow Atlas: Transitioning Interactive Multisensor Snow and Ice Mapping System (IMS) Data Into a Northern Hemisphere Snow Climatology

    Abstract

    The United States National Ice Center (USNIC) hosts the Interactive Multisensor Snow and Ice Mapping System (IMS), an operational software package used to demarcate the presence of snow and ice across the entire northern hemisphere. The data is produced primarily for use in daily operational weather model initializations, but a demand has arisen to use this record for both climatological analysis and as a means to visualize meteorological events. Since 2005, daily, gridded, hemispheric snow and ice charts have been generated at 4km resolution, and cataloged by the USNIC. Until now, no products had been developed to analyze this data. This project transitions data records spanning 15 years from 2006 to 2020 into a working snow climatology. Two climatology products resulted; A collection of 24 bimonthly files depicting cumulative number of days with snow on the ground over the duration of the climatology, and 24 bimonthly files depicting average number of days with snow on the ground per period. Both of these are made publicly available on the USNIC website. Instructional documents are created detailing the methodology analysts will follow to perform annual updates of the cumulative and average snow climatology records, as well as instructions and templates for how to create bimonthly difference charts depicting present anomalous snow conditions. The bimonthly snow on the ground products can be used by the research and technical community as a data source for study while the operational departure from normal charts can be used by the operational community for quickly understanding snowpack characteristics. The detailed instructional documents allow the USNIC to carry this project forward, expanding the record into a more robust climatology with each subsequent year.

  • Portrait photo of Anna Sitzman

    Anna Sitzman

    School: Loyola University of New Orleans

    Major: Environmental Studies and Social Science

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Climate Program Office

    Research Title

    Combined Sewer Systems, Climate Change, Vulnerability, and Adaptation in the Great Lakes Region

    Abstract

    Understanding the stormwater management issues of the Great Lakes region brings to light pressing issues brought on by climate change and its impact on equity, public health, and the future of the Great Lakes environment. To manage their water, 1900-era engineers crafted an easy and efficient way to collect rainwater runoff, domestic sewage, and industrial wastewater into one pipe for transport and disposal; this method is still being used in approximately 772 cities in the U.S today. In the Great Lakes region, combined sewer systems transport wastewater to a sewage treatment plant for treatment, then discharge it into one of the lakes. Today, the combined sewer systems are long past their prime. The 100+-year old transport pipes are falling apart, cannot keep up with growing populations, and are expected to deteriorate further with increasing impacts of climate change. As the climate continues to change, cities in this region are faced with new challenges to adapt and protect their citizens and environment as more intense storms are expected. The increases in extreme rain events and fluctuation of lake levels bring to light the age and limited capacity of the original sewer systems that were built before thoughts of increases in intensity, duration, and frequency of precipitation events were even considered. . In addition, neighborhoods continually suffer public health dangers and property destruction from extreme rainstorms and increased flooding. Inequity is revealed by analyzing flood-vulnerable communities and the state of their water infrastructure. To accommodate this discrepancy, cities are becoming more aware of issues with the system and specifically vulnerable communities. Through analysis of city programs and plans and data on changes in precipitation and lake levels, the disproportionate impacts of flooding in the Great Lakes region can be explored. The expectation of the results of my project will be to help educate citizens on the importance of considering the future impacts of a changing climate, lake levels, and their impacts on updating stormwater infrastructure in their neighborhoods.

  • Portrait photo of  Austin Jerke

    Austin Jerke

    School: South Dakota School of Mines and Technology

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP Weather Prediction Center

    Research Title

    Exploring Object-Based Biases in Weather Prediction Center's Excessive Rainfall Outlook

    Abstract

    The Excessive Rainfall Outlook (ERO) is a probabilistic forecast of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance within 40 km of a point. It is issued for days 1 through 3 with four categorical risks: marginal (5-10%), slight (10%-20%), moderate (20%-50%), and high (>50%).

    Atmospheric models inherently possess biases or errors that influence forecasts made by meteorologists every day. The ERO product produced by the Weather Prediction Center (WPC) relies on these atmospheric models and is therefore subject to similar biases and errors. Since flash flooding is one of the deadliest weather phenomena on Earth, exploring the object-based ERO biases could provide forecasters with increased situational awareness. This presentation will feature the progress made exploring object-based biases during the William M. Lapenta Internship program of 2021.  This study compares the ERO to an analysis called Practically Perfect (PP), which consists of a variety of flash flood observations and proxies. PP represents a best-case forecast given perfect knowledge of prior events. Comparisons between PP and the ERO are made using the Model Evaluation Tools (MET) Method for Object-based Diagnostic Evaluation (MODE) developed by the Developmental Testbed Center (DTC) at the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR).  In addition to exploring the contiguous United States, the day 1, day 2, and day 3 EROs are alsosub set by region and season. The ERO was found to present displacement biases towards the east northeast especially for the central United States for slight day 1 when compared to PP. Results will be shown to highlight discrepancies in ERO and PP centroid frequencies, ERO and PPobject areas, and ERO and PP displacements. Additionally, modifications made to the previous MODE configuration settings will also be discussed.

  • Portrait photo of Brittany Whitlam

    Brittany Whitlam

    School: University of Utah

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/OSTI Meteorological Development Lab

    Research Title

    Validation of datasets for use in Aviation Decision Support: AK ceiling and visibility forecast guidance verification and a CONUS lightning data analysis

    Abstract

    This project evaluates two datasets that are commonly used for aviation decision support. Accurate ceiling and visibility forecast guidance is critical to the aviation industry in Alaska. Therefore, the first topic includes a verification of Alaska ceiling height and visibility forecast guidance from the Localized Aviation Model Output Statistics Program (LAMP) Meld compared to the National Blend of Models (NBM). Unlike products for the contiguous United States, NBM Alaska products do not currently include LAMP Meld data as an input, but may in the future. Using archived ceiling height and visibility observations at LAMP stations in Alaska, the threat score and bias of forecast guidance from both LAMP Meld and NBM were calculated and plotted. The findings from this verification will allow the Meteorological Development Laboratory to measure how the NBM ceiling height and visibility forecast guidance could improve if the LAMP Meld data is incorporated as an input to the NBM’s products in Alaska.

    The second topic includes a comparison of Vaisala and Earth Networks Inc. (ENI) ground-based lightning detection systems within CONUS. LAMP uses lightning data for short-term forecast guidance for aviation. This evaluation uses archived data of individual cloud-to-ground (CG) strokes, in-cloud (IC) pulses, and total lightning (TL) strokes/pulses. These strokes and pulses were mapped in order to visualize the different characteristics of Vaisala and ENI ground-based lightning detection networks.

  • Portrait photo of Carina Rodriguez

    Carina Rodriguez

    School: California State University – Long Beach

    Major: Environmental Science and Policy

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Climate Program Office

    Research Title

    Human Thermal Comfort: An Analysis of the Downstream Use Cases of Climate Observation Datasets

    Abstract

    This project follows the flow of data from thousands of land- and space-based observations in North America, to higher-order analyses, to their eventual societal application. Many different kinds of observations are essential to monitor climate change, such as increasing averages in global temperatures, or long-term changes in extreme weather and cross-disciplinary studies are needed to connect these observed changes to societal impacts and solutions. Extreme weather events, including heat waves and cold waves, have detrimental impacts on human thermal comfort and biological systems at large. Compiling thousands and thousands of these observations from 1979-2016, the North American Regional Reanalysis (NARR) is a consistent, high quality atmospheric and land surface hydrology dataset and a valuable resource used in multiple NOAA-funded studies to classify extreme temperature events (e.g. heat, cold, humidity, dryness). Cross-disciplinary studies build on NARR analyses and elucidate drivers of mortality during extreme temperature events, growing evidence-based literature available to policy makers to protect communities from dangerous extreme temperature events. Following the flow of information from observations through the environmental science and public health literature demonstrates observations and analyses are critical for understanding climate impacts and advancing climate solutions, such as improving the health of communities.

  • Portrait photo of Charlotte Merchant

    Charlotte Merchant

    School: Princeton University

    Major: Computer Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/OPPSD Central Processing

    Research Title

    AWIPS Code Development for Product Improvement

    Abstract

    The Advanced Weather Interactive Processing System (AWIPS) is a meteorological processing, display, and analysis system that ingests and integrates meteorological, satellite, and radar data for distribution to 135 Weather Forecast Offices and River Forecast Centers across the United States and was originally developed by the National Weather Service in partnership with Raytheon. Founded in 2015, the AWIPS Software Development Team (ASDT) acts as the in-house programming expertise for NOAA’s Office of Central Processing AWIPS Program Office. The Software Recommendation and Evaluation Committee (SREC) ranks and assigns Development Change Specifications (DCSs) and Discrepancy Reports (DRs) to ASDT which, consequently, performs level of effort (LOE) estimates for each DCS and larger DRs. Software engineers for AWIPS develop using Agile methods, and the codebase is primarily written in JAVA and Python. My contributions through the Lapenta internship include work on two DCSs: tracking duplicate process events for the AWIPS statistical display and integrating Observed Weather into the Weather Wire Service Daily Climate product. AWIPS users can load external products into the Common AWIPS Visualization Environment (CAVE), used for rendering and analyzing AWIPS data. Within the CAVE AWIPS statistical display, the user can graphically represent the processing time, processing latency, and, now, duplicates of processing events for a given time range. Using this tracking, the user can optimize their data ingest events and prevent repeated processing of the same product. Additionally, the integration of observed weather in the Weather Wire Service Daily Climate product allows for the automated and accurate report of counts for weather events (such as rain or hail) for the Climatological Report. Future AWIPS developments will include an update to the Red Hat Linux 8 operating system and transitioning to more cloud-based services. Subsequent ASDT work could involve implementation of Spanish text products and further enhancements to the Post-Tropical Storm report (PSH) software.

  • Portrait photo of Emily Speciale

    Emily Speciale

    School: University of Miami

    Major: Marine Science and Biochemistry

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Office of Ocean Exploration and Research

    Research Title

    Visualizing Open Source Acoustic Metrics and Their Relationship to Satellite Oceanography

    Abstract

    Mesopelagic fish play a key role in ocean ecosystems, serving as predators for zooplankton, prey for larger commercial species, and a source of carbon transfer for holistic ecosystems. Active acoustics are used to collect data on mesopelagic fish since returning echoes can be quantified into echometrics that describe the fishes' distribution in the water column. These echometrics include density (Sv), center of mass, inertia, proportion occupied, index of aggregation, and equivalent area. It is important to understand what factors could affect these echometrics. Satellite-derived oceanic data is widely accessible and can be used to recognize how epipelagic factors affect mesopelagic dynamics. Thus, we created an open-source and cloud-based workflow that processed active acoustic backscatter data into echometrics and correlated these values to satellite-derived data measurements. The workflow centered on analyzing data from NOAA Ocean Exploration’s Okeanos Explorer cruises, specifically the Windows to the Deep 2019 Expedition (EX1903), which surveyed the Exclusive Economic Zone of the southeastern United States. The ship’s Simrad EK60 18 kHz active acoustic data was processed and interpreted into echometrics by using Python to combine PyEchoLab and Echometrics repositories. R was then used to find relationships between the echometrics and satellite-derived data. Overall trends in the data showed the density of organism backscatter increasing with chlorophyll-a concentrations and decreasing with sea surface temperature (SST). General additive models found high significance levels between satellite-derived chlorophyll-a concentrations and all echometrics, with 74.2% of deviance explained. Significant correlations between SST and all echometrics except aggregation were also present. Through this analysis, we gain more understanding on the trends and patterns of mesopelagic fish distribution, and we can use this information to better inform fisheries management decisions.

  • Portrait photo of Emma Estburg

    Emma Estburg

    School: Northwestern University

    Major: Manufacturing and Design Engineering, Applied Math

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Pacific Marine Environmental Lab

    Research Title

    Evaluation of MERRA-2 Sensible and Latent Heat Flux in the Arctic Using Saildrone Observations

    Abstract

    With more Arctic in situ observations available due to growing technology, along with the need for the observations to increase understanding of the weather and climate, evaluations of forecasts and models need to be made. This study uses in situ observations from uncrewed surface vehicles (USVs), saildrones, to evaluate the Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications version 2 (MERRA-2) surface heat fluxes in the Arctic. MERRA-2 is the global atmospheric reanalysis of the satellite era produced by NASA’s Global Modeling and Assimilation Office. The observations were taken in the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas by three saildrones during July – September 2017, four saildrones during July – October 2018, and six saildrones during May – October 2019. Sensible and latent heat fluxes were calculated using the saildrone observations. The heat fluxes were compared with regional and bilinear interpolated data from MERRA-2. The findings show that MERRA-2 surface heat fluxes are good estimations in the Arctic and errors do not vary greatly year to year or month to month. With the increasing loss of sea ice during the summer months, accurate models and forecasts in the Arctic are needed to fully understand the effects of climate change. Since MERRA-2 has good estimations for sensible and latent heat fluxes, this product can be used to estimate changes in the surface energy budget in the Arctic during a time of increasing sea ice loss.

  • Portrait photo of Eric Robinson

    Eric Robinson

    School: University of Maryland – College Park

    Major: Geographic Information Systems/Computer Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP Environmental Modeling Center

    Research Title

    Enabling Frontal Analysis and Hurricane Analysis for Regional Marine JEDI at EMC

    Abstract

    This project will be hosted by EMC’s Model Evaluation Group (MEG) and will focus on evaluating convection-allowing models (CAMs) that are currently being developed at EMC. In particular, this project will largely focus on the FV3-CAM development effort. The student will evaluate FV3-CAM forecasts to 1) assess the FV3 model’s ability to provide useful guidance during severe convective events and 2) help inform decisions related to the ongoing development of regional configurations of the FV3.

  • Portrait photo of Erica Bower

    Erica Bower

    School: Stony Brook University

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorology Lab

    Research Title

    Understanding the Impact of Hurricanes Marco and Laura (2020) on the Upper Ocean Freshwater Barrier Layer

    Abstract

    Hurricanes Marco and Laura traversed the Gulf of Mexico within 3 days of each other in late August of 2020, influencing the upper ocean in this region significantly. To quantify the impact of the storms' wind and precipitation fields on the upper ocean, this study analyzes the ocean salinity and temperature fields from various data sources, including the Navy Coupled Ocean Data Analysis (NCODA), global HYCOM Real-Time Ocean Forecast System (RTOFS), and the Princeton Ocean Model (POM) forecast products from the 2020 operational coupled Hurricane Weather and Research Forecast (HWRF) system. The Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for GPM (IMERG) final run precipitation product is used to identify the effects of precipitation on upper ocean processes such as barrier layer fluctuations. Total accumulated precipitation from Hurricane Marco reached 497.64 mm in the Northern Gulf, while maximum accumulated precipitation resulting from Hurricane Laura totaled 499.45 mm over the Central Gulf. This excessive precipitation must be accounted for when studying the oceanic barrier layer. The precipitation due to both storms was correlated to the barrier layer depth (BLD), ocean heat content (OHC), and upper ocean salinity in the following 6-12 hours, with correlation values as high as 0.94 when NCODA analysis was paired with IMERG precipitation. The wind field of each storm caused BLD changes occurring between 6 and 24 hours after the passage of the strongest winds. An anticyclonic low salinity eddy driven by the Mississippi River freshwater discharge (Eley et al. 2021) is identified in the Central Gulf in the path of Hurricane Laura. After the passage of the hurricane, mixing induced by the strong wind field dissipates the feature, making the salinity field more uniform in the wake of the storm. Finally, the HYCOM and POM models are assessed for accuracy as compared to the NCODA analysis. HYCOM does not represent the low salinity anticyclonic eddy in the central Gulf of Mexico but represents the BLD similarly to that in the NCODA data in all areas of the Gulf except the Loop Current. POM tends to more accurately represent the anticyclonic eddy but still underestimates BLD in the Loop Current. The representation of salinity and BLD in HYCOM and POM may be explained by the forcing of the simulations without precipitation and freshwater river discharge. To improve salinity and BLD simulations, more accurate initial conditions are needed through data assimilation and the inclusion of freshwater input.

  • Portrait photo of Erika Maneke

    Erika Maneke

    School: Purdue University

    Major: Applied Meteorology and Climatology

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Great Lakes Environmental Research Lab

    Research Title

    Interannual Variability of Ice Cover in Green Bay and Western Lake Erie in the Great Lakes

    Abstract

    Ice cover on the Great Lakes affects the ecology, biology, and economy of the Great Lakes area, and it also serves as an indication of the regional climate. Ice cover data from the National Ice Center was used to analyze Green Bay and Western Lake Erie for the 1973-2021 time period. Green Bay exhibited a higher average ice concentration than Western Lake Erie. The standard deviation calculated for Western Lake Erie’s average daily ice cover concentration is larger than Green Bay’s, indicating that Western Lake Erie’s ice cover is more variable and therefore harder to predict. The annual average ice cover (AAIC) of both regions shows a large interannual variability over time, in responses to the atmospheric teleconnection pattern forcings such as ENSO. The AAIC and the annual maximum ice cover in Green Bay and Western Lake Erie exhibited negative trends, meaning less ice cover occurs in the present compared to the past. The first and last ice cover dates in both regions have demonstrated a negative trend indicating an earlier start and end to the ice cycle. The duration of ice cover, which plays a crucial role in ecological processes, has become shorter for Western Lake Erie but slightly longer for Green Bay. Overall, lake ice cover has shown a long-term declining trend from 1973-2021.

    An update of the climatology of the Great Lakes was completed for the years 2018-2021. Shallower, nearshore regions of the lakes show the earliest dates of ice cover while the middle of the lakes freeze later, if ever, in the season. Lake ice melts first in the middle regions of the lakes and persists longer in nearshore locations. The 2020 winter season displayed a significant decrease in ice cover on the lakes, due to a strong El Nino event.

  • Portrait Photo of Gabbie Christo

    Gabbie Christo

    School: University of Illinois – Urbana Champaign

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP Environmental Modeling Center

    Research Title

    The NWS Global Aerosols Performance during the 2019 CAMP2Ex field campaign

    Abstract

    This project evaluates data from the global ensemble forecasting system- aerosol during two case studies from the 2019 CAMP2EX field campaign. The purpose of this project is to examine how well the model performed when compared to field observations. The GEFS-aerosol model provides 6-hourly global aerosol optical depth and mixing ratios of aerosol species at 64 model levels. The aerosol model is embedded in the GFSv15 and uses inline aerosol representation from GOCART to examine the forecasts of aerosols such as dust, organic and black carbon (wildfire smoke), sea-salt, and sulfate. The Cloud and Aerosol Monsoonal Processes- Philippines Experiment’s (CAMP2EX) goal was to characterize roles of anthropogenic and natural aerosol particles effects in frequency and amount of warm and mixed phase precipitation in the vicinity of the Philippines during the Southwest Monsoonal period. This location was chosen due to the diversity of aerosols and the significant period of biomass burning originating from Borneo. Focusing on the Single Particle Soot Photometer (SP2) from Orion P3 aircraft that measures black carbon concentrations, comparisons were able to be made from the model black carbon concentrations to aircraft observations. Model forecasts of total aerosol optical thickness were able to be compared to satellite maps from MODIS. Vertical profiles were created from model outputs, graphed along the latitude and longitude of the aircraft flight track, to examine how high the black carbon was extending into the atmosphere and compared to vertical motion as a possible reason why.

  • Portrait photo of George Campe

    George Campe

    School: University of Maryland – College Park

    Major: Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Ocean Acidification Program

    Research Title

    Connecting Scientists to Students

    Abstract

    This presentation seeks to determine the effectiveness of informational 2-page documents in educating a congressional audience (with varying degrees of knowledge on the subject) on ocean acidification and its effects on 3 major geographical regions. The mentioned 2 page documents were first presented to Congress on July 14th and 15th before being opened to the public. Their main purpose was to describe how ocean acidification in the Pacific Northwest, Pacific Islands, and the Gulf of Alaska has been harming the local indigenous populations. The 2-pagers were sent out to large groups of people along with one survey to be taken before the documents were read, and one for after. The responses to these surveys were recorded, analyzed, and then visualized to determine the difference in the general public’s knowledge on the subject. Low response rates to the surveys made some regions more difficult to analyze than others, but ultimately the data demonstrated an increased understanding of the effects of ocean acidification, as well as an increased awareness of what NOAA’s Ocean Acidification Program is doing to help prepare local communities for this problem.

  • Portrait photo of Hailey Santa Ana

    Hailey Santa Ana

    School: Texas A&M – Corpus Christi

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP National Hurricane Center

    Research Title

    Specialized verification of NHC and model forecasts of potential tropical cyclone track and intensity and tropical cyclone structure

    Abstract

    The National Hurricane Center (NHC) began issuing Potential Tropical Cyclone (PTC) advisories in 2017. A potential tropical cyclone is classified as a disturbance that is not yet a tropical depression or storm and poses a threat of tropical storm or hurricane conditions to land areas within 48 hours. The purpose for these advisories is to allow for forecasters to issue tropical storm/ hurricane watches and warnings more in advance than if the disturbance were to be labeled as an invest until it can be categorized as a tropical depression or storm. There have been 56 forecast advisories issued from 2017-20 for PTCs. Although NHC completes an annual verification of their forecasts for tropical cyclones, no comprehensive verification has been conducted for PTCs. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the accuracy of the PTC forecasts and assess which models have been performing best for this sample. In addition, comparisons of the predictions between PTCs and tropical cyclones will be shown to document the challenge of making PTC forecasts. The results are visually represented as plots created in MATLAB from the forecast track and intensity error found.

  • Portrait photo of Harrison Tran

    Harrison Tran

    School: Cornell University

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP Weather Prediction Center

    Research Title

    Automating the CLIQR (CLImatology-based Quantitative Rainfall) Program and Enhancing CLIQR matches by using NHC Forecast Track

    Abstract

    CLIQR is a storm analog identification system that finds historical storms with parameters similar to currently active storms, prioritizing parameters most relevant to rainfall. Analogs are paired with rainfall accumulation graphics, allowing for quick assessment of rainfall produced by storms with similar sizes, motions, and intensities. CLIQR's outputs are offered in a GUI for WPC users or on a website where users can view currently active systems and the analogs identified by CLIQR. Initially developed in 2008 in Perl, CLIQR lost functionality in 2017 following the discontinuation of the NHC's Tropical Cyclone Objective Guidance product. CLIQR has now been rewritten in Python and modified to update every three hours using data from the NHC's new Tropical Cyclone JSON product and the ATCF. Additionally, CLIQR now incorporates the entire NHC forecast track to identify and rank analogs, allowing CLIQR to capture a greater breadth of possible matches and tailoring the best matches to more relevant systems. To supplement CLIQR, over 50 new rainfall graphics have been created for historical CONUS-impacting systems extending back to 1900 to augment the WPC's Tropical Cyclone Rainfall Project. A large database of CONUS tropical cyclone rainfall observations has also been created to help power future GIS applications.

  • Portrait photo of Jake Campbell

    Jake Campbell

    School: George Mason University

    Major: Climate Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP Environmental Modeling Center

    Research Title

    Statistical Analysis for the WAVEWATCH III Model Optimization Tools

    Abstract

    WAVEWATCH III (WW3) is a community wave modeling framework that includes the latest scientific advancements in the field of wind-wave modeling and dynamics. When given a specific application, the WW3 model’s physical parameters require adjustments dependent on the specific application’s need. It is due to simplification of the model physics, or incomplete parametrization of certain observed processes that cannot be fully modeled. As an actively open source and evolving model, its significant performance improvements over the past few years, and its ever-growing list of applications, the need for model optimization becomes increasingly important. Due to differing grid shapes and resolutions along with differing temporal scales, a set of optimization tools are needed that can be accommodating to adjust interconnected model parameters that are central to a specific application. Employing an optimization algorithm and statistical analysis of model outputs compared to observations (buoy station and satellite altimeter observations) can accurately be used to fine tune the model performance to improve model accuracy. The work done this summer consisted of creating validation scripts in the Python programming language, which is also open source, in parallel to the existing MATLAB validation scripts, which will expand the portability of optimization to platforms that do not have access to MATLAB. The created python scripts over the past ten weeks accomplished the following: 1) Pull buoy station datasets in NetCDF format by year from NOAA’s National Data Buoy Center database and save them by station name for easy integration later, 2) Merge all buoy station datasets into one file, process WW3 model output to matched merged observations, and interpolate both to a user requested time frame and frequency and save as two new NetCDF files. 3) Interpolate WW3 satellite wave height output data to satellite along-track altimeter data. This enables straightforward statistical analysis as it provides a predicted wave height value for every satellite measurement which is of finer spatiotemporal resolution than WW3, 4) Two statistical analysis scripts provide the root mean squared error calculations for all variables available for both buoy point and satellite data. Finally, time series plots were created for all variables to illustrate the success of the Python scripts. All Python scripts are now currently uploaded to the WW3_Optimization GitHub repository for easy user access.

  • Portrait photo of Jetson Ku

    Jetson Ku

    School: University of Maryland – College Park

    Major: Computer and Data Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/OSTI Meteorological Development Lab

    Research Title

    NDFD Comparative Forecast Verification

    Abstract

    Forecast verification statistics are graphically displayed on an internal NOAA website by interactively querying a relational database. This presentation will talk about the development of a Python script that automatically produces summary reports of these statistics to ensure data integrity and completeness. It will also discuss how the reports can be used to provide verification data to the field in a reliable and consistent manner.

  • Portrait photo of Justin Bettenhauser

    Justin Bettenhauser

    School: Plymouth State University

    Major: Applied Meteorology

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Air Resources Lab

    Research Title

    Evaluation of Probabilistic Volcanic Ash Forecasts Produced Using the HYSPLIT Model and Global Ensemble Forecast System (GEFS)

    Abstract

    For decades, the aviation industry has sought for ways to have commercial aircraft avoid ash plumes after a volcanic eruption. The Eyjafjallajökull eruption of 2010 shutdown the European airspace for about a month, which caused significant financial losses for commercial aviation companies. The International Civil Aviation Organization will be setting new requirements for probabilistic forecasts of volcanic ash will be implemented in the next 5 years and the Air Resources Laboratory (ARL) is currently creating model simulations that will meet these requirements. The HYSPLIT group within the ARL is responsible for the development of these ensemble model forecasts as well as researching other HYSPLIT transport and dispersion model applications. One eruption that is currently being studied is the October 2020 Bezymianny eruption. The HYSPLIT ensemble output was created by driving HYSPLIT with 31 members of the global ensemble forecast system (GEFS). Using python and Image Magick, images and animations were created to qualitatively compare forecasts from each ensemble member. Satellite retrievals of ash mass loading of the ash cloud were made by the volcanic cloud analysis toolkit (VolCAT) from NOAA and NESDIS and were used in several ways. The forecast images were compared side-by-side for a qualitative comparison. It was observed that capturing the exact location and pattern of the observed ash was difficult. Finally, the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was utilized for a quantitative evaluation of the probabilistic forecast. For many ensembles and time periods, there turned out to be a huge contrast between the forecasted ash plume with the observed one.

  • Portrait photo of Katherine Parise

    Katherine Parise

    School: American University

    Major: Environmental Science

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Ocean Acidification Program

    Research Title

    Developing New Acidification Visualizations from a Time-Series Analysis of Selected Stations from NOAA’s Ocean Acidification Network

    Abstract

    This project will involve in depth analysis of co-located biological and chemical oceanographic data sets, from OA funded cruises, to determine potential OA impacts. These data sets exist for all US coasts so the student can choose the region they know most about or prefer.

  • Portrait photo of Kayla Hudson

    Kayla Hudson

    School: Jackson State University

    Major: Meteorology

    NOAA Affiliation: NESDIS STAR

    Research Title

    Increasing the Impact of Satellite Observations on NOAA's Global Forecast

    Abstract

    According to McLaughlin et al., 2005 data assimilation is defined as, “A way to integrate the data from a variety of sources with different resolutions and accuracies, with model prediction, to improve deterministic model accuracy.” Data assimilation is known to be helpful in observational data usage and global analyses while at the same time being a key necessity in weather prediction and simulations systems. Although satellite observations are critical for numerical weather prediction, they remain under-utilized in terms of volume of data assimilated, and information content extracted. A machine learning model was developed to optimize observation errors in Numerical Weather Prediction. This research will improve the way satellite observations are used in forecast models. The case study used to execute this is the 2020 Easter Tornado Outbreak and we observed the way the forecast system behaves as it evolves through all the cycles. To effectively execute this process, we analyzed the Easter tornado outbreak for the period around April 12th 14th to base research around this case study. Next, we trained a machine learning model that can predict the way that observations are currently weighted, focus on a single satellite sensor, and evaluate current observation errors assigned. Then we developed the machine learning model to predict the way the current system assigns observation errors; this work led to testing a machine learning model and assessing impact on forecast. The machine learning model was optimized to improve the assignment of observation errors and tests. It would improve it by lowering the errors, getting more information out of them. Ultimately, this project aims to improve the utilization of satellite data in Numerical Weather Prediction’s data assimilation, as well as cater to the improvement of satellite data’s impact through forecast accuracy and weather preparedness for future extreme weather events.

  • Portrait photo of Kendrick Lolange

    Kendrick Lolange

    School: University of Massachusetts - Boston

    Major: Electrical Engineering

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Pacific Marine Environmental Lab

    Research Title

    Multipurpose Integrated Diagnostic Acquisition System (MIDAS)

    Abstract

    The main purpose of this Multipurpose Integrated Diagnostic Acquisition System (MIDAS) is to log data from a quatersized microcontroller called an Openlog Artimus to measure parameters such as pressure via Bluetooth communication for ocean instrumentation. The serial port terminal application (Cool term) was used as a serial communication link between the PC and the microcontroller. Coolterm was simply used to transfer the data from the microcontroller to the PC. The data recorded from the MIDAS is then plotted in real time as a time series graph for observation by engineers and technicians.

  • Portrait photo of Kyle James

    Kyle James

    School: University of Oklahoma - Norman

    Major: Meteorology

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Earth Systems Research Lab GSL

    Research Title

    Comparison of Generic vs. Use-Specific Calibration in the Context of Aviation-Targeted Convective Forecasts

    Abstract

    The High-Resolution Rapid Refresh (HRRR) Version 3 and National Blend of Models (NBM) convective forecasts are used by the aviation community to plan and route air traffic within the National Airspace System (NAS). Additionally, they are used as inputs to the Traffic Flow Management Convective Forecast used by the Federal Aviation Administration. This work compares the calibrated HRRR, the uncalibrated HRRR, and uncalibrated NBM quantifying the impact to the NAS owing to differences in convective performance. HRRR and NBM data was provided for March-August 2020 and were compared against the Corridor Integrated Weather System, which was used as the truth data set. Performance was evaluated from an impact-based perspective, using the Flow Constraint Index, which combines weather (Vertically Integrated Liquid and echo top fields) and air traffic data to derive constraint information using a geometry consistent with airspace operations. This method of assessment allows the model performance to be measured as it impacts aviation decision making. Categorical statistics showed that the calibrated HRRR performed better than the uncalibrated HRRR, which performed better than the uncalibrated NBM. This result held true when stratifying by either echo top height or magnitude of constraint. In addition, two case studies (a severe weather event over Michigan and pop-up thunderstorms over Atlanta) were examined to further prove the validity of categorical statistics. Variability in performance is also examined geographically over the US.

  • Portrait of Laura Cabrera

    Laura Cabrera

    School: University of Puerto Rico

    Major: Environmental Health

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Climate Program Office

    Research Title

    Expanding Regional Capacity to Adapt to Climate Change in Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands: Identifying Gaps and Recommendations for a Caribbean RISA

    Abstract

    Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI) are rich in biodiversity, cultural heritage, and natural resources. More than 3.5 million inhabitants depend on the region’s natural resources and environmental services for their well-being, livelihoods, local economies, and cultural identities. Changing climate and weather patterns interacting with human activities affects land use, air quality, and resource management and poses growing risks to food security, the economy, culture, and ecosystems services (NCA, 2018). On September 2017, Puerto Rico and USVI were struck by two (2) major hurricanes in less than two (2) weeks. There were 2,975 excess deaths related to Hurricane María due to the loss of essential resources and lack of understanding and knowledge. Therefore, the U.S. Caribbean region, including Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI), is a high priority for investment by the Regional Integrated Sciences and Assessments (RISA) Program from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrator (NOAA). NOAA-RISA Program has expanded regional capacity to adapt to climate change by investing in transdisciplinary climate science teams over five-year periods. These regional teams’ main goal is to build sustained relationships between decision makers and researchers that support collaborative and equitable adaptation to climate risks. While the RISA Program has evolved since its inception in the 1990s, it still lacks national coverage across the United States. For that reason, RISA Program partnered with a 2021 William M. Lapenta NOAA Student Intern to conduct a review of the region’s climate impacts, federal investments, partner networks, and research gaps. The findings of the review indicate availability of resources for agriculture, forestry, coastal zone management, and atmospheric science, however there are few federal grant projects related to climate health and few collaborations between Puerto Rico and USVI, two islands that experience the same climate challenges. For that reason, we recommend more institutional support for partnerships between Puerto Rico and USVI and the promotion and encouragement of projects about Climate Health.

  • Portrait photo of Lauren Crane

    Lauren Crane

    School: University of Michigan – Ann Arbor

    Major: Climate and Space Engineering

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Climate Program Office

    Research Title

    Climate Justice Through the Lens of ACE

    Abstract

    Climate Justice Through the Lens of ACE will present an introduction to Climate Justice and an in-depth analysis of the distribution of climate justice programs across the federal government, as researched and recorded through an Action for Climate Empowerment (ACE) stocktake conducted by myself and two other Lapenta interns from June 2021-August 2021. The stocktake was completed through desktop research of federal budget documents and extensive peer reviewing in order to gain a general, widespread understanding of which existing federal programs were supporting the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) ACE strategy, with a focus on Climate Justice, a specific initiative of the United States. The presentation aims to break down the dispersion of climate justice and equity programs in terms of which departments they fall under and the balance, or lack thereof, in the underserved audiences and focal points they are addressing. This will be accomplished through statistical charts and visuals that demonstrate not only the stronger areas for climate justice in the federal government, notably racial equity and justice in both the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Department of Energy, but also the gaps in certain departments and audiences that have yet to be addressed sufficiently, with the lack of gender-sensitive programs and intergenerational programs being a significant gap according to the stocktake findings.

  • Portrait photo of Lauren Vocke

    Lauren Vocke

    School: University of North Dakota

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NESDIS STAR

    Research Title

    Comparing Sentinel-6 Altimeter Wind and Wave Measurements to NDBC Buoy Data

    Abstract

    Satellite altimeters have been flown on several missions and provide critical data to scientists, users, and forecasters, including sea level, wave height, and marine wind measurements. Recently the Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich satellite (S6MF), launched in November 2020, was added to the constellation of satellite altimeters. S6MF is unique because it includes both conventional low-rate altimetry and the newer delay-doppler (high-rate) method. To validate the accuracy of the S6MF data, significant wave heights and 10-meter wind speed measurements were compared to open ocean buoy observations within close proximity to the altimeter pass. Early results showed strong correlations and low standard deviations for the difference between the buoy and altimeter observations. However, the high-rate data was found to overestimate the wave heights compared to the buoy observations, leading to a significant positive bias. These results confirmed a known issue in the initial S6MF processor, which produced high-rate wind speed values that did not meet the uncertainty requirements for the mission. The problem was corrected on August 3rd, 2021, but unfortunately, this was after the comparison for this project. Analysis of the altimeter data after the processor change is needed to determine a more complete and accurate validation of the S6MF data. Accurate altimeter wind and wave height measurements are needed to improve predictions of extreme winds and waves and to issue high wave warnings for shipping, navigation, and oil platforms. Data from the Sentinel-6 mission will also allow scientists to continuously monitor the global mean sea level and determine the effects of sea-level rise in the years to come.
  • Portrait photo of Leah Barkai

    Leah Barkai

    School: University of San Diego

    Major: Environmental and Ocean Sciences

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR/ESRL Global Monitoring Laboratory

    Research Title

    Calibration of World Dobson Network Using Data from Mauna Loa Observatory

    Abstract

    The Ozone and Water Vapor group of NOAA’s Global Monitoring Laboratory makes long-term continuous measurements of the Earth’s ozone layer at key locations around the world. A key tool for making these measurements is the Dobson spectrophotometer. It was first designed by Dr. Gordon Miller BourneDobson in 1931, and has been used for gathering Total Column Ozone (TCO) measurements ever since. Dobson Spectrophotometers were designed to be self-calibrating by the Langley technique, but the environments in which they’re operated are often unsuitable for conducting calibrations. Therefore, the World Meteorological Organization devised a calibration scheme in which a single standard instrument is calibrated at a pristine environment, and all other instruments are assigned calibrations by comparison to that standard. NOAA GML is the custodian of the world standard and checks its calibration every two years at their observatory in Mauna Loa, Hawaii by taking measurements with Dobson spectrophotometer 083. The Dobson returns total column ozone values in Dobson Units (DU) where one DU equals 0.01 millimeters of pure ozone at standard temperature and pressure. The total column ozone is the amount of ozone contained in a hypothetical column of air between the Dobson and the outer edge of the atmosphere. The Dobson method evaluates the amount of ozone by comparing the relative change of the Solar ultraviolet light measured by the instrument to what the instrument would measure outside of the atmosphere (so-called calibration constant). The Langley technique graphs the relative intensity measured by the instrument with respect to the path length through the ozone layer, and then extrapolates data to a path length of zero, which is called the calibration constant. The project was important for three reasons: 1) collecting continuous measurements of the ozone layer at MLO, 2) verification of historic, ongoing and new satellite ozone records and 3) applying the network calibration technique called Langley to verify the World Dobson Standard calibration. The results will be compiled and plotted against previous years starting in 1972.

  • Portrait photo of Macy Chang

    Macy Chang

    School: University of California at Berkeley

    Major: Environmental Engineering

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Lab

    Research Title

    Investigating Changes in Tropical Pacific Water Mass Pathways and Iron Transport in GFDL Ocean Models

    Abstract

    Ocean currents in the Solomon Sea, a semi-enclosed sea in the southwestern tropical Pacific, feed into the Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC) through three northern exit straits, providing dissolved iron (dFe) to the iron-limited eastern equatorial Pacific waters. As iron is a significant and limiting nutritional component of oceanic primary productivity, it is important to understand projected future change of the Solomon Sea’s outbound dFe transport. This study compares model projections of ocean volume and dFe transport out of the Solomon Sea under the high-emissions future scenario Shared Socioeconomic Pathway 5-8.5 (SSP5-8.5). Volume and dFe transport calculations are derived from a series of simulations performed using two state-of-the-art coupled GFDL models, GFDL-CM4 and GFDL-ESM4. Observations of transport and iron concentrations in the Solomon Sea are first used to assess the mean-state performance of the two models. The simulated vertical flow structure and distribution of transport between the straits differs from that observed; however, both models have net volume transports which are consistent with observed estimates (18.5 Sv annual mean). Net volume transport exiting the Solomon Sea is projected to increase in magnitude and interannual variability under the SSP5-8.5 scenario in both models. The vertical structure of dFe concentrations is more consistent with observations in ESM4 compared to CM4, likely due to its more sophisticated treatment of iron cycling. This suggests a higher level of confidence in projected changes in Solomon Sea dFe concentrations in ESM4 compared to CM4. ESM4 projects dFe transport out of the Solomon Sea to decrease by 3.0 x 1010 mmol/year (-9.6%) under SSP5-8.5 conditions. The results suggest that anthropogenically-forced climate change may lead to a decreased delivery (and increased interannual variability) of iron-rich waters from the Solomon Sea region into the equatorial Pacific, which may influence oceanic primary productivity. This study underscores the importance of conducting model validation in understudied regions to reduce regional biases in model development and reduce uncertainty in future climate projections.

  • Portrait photo of Madeline Statkewicz

    Madeline Statkewicz

    School: University of Houston

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Climate Program Office

    Research Title

    Plans for Atmospheric Composition Measurements in New York City

    Abstract

    New York City is a petri dish of atmospheric chemistry due to its unique combination of natural and anthropogenic emissions. Subsequently, there are many current and planned campaigns to measure and characterize the City's atmospheric composition in both the short- and long-term. This project will categorize, describe, and connect seven scientific measurement campaigns: two ground-based studies (LISTOS and NYC-METS), three aircraft campaigns (CUPiDS, AEROMMA, and GOTHAMM), and two satellite missions (TEMPO and GeoXO). All of these activities will be presented cohesively in a single infographic to inform stakeholders, policymakers, and citizens alike of the exciting atmospheric campaigns in New York City.

  • Portrait photo of Maggie Bruckner

    Maggie Bruckner

    School: University of Wisconsin - Madison

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR/ESRL Global Systems Lab

    Research Title

    Composition Assimilation and Forecasting within UFS

    Abstract

    During August and September of 2020 air quality and visibility in the western US was greatly degraded as a result of wildfire smoke. The 2020 fire season was one of the worst on record, and resulted in hazardous air quality across Washington, Oregon, and California. The High-Resolution Rapid Refresh-Smoke (HRRR-Smoke) model forecasts 3D smoke concentrations on an hourly refresh cycle, with wildfire emissions estimated from VIIRS and MODIS fire radiative power (FRP) data. Previous evaluations of HRRR-Smoke forecasts have focused mostly on surface particulate matter and satellite derived smoke aerosol optical depth (AOD). In this study we evaluate HRRR-Smoke forecasts with hourly aerosol optical depth (AOD) observations from the Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET).

  • Portrait photo of Michael Michaud

    Michael Michaud

    School: University of Delaware

    Major: Disaster Science and Management

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Weather Program Office

    Research Title

    An EPIC Dive into Social Science: An Analysis of the Community Aspects of Community Modeling

    Abstract

    Following Hurricane Sandy in 2012, more attention turned to the need for improving Numerical Weather Prediction capabilities within the United States as it became evident they were outperformed by models developed internationally. This led to the creation of the Unified Forecast System (UFS) to simplify the operational suite of models and capitalize on “community modeling”. While the idea of community modeling is not new, it can take different forms and meanings. It is important to have a common definition and understand what it means to be part of a community before being able to strengthen one. This project examines perceptions of “community modeling” from key stakeholders involved with the UFS and the Earth Prediction Innovation Center (EPIC). As a center designed to build partnerships, EPIC must be aware of perceptions and understanding of what it means to be part of the community. Through data from interviews with key stakeholders across different sectors of earth prediction, and utilizing theoretical and practical frameworks, this project makes recommendations on how EPIC can cultivate a Community of Practice and continuously engage members to develop a sense of community.

  • Portrait photo of Michelle Spencer

    Michelle Spencer

    School: University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee

    Major: Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorology Lab

    Research Title

    Direct Measurements of the Upper Ocean Response to Tropical Cyclones in the Tropical North Atlantic

    Abstract

    The strong winds, rainfall, and surface heat fluxes from tropical cyclones (TCs) can force pronounced changes in sea surface temperature (SST) as well as subsurface temperature, salinity, and upper ocean velocity. This study characterizes the effects of TCs on the ocean by determining the primary storm factor(s) controlling surface and subsurface temperature, salinity, and velocity before and after the storm passes. We use direct observations of the ocean and near-surface atmosphere from the Prediction and Research Moored Array in the Tropical Atlantic (PIRATA) to investigate the effects of TCs on the upper ocean. Between 1998 and 2020, nine TCs were identified with wind speeds in excess of 15 m/sec, as measured by one of the PIRATA moorings, and for which hourly mooring data was available. These storms passed within two degrees of the moorings located at 20N, 38W; 15N, 38W; or 12N, 23W in the tropical North Atlantic Ocean. Along 38W, where ocean temperature stratification is weak, it is found that TC-induced SST cooling is linked primarily to storm intensity (maximum near-surface wind speed). In contrast, ocean temperature stratification is likely the primary driver for SST cooling at the 12N, 23W site, where stratification is strong and weaker storms are able to produce large SST decreases. Interestingly, the upper-ocean velocity response to TCs does not show a strong relationship with the pre-storm ocean state and instead depends mainly on TC intensity. Potential implications of these results for understanding the ocean’s response to TCs and predicting the ocean’s feedback to TC intensity will be discussed.

  • Photo of Milton Stookey sitting on a tree branch

    Milton Stookey

    School: University of California - Berkeley

    Major: Physics

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP Environmental Modeling Center

    Research Title

    Initial Evaluation of NOAA Unified Forecast System Coupled Model Using NASA Land Verification Toolkit

    Abstract

    NOAA’s Unified Forecast System (UFS) is a global coupled Earth modelling environment with considerable spatial and temporal flexibility. The UFS environment is being used for development of the next generation of the operational Global Forecast System, GFS v.17. Progress is made incrementally using UFS Prototypes, each one bringing in new features or physics. This work documents recent steps taken to configure the Land Verification Toolkit (LVT) from NASA’s Land Information System Framework (LISF) for UFS model evaluation. LVT is a formal system for land surface model evaluation, providing numerous evaluation capabilities for insitu observations, as well as gridded, remotely sensed, and reanalysis products in their native formats. LVT offers accuracy-based metrics, uncertainty and ensemble diagnostics, information theory, spatial similarity and scale decomposition metrics, as well as external masking and stratification options, lending it considerable evaluation breadth and flexibility. In order to allow LVT to work with native data formats, a custom reader must be developed for each datastream. A reader was created for UFS Prototype single-month outputs, and was extended to allow for multi-year evaluations. Initial accuracy-based evaluations were performed on output against International Soil Moisture Network CONUS stations from July 2012. Results were found to be consistent with previously performed evaluations. Subsequently, 8 years of Prototype 6 soil moisture outputs (2011-2018) were evaluated using the ESA CCI SM Combined (active scatterometer and passive radiometer) product (0.25º daily), with a focus on land type classifications. Finally, albedo evaluations were performed using the MODIS GLASS albedo product (0.05º 8-daily). This initial work aims to incentivize the use of LVT by non-LIS groups. Future work would seek to increase interfacing between UFS outputs and LVT, so as to take full advantage of the framework’s evaluation capabilities.

  • Portrait photo of Miranda Bitting

    Miranda Bitting

    School: Pennsylvania State University

    Major: Meteorology

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP Weather Prediction Center

    Research Title

    Evaluation of the FV3-LAM Precipitation Rates in the Flash Flood and Intense Rainfall Experiment

    Abstract

    The Flash Flood and Intense Rainfall (FFaIR) experiment is a Hydrometeorological Testbed experiment that evaluates the utility of certain operational and experimental models in the context of forecasting extreme precipitation events. Last year in FFaIR, participants noted that “popcorn” convection simulated by FV3 convective-allowing models (CAMs) had a large wet bias in both the hourly and 24-hour QPF from these storms and had the appearance of grid-cell storms. In order to investigate this trend and to try and identify a possible cause for these grid-cell storms, instantaneous precipitation rates (hereafter p-rate) from the models were compared to p-rates from the Multi-Radar Multi-Sensor (MRMS) QPE. The FV3-CAM models evaluated in the study were the EMC FV3-LAM and FV3-LAMDAX as well as the GSL RRFS1. First, a time series analysis was done on the four data sources using the maximum p-rate for each model each hour. This showed a clear trend: all three experimental models consistently overestimated the maximum p-rate, with the RRFS1 demonstrating the highest overestimation on the majority of dates studied. Additionally, heat maps were created to illustrate the amount of grid points showing certain p-rates for each forecast hour. According to the daily heat maps, it is clear that all three experimental models have significantly more p-rate grid point values above 10 in/hr than the MRMS data.

  • Portrait photo of Naylah Perodin

    Naylah Perodin

    School: Loyola University of Maryland

    Major: Computer Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NESDIS STAR

    Research Title

    Correlation Study between VIIRS GVF and PhenoCam GCC Values

    Abstract

    After reviewing the vegetation indices from the NOAA-20 and S-NPP satellites, it has been determined that there are locations and intervals of time when high quality vegetation index values cannot be obtained. In order to improve the VIIRS vegetation indices, we need to complete a correlation validation study between the PhenoCam Green Chromatic Coordinate (GCC) and satellite Green Vegetation Fraction (GVF) values, as the GVF values are derived from vegetation indices. The study will provide insight on where and how improvements to the vegetation products can be implemented. We have created a correlation tool that calculates and validates the annual and seasonal correlation between the GCC and GVF values. After reviewing the results of the study, we have determined that there is a stronger correlation on average between the GCC and NPP and NOAA-20 GVF values than between GCC and existing AVHRR GVF climatology. This indicates that improvements to the GVF climatology should be possible by using NPP or NOAA-20 data. In future work, a monthly NPP GVF climatology will be computed and that improvement will fill in the missing gaps to produce a more precise product.

  • Portrait photo of Nicholas Mesa

    Nicholas Mesa

    School: University of Florida - Gainesville

    Major: Civil Engineering

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorology Lab

    Research Title

    Investigating Intensity Changes Related to Thermodynamic and Kinematic Processes Using Near-Coincident Aircraft and Satellite Observations

    Abstract

    By using frequent and near-coincident NOAA aircraft and satellite observations, we can provide greater detail and context to the dynamics of an intensifying tropical cyclone, fostering a better understanding of intensification to improve forecasts. We sought to use these observations to investigate the spatiotemporal evolution of precipitation and relative humidity in an intensifying tropical cyclone with respect to vertical wind shear. Our hypothesis proposed an increase in the mean relative humidity in the upshear portion of a tropical cyclone as it intensified, indicating a more symmetric moisture distribution which is conducive to sustained convection. This project focused on Hurricane Edouard in 2014 to look into this evolution while also establishing the framework for analyzing the forthcoming abundance of near-coincident observations from the NASA TROPICS constellation. By determining the frequency of near-coincident observations in Edouard and “matching” the data, a unique and comprehensive dataset was created that combined data from satellite microwave retrievals, tail-Doppler radar, and dropsondes.

    Preliminary diagnostic products were created to investigate how the mean relative humidity in the mid-troposphere changed over time in the upshear and downshear quadrants of the storm. One challenge was the presence of “contaminated” pixels in the microwave soundings. These pixels were mainly associated with areas that were likely to have precipitation or convection. While Edouard provided an intriguing initial case, other tropical cyclones should be investigated in a composite analysis. Overall, this tool could be valuable for future use by incorporating additional datasets and creating other derived diagnostic products. Thus, this project enables a streamlined and thorough analysis of past and future tropical cyclones that spans time, space, and different observational platforms.

  • Portrait photo of Nicole Hilton

    Nicole Hilton

    School: University of North Carolina – Charlotte

    Major: Geography

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Climate Program Office

    Research Title

    Synthesizing the Training Element of the Federal ACE Inventory

    Abstract

    The global resource landscape, including labor and the environment, faces significant risks due to climate change, which has equally significant implications for our civilizations. This dynamic is influenced heavily by policy and action, with endeavors such as the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)’s Action for Climate Empowerment (ACE) strategy crafted to provide guidance for sustainable and equitable progress towards the Paris Climate Agreement goals, while honoring the unique context of each country and leveraging the power of the local people. Despite the United States not yet adopting an ACE national strategy of its own, this project discovered the implementation of ACE-related elements in over 200 federal programs. Through the examination of fiscal year 2022 budget documents and other sources of publicly available information with refined ACE element definitions adapted for the U.S. context, an initial inventory of federal programs was generated, internally reviewed, and analyzed between June 2021-August 2021. Of the six elements within the framework that these programs may have incorporated, however, the demands for skills emerging from the impacts of climate change and potential transitions lend to the imperative nature of the ACE-element ‘Training’, which focuses in large part on capacity building and workforce development, in particular. This presentation synthesizes the findings of this element-specific analysis, determining the scope of programmatic inclusion and identifying opportunities for future integration

  • Portrait photo of Patricia Razafindrambinina

    Patricia Razafindrambinina

    School: University of Maryland – College Park

    Major: Chemistry

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR/ESRL Global Monitoring Lab

    Research Title

    Identifying Correlations of Ozone Anomalies with Air Masses that are Impacted by Biomass Burning

    Abstract

    Ozone in the troposphere is a pollutant that can be formed from the photochemical processing of wildfire and biomass burning byproducts as plumes age. (Jaffe et al., 2012). In North America, studies have shown that wildfires are increasing in number and intensity, and are projected to become a larger contributor to the total tropospheric ozone budget. In this study, we evaluate the correlations between surface ozone anomalies and wildfire tracers (carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, aerosol light absorption coefficients, aerosol Ångström coefficient, and boundary layer heights) during the mid-October 2020 fires in the Colorado Front Range. Tracers were measured at NOAA’s Table Mountain Facility monitoring site in the foothills region of central Colorado. Back-trajectories and satellite fire maps from VIIRS and MODIS are used to link episodes of ozone enhancements in the Colorado Front Range to the wildfire origin. The ozone anomalies are compared to clear days that are not impacted by fires (i.e. low CO and aerosol levels) to quantify the enhancement of ozone due to wildfires and biomass burning. It is important to note that Colorado experienced record-breaking wildfires in the Fall of 2020. In addition, the temperatures in September-October 2020 were uncharacteristically high, and thus even on the smoke-free days, ozone in Frontrange, Colorado continued to be produced by local pollution emissions and photolysis. Therefore, we will discuss several episodes of apparent ozone enhancements and point to the importance of the coincident observations of fire tracers for attribution of ozone enhancements at Front Range and in the Rocky mountains to the fire-related sources.
  • Portrait photo of Quinn Bustos

    Quinn Bustos

    School: New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology

    Major: Technical Communication

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Climate Program Office

    Research Title

    Analysis of Current and Proposed Climate Public Awareness Federal Programs in the United States

    Abstract

    Public awareness of climate is essential to fighting against climate disruption. The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) recognized the importance of climate awareness among the public, and included it in Article 12: Action for Climate Empowerment (ACE). As the United States moves toward implementing an ACE national strategy, it was necessary to take a preliminary inventory of federal programs in the U.S. to discover what ACE-related work is currently being done or is planning to be done in the future. The inventory was conducted by two other interns and I who researched many federal programs to see what ACE elements they included. This presentation uses data from that inventory to determine where the most climate public awareness programs are in the government, what audience is most served by these programs, and which other ACE elements the climate public awareness programs typically address. I found that the Department of Commerce had the most climate public awareness programs in our inventory. The audience most served was the community, and the other ACE element most commonly addressed in climate public awareness programs was education.

  • Portrait photo of Rachel Han

    Rachel Han

    School: University of California – Los Angeles

    Major: Environmental Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP Ocean Prediction Center

    Research Title

    Recent Extreme Extratropical Cyclones and Their Relationships to North Pacific Teleconnections

    Abstract

    Due to a period of intense extratropical cyclones this past winter, this project studied the different ocean and atmosphere behaviors that potentially contributed to this extreme storminess in the North Pacific. In late November, the ultra-large container vessel ONE Apus lost over 1,800 containers when it encountered swell generated from a very intense cyclone, resulting in $90 million in cargo loss alone. In late December the crew from FV NNE of Midway Island was reported missing, presumed to have abandoned the ship, and never found. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the dependency of the world’s population on transoceanic shipping as a key component of global supply chains and the reliance on accurate marine weather forecasts to prevent the loss of cargo and lives. This project highlights two different storm periods during the fall and winter of 2020- 21, November 29th to December 4th and December 30th to January 8th, and examines the evolution of large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns of the Northern Hemisphere during and leading up to these two periods of frequent extreme extratropical cyclone activity. We analyzed sea level pressure, 500-hPa geopotential height, and wind speed to see where these storms were developing. We then compared the anomalous fields during the two periods of cyclone activity with those associated with several teleconnections, focusing primarily on the Pacific-North American (PNA) and the North-Pacific Oscillation patterns. This year, we were in a La Niña year, but the PNA (which is typically negative during a La Niña) did not exhibit the expected behavior. The pattern of z500 anomalies for each storm period are consistent with the dominant teleconnections during those days. However, during both date ranges there were more than one strong teleconnection observed, meaning these stormy periods may be reflections of the constructive interference of multiple modes of large-scale climate variability. Assumptions made within the project and potential future projects will also be discussed.

  • Portrait photo of Sam Coakley

    Sam Coakley

    School: Rutgers University

    Major: Physical Oceanography

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Global Ocean Monitoring and Observation

    Research Title

    Collaboration with the Extreme Events-Ocean Obs Task Team and Various Working Groups to Help Improve the State of NOAA’s Hurricane Intensity Forecasting System

    Abstract

    The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season holds the record for the most billion-dollar tropical cyclones (TCs) with 7 landfalling on the U.S. coast. TC track forecasting has seen great improvement while intensity forecasting lags behind. The limited improvement in intensity forecasting can be partially attributed to an incomplete understanding of ocean-TC interactions. Ocean observations have been increasingly acknowledged by the scientific and operational forecast communities as critical to improving Earth system prediction. 

    This work presents a coordinated, multi-institutional, and multi-platform approach to capture the ocean features that affect TC intensity. This effort will focus on the essential ocean features (EOFs) of the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea and provide recommendations for how to best observe these features for the ultimate goal of improving TC intensity forecasts.

    Sustained surface ocean observations during hurricane season help to improve the initial conditions in data assimilative coupled models, which has been shown to improve intensity forecasts. We will use autonomous platforms, such as underwater gliders and saildrones, to monitor EOFs throughout a hurricane season. Colocated ocean and atmospheric observations targeted at a TC would help develop air-sea interaction theory by capturing the evolution of both the ocean and atmosphere throughout the passage of the TC. Air-deployed instruments allow us to study the small-scale, nonlinear interactions of the ocean and TCs. 

    Closing gaps in NOAA’s ocean observations by capturing sustained and targeted ocean observations and coordinating colocated ocean-atmosphere observations is essential to accurately representing the ocean in Earth system models and improving forecasts.

  • Portrait photo of Samuel Ephraim

    Samuel Ephraim

    School: University of Michigan – Ann Arbor

    Major: Meteorology and Computer Science

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Weather Program Office

    Research Title

    Migrating the UFS Graduate Student Tests (GST) to the Cloud

    Abstract

    The goal of the Earth Prediction Innovation Center (EPIC) is to enable the most accurate and reliable operational numerical forecast model in the world. EPIC will achieve this goal through community engagement where students, researchers, professors, and other community members can collaborate to develop open-source code for the Unified Forecast System (UFS). One way to spark the interest of new community members is through Graduate Student Tests (GST), which are usability tests that entail running, modifying, rerunning, and comparing outputs of the UFS code and its applications.

    In order to increase accessibility of the UFS GSTs, cloud versions were developed as part of a William M. Lapenta internship project at NOAA. The cloud-based GSTs include documentation with instructions to run containerized versions of the UFS usability tests on the Amazon Web Services (AWS) platform that utilize new plotting scripts to visualize results, as well as a FAQ document. Running the GSTs on the cloud is important for increasing accessibility because people without access to HPCs will now be able to run the GST quickly and cheaply using any device that can connect to the internet. Cloud-based GSTs are expected to increase the number of people running the UFS. This will in turn increase the pool of people contributing to the UFS, which will help NOAA develop the most accurate and reliable operational numerical forecast model in the world.

    This talk will discuss the GSTs in depth and explain some of the challenges of deploying the GSTs in the AWS cloud. Performance metrics from running the GSTs in the cloud along with opportunities of future engagement with

  • Portrait photo of Sean Parker

    Sean Parker

    School: Rutgers University

    Major: Meteorology and Atmospheric Science

    NOAA Affiliation: NWS/NCEP Climate Prediction Center

    Research Title

    Update to 30 year Climate Normal: Comparisons and Impacts

    Abstract

    PC outlooks are all issued relative to a historical 30-year base period. These climate normals have recently been updated from the 1981-2010 to 1991-202 base period, which will remain in effect for the next 10 years. This study will explore the differences between the two base periods and evaluate the potential impact this change will have on forecasting across subseasonal to seasonal time scales. Spatial plots of temperature and precipitation were generated to show shifts in distribution and change in shape of the newly established climate normals. A comparison between the two base periods is made using averaging over the subseasonal to seasonal time scales and used to retrospectively verify outlooks made between 2011-2020 in order to assess the potential impacts of the new normals on upcoming forecasts. Not surprisingly, the results show an overall decrease in skill for the outlooks with the most significant impacts occurring for the temperature forecasts, the result of the generally warmer base period means.
  • Portrait photo of Sophie Grimsley

    Sophie Grimsley

    School: University of South Carolina

    Major: Environmental Science

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorology Lab

    Research Title

    Aircraft Observations of the Boundary Layer Structure in Hurricane Irene

    Abstract

    Accurately forecasting hurricane intensity change is important for timely hurricane preparedness and impact-based forecasts. Previous studies have shown that air-sea interactions and boundary-layer processes play a key role in regulating hurricane intensity change. Despite its importance, the hurricane boundary layer has been the least observed part of a storm, and how the boundary layer structure evolves during intensity change is not well understood. The purpose of this study is to identify key boundary layer structure in relation to intensity change by analyzing aircraft observations in Hurricane Irene (2011). A total of ~80 dropsondes, and Tail Doppler Radar (TDR) and lower-fuselage radar data from 4 continuous reconnaissance flights into Hurricane Irene at different intensity stages are analyzed. Structural metrics including boundary layer height, inflow strength, and moist entropy are evaluated. Both symmetric and asymmetric distribution of the boundary layer structure are presented. Results show that a) there is no apparent correlation between the axisymmetric boundary layer height and intensity; b) both the height of maximum wind speed and mixed layer depth increase with radius; c) the mixed layer depth downshear is shallower than upshear before intensification; d) near-surface equivalent potential temperature shows a shear-relative wavenumber-1 asymmetry that is tied to the asymmetry of convection; and e) surface enthalpy fluxes are enough to recover downdraft induced low-entropy air before the intensification period of Irene.

  • Portrait Photo of Sylvie Alexander

    Sylvie Alexander

    School: Scripps College

    Major: Environmental Analysis

    NOAA Affiliation: OAR

    Research Title

    NOAA Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) Initiative

    Abstract

    Sylvie will serve on the NOAA Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) Task Force and lead NOAA's cross line office portfolio analysis for the NOAA
    CDR Science Strategy white paper and the development of a summary document for senior leadership. They will also engage with other
    federal agencies through the USGCRP Carbon Cycle Interagency Working Group as part of their interagency CDR efforts. This internship will
    require engagement with scientists and program managers throughout NOAA and academic partners.