I am very grateful to have had the opportunity to attend the American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting in December. It was a great experience to meet new people, reconnect with colleagues,attend career development workshops, learn about the cutting edge of geology, geophysics, and planetary science, and have the opportunity to present my own research.
This post may seem lengthy, but I'm also partially writing it as a means to refresh myself with all the events from the conference. The week went past like a whirlwind, and there were a lot of interesting topics I'd like to follow up on. I hope you're interested, too!
View of the Moscone South building (Poster Hall) from Moscone West (Oral Sessions) |
Highlights
Student & Early Career Scientists ConferenceI arrived a day early to attend the Student & Early Career Scientist Conference - a daylong series of career development workshops. Only a few weeks prior I had made an offhand comment to my labmate Gavin that I wished there were courses we could take on data management, and making scientific figures. To my delight, this event offered both! Hour long talks included, "Making Figures Talk: Data Visualization for Scientists" and "Improving Your Science Through Better Data Management: Tips and Techniques". The notes from the data visualization workshop are available online if you're interested. A couple tips I plan on trying are using white instead of black lines on bar graphs to make them sharper, and using partial transparency on scatter plots to see overlapping points. We were also warned that the "rainbow" colour scale, frequently used for raster datasets, has a couple sharp steps that can make it seem like there is a bigger change than their really is. This is something to keep in mind, because we use the rainbow scale for our CPR images.
Exhibitor Hall
Exhibitor's Hall, immediately upon opening |
Okay, aside from the ridiculous amounts of swag collected (many new posters are now decorating my apartment) there were a lot of interesting things going on in the Exhibit Hall. The Google booth hosted many short talks on using remote sensing to monitor and study global environmental issues. Western alumni, Tanya Harrison, had a featured talk on Martian gullies at Arizona State University's booth.
Western alumni, Tanya Harrison, gives a talk on Martian Gullies |
Poster Hall
Tim Haltigin from the Canadian Space Agency presented a well-designed, highly popular poster on the 2016 CanMars mission. CanMars was a highly successful, collaborative analogue Mars sample return mission that ran mission control operations here at Western last November. I had the pleasure of taking part in the mission as a member of the GIS & Mapping team, and am thoroughly grateful for the opportunity.
Maria's poster and my talk complimented each other really well. She presented the results from her internship with Dr. Neish over the summer, using thermal infrared spectroscopy to identify and map anhydrite salt exposures on Axel Heiberg Island, NU. I presented results in which I extracted the zonal statistics for CPR values in the areas she mapped as salt. Unfortunately, her poster presentation was during the time slot of my oral session, so I wasn't able to visit her during poster-time, but I did have the privilege to talk with her about it before and after.
Really cool radar stuff: I roamed through a few really interesting poster sessions that employed polarimetric radar for planetary atmospheres and meteorological studies. In the back of my mind, I was vaguely aware that this was a thing people do, but hadn't previously thought about how it works. Many studies explored the using different bands of polarimetric radar to estimate precipitation and storm intensity, which is important in risk assessment in coastal nations like Korea (Gu et al. 2016; Lim et al. 2016). One of the studies measured the distribution of raindrop size, which can then be correlated with the storm severity for hazard prevention. Another study uses C and S band radar for distinguishing size of hail particles, which is important in central Europe where hail can be the size of tennis balls (Schmidt et al. 2016).
Not radar, but another session focused on using passive polarimetry as a tool to study planetary bodies, including spaceweathering on the moon (Kim et al. 2016), the surface texture of Europa (Nelson et al. 2016), and even the composition of organics in meteorites (Kobayashi et al. 2016)
Oral Sessions
One of my favourite oral sessions entailed a group of prominent Mars researchers discussing Mars's past as either "cold and dry" or "warm and wet". I didn't realize that the "cold dry Mars" theory had much footing, but field analogues from Dry Valleys, Antarctica shows that even in very cold dry places there is significant seasonal melting that can form erosional features (Head 2016). Robin Woodsward similarly suggests that early Mars may have been more Titan-like, with a cold, dry climate and episodic melting that can explain fluvial features (Wordswarth 2016). I had the pleasure of meeting some of the presenters after this session and discussed current advancements in planetary science.
My talk was also quite successful! Despite being in the last session of the final day, there was a reasonable turn out. I met Dr. Gerald Patterson and Dr. Lynn Carter before the session, and they were both positive and asked insightful questions after my talk. Another gentleman approached me afterwards, asking if we have used any Sentinel-1 data for our student. We have not, but I mentioned that we are about to request PALSAR data. The other talks in this session were really interesting, too. One gentleman from Arceibo gave an overview of how Arecibo is used for planetary exploration (Taylor 2016). Dr. Carter gave a talk about how they have constructed giant vats of ice and sediments at the Goddard Flight Center to try and simulate data from SHARAD, the shallow ground penetrating radar orbiting Mars (Carter et al. 2016).
Social Events
The NASA hosted Planetary Science division Townhall. I met Jim Green, and asked about the current relationship and collaborations between NASA and the CSA. Bethany Ehlmann from Caltech was also a speaker at this session. I worked with her during our Arctic field season last summer, and it was great to see her again.
Bethany's career advice for students and early career scientists,
1. Don't give up on your rejected proposals
2. Papers. Papers, papers, papers. Grad students should focus on writing good papers.
Panelists at the NASA Planetary Science Division Townhall meeting |
San Francisco
Of course, I also took time to explore San Francisco! I had never been to the city before, and was able to have the chance to visit Chinatown, Fisherman's Wharf, and Pier 39.One of my favourite parts of traveling is trying local food, so I'm happy that I was able to eat some dim sum, sourdough bread, and Ghirardelli chocolate.
Fancy bank in Chinatown |
View of Alcatraz prison from Fisherman's Wharf |
Golden Gate Bridge as seen from Fisherman's Wharf |
SOURDOUGH BREAD FACTORY! YUM! |
Overall, I highly recommend the American Geophysical Union Fall Meetings. I had a great time, learned lots, and met a lot of incredible people. Cheers!
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