Sessions for the 2022 American Meteorological Society (AMS) Annual Meeting are being announced. If you are leading a session relevant to the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) user facility or Atmospheric System Research (ASR), please let us know. We are collecting this information to be shared on the ARM and ASR websites as it is provided.
The following sessions are being convened by your colleagues during the 102nd AMS Annual Meeting from January 23 to 27, 2022, in Houston, Texas. UPDATED DEADLINE: Submit your abstracts for these sessions until September 8, 2021. (You will select the session during the first step of the abstract submission process.)
Virtual options for attending and presenting are now available. See the AMS website for details.
The 2022 meeting includes a number of interesting conferences/symposia organized by ARM/ASR researchers or relevant to ARM/ASR themes, which cover various session topics in atmospheric chemistry, aerosols, clouds, and precipitation as well as topics related to measurements and data analysis.
Find details about the conferences, symposia, and proposed sessions on the following web pages:
- Symposium on Radar Science in the Service of Earth System Predictability
Program Chair: Scott Collis, science lead for the Python ARM Radar Toolkit (Py-ART)- Session: Radar Measurements of Cloud and Precipitation Life Cycle organized by Katia Lamer, Brookhaven National Laboratory
- Session: Ground-Based Radar Studies to Advance Satellite Precipitation Retrieval Algorithms organized by Christopher Williams, University of Colorado, Boulder; Claire Pettersen, University of Wisconsin, Madison; and Steve Nesbitt, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
- 12th Symposium on Advances in Modeling and Analysis Using Python
Program Chair: Scott Collis, science lead for the Python ARM Radar Toolkit (Py-ART)
- 14th Symposium on Aerosol-Cloud-Climate Interactions
- Session: Aerosol-Cloud Interactions in Deep Convective Clouds organized by Dié Wang and Michael Jensen, Brookhaven National Laboratory; and Zachary Lebo, University of Wyoming
- Session: Aerosol-Cloud Interactions in Mixed-Phase Clouds organized by Adele Igel, University of California, Davis; Chuanfeng Zhao, Beijing Normal University; and Susannah Burrows, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
- Session: Aerosol-Radiation Interactions organized by Zhibo Zhang, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Xiquan Dong, University of Arizona; Adeyemi Adebiyi, University of California, Los Angeles; and Hongbin Yu, Arizona State University
- Session: Challenges and Progress in Understanding, Simulating, and Forecasting Fog organized by Salil Mahajan, Min Xu, and Wei Zhang, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Hamish Gordon, Carnegie Mellon University Engineering Research Accelerator; and Adrian Hill, U.K. Met Office
- Session: Measurements and Modeling of CCN and INP – invited speakers Jessie M. Creamean, Colorado State University, and Zamin A. Kanji, ETH Zürich. Organized by Isabelle Steinke, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Naruki Hiranuma, West Texas A&M University; and Ottmar Möhler, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (Germany)
- Session: New Observations and Modeling Studies of Smoke-Cloud-Radiation-Climate Interactions organized by Michael Diamond, Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences/NOAA Chemical Sciences Laboratory; Kristina Pistone, NASA Ames Research Center/Bay Area Environmental Research Institute; and Hamish Gordon, Carnegie Mellon University Engineering Research Accelerator
- 19th Conference on Mesoscale Processes
- Session: Advances in Cumulus Convection Measurements, Parameterization, and Modeling organized by Kiran Alapaty, Environmental Protection Agency