ficha de avaliação - artigo: "Relação entre ocorrência de queimadas
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ficha de avaliação - artigo: "Relação entre ocorrência de queimadas
PROGRAM April 1 Tuesday April 2 Wednesday 8:30 – 8:45 (15 min) Welcome Local Committee: Karla Longo 8:45 – 9:10 (25 min) Presentation Project PI: Laura Gallardo Klenner 09:10 – 09:35 (25 min) Opening Oral Session 1: Maurício Osses 09:35 – 10:00 (25min – 1 talk) Oral Session 1 10:00 – 10:30 (30 min) Coffee break and posters 10:30 – 11:10 (40 min) Guest Presentation: IAI Gerhard Breulmann 11:10 – 11:15 Questions (5 min) April 3 Thursday 8:30 – 8:55 (25 min) Opening Oral Session 2: Karla Longo 8:55 – 9:15 (0h:20min – 1 talk) Oral Session 2 April 4 Friday 8:30 – 9:10 (40min) Guest Presentation: Greg Carmichael 9:10-9:15 Questions (5 min) 9:15 – 9:40 (25 min) Opening Oral Session 3: Pérola Vasconcelos 9:15 – 9:55 (40 min) Guest Presentation: Carlos Nobre 9:55-10:00 Questions (5 min) 9:40 – 10:00 (0h:20min – 1 talk) Oral Session 3 10:00 – 10:30 (30 min) Coffee Break and posters 10:00 – 10:30 (30 min) Coffee Break and posters 10:30 – 12:00 (1h:30 min – 4 talks) Oral Session 2 10:30 – 12:00 (1h:30min 4 talk) Oral Session 3 12:00 – 13:30 (1h:30) Lunch 12:00 – 13:30 (1h:30) Lunch 11:15 – 12:00 (45min – 2 talks) Oral Session 1 12:00 – 13:30 (1h:30) Lunch April 5 Saturday Until 14:00 Check out After 14:00 Arrival and registration of participants 14:00 – 15:30 (1h:30min – 4 talks) Oral Session 1 14:00 – 15:30 (1h:30min – 4 talks) Oral Session 2 14:00 – 16:00 (2h) Mini Course Data Assimilation Hendrik Elbern In Parallel: WG meetings 15:30 – 16:00 (30 min) Coffee Break and posters 16:00 – 18:00 Mini Course Numerical Modeling Greg Carmichael In Parallel: WG meetings 15:30 – 16:00 (30 min) Coffee Break and posters 16:00 – 16:30 (30 min) Coffee Break and posters 18:00 – 18:40 (40 min) Guest Presentation: Hendrik Elbern 18:40 – 18:45 Questions (5 min) 20:00 – 21:30 (1h:30) Dinner 20:00 – 21:30 (1h:30) Dinner 16:00 – 18:00 Mini Course Numerical Modeling – Georg Grell In Parallel: WG meeting 18:00 – 19:00 Posters In Parallel: WG meeting 20:00 – 21:30 (1h:30) Dinner 16:30 – 17:10 (40 min) Guest Presentation: Georg Grell 17:10-17:15 Questions (5 min) 17:15-18:30 (1h:15) Plenary Session: WG Reporting and Workshop Closing 20:30 – 23:30 (3h:00) Special Dinner Guests presentations: 1. IAI: Data & information sharing, cross-disciplinary collaboration, and IAI scientific and capacity building programs Gerhard Breulmann (IAI) 2. Spatio-temporal data assimilation for supporting chemical weather Hendrik Elbern (Rhenish Institute for Env. Research, Univ. of Cologne, Germany) 3. Climate Change and Megacities in Brazil: Mitigation or Adaptation Carlos Nobre (INPE, Brazil) 4. Regional and global perspectives of mega-city air pollution Greg Carmichael (University of Iowa, USA) 5. WRF/Chem and Air Quality Forecasting Georg Grell (NOAA, USA) Mini-courses: 1. Future directions for improving air quality predictions by Greg Carmichael Air quality prediction plays an important role in the management of our environment. Computational power and efficiencies have advanced to the point where chemical transport models can predict pollution in an urban air shed with spatial resolution less than a kilometer, and cover the globe with a horizontal resolution of less than 50 km. Predicting air quality remains a challenge due to the complexity of the governing processes and the strong coupling across scales. While air quality prediction is closely aligned with weather prediction, there are important differences, including the role of pollution emissions and their associated large uncertainties. Improvements in air quality prediction require a close integration of observations. As more atmospheric chemical observations become available chemical data assimilation is expected to play an essential role in air quality forecasting. In this workshop a review of basic elements in air quality modeling are discussed along with a discussion of some recent advances. Techniques to closely integrate observations and models will also be presented with an emphasis on data assimilation. Applications of the four-dimensional variational method (4D-Var) and the ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) approach are presented and the computation challenges are discussed. 2. Online Versus Offline Modeling by Georg Grell In this course we will first state why coupling is important, define the term "online" and "offline", and list pro's and con's of either choice. We will then discuss the importance of different scales in the real world and the model world and relate it to the choice of online versus offline modeling approaches. In addition examples will be shown comparing model simulations using both approaches but identical cases. Finally we will introduce different approaches that are commonly used to couple models in an online fashion. 3. Basic data assimilation concepts for atmospheric chemistry by Hendrik Elbern The course comprises an overview of objectives and concepts in data assimilation suitable for atmospheric chemistry modelling. Based on tutorial examples the range of techniques will be adressed to enable a formal validation of approaches. Discussion of spatio-temporal best linear unbiased estimators like variational approaches and Kalman filtering will conclude the course, with the focus on their ability for inversion with respect to emission rates. Oral Session 1: Emissions • Opening: How accurate are our emission factors for mobile sources? Mauricio Osses Alvarado, Departamento de Ingenieria Mecanica, Universidad de Chile 1. Improvement of emission inventories through observations Germán Ariel Torres (Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Argentina) Coauthors: Axel Osses, Laura Dawidowski, Ariela D'Angiola, Rodrigo Delgado 2. Characterization of local atmospheric pollution sources in the megacity of São Paulo, Brazil Maria de Fatima Andrade (Atmospheric Sciences Department, University of São Paulo, Brasil Coauthors: Leila D. Martins 3. Emission Factors for Urban Vehicles: Measuring and Analysis for Metropolitan Region of Santiago, Chile David Carrasco Manriquez (Universidad de Chile, Chile) Coauthors: Mauricio Osses 4. Lessons learned while updating Bogota's pollutant emissions inventory: mobile sources Eduardo Behrentz (Universidad de los Andes, Colombia) Coauthors: Mauricio Osses, Nancy P. Sánchez, Rodriguez Sebastian Tolvett, Paula 5. Past (1970 – 2005) and Prospective (2005 – 2025) Trends of CO2 Emissions from the Argentinean Energy Sector, Laura Dawidowski (CNEA, Argentina) Coauthors: Laura Dawidowski, Norberto Coppari, Jorge Giubergia, Regina Mancuso, Darío Gómez, Diego Maur, Florencia Precensio Deck, Francisco Rey 6. Comparison of a static and a dynamic IVE on-road mobile emission inventories for the City of Buenos Aires and the Metropolitan Area Ariela d'Angiola (IAI, CNEA, Argentina) Coauthors: Dário Gomez, Laura Dawidowski, Fabian Fujiwara, Mauricio Osses, Pilar Henriquez, Arie Araya 7. Improving Santiago's CO emissions inventory by means of inverse modeling Pablo Saide (Universidad de Chile, DIMEC, CMM, Chile) Coauthors: Axel Osses, Laura Gallardo, Mauricio Osses Oral Session 2: Chemical Weather, Data Assimilation, and Grid Computing • Opening: A chemical weather and climate studies system for South America: from regional scale to mega cities Karla Longo (DGE / INPE, Brasil) 1. CCATT-BRAMS modeling system: numerical tools and data description Saulo Freitas (CPTEC / INPE, Brasil) 2. Chemical Weather Forecasting and Climate Change in South America: from regional scale to mega-cities Marcelo Felix Alonso (INPE, Brasil) Coauthors: Karla M. Longo, Saulo R. Freitas 3. Operational Chemical Weather Forecast at Chilean Weather Service Ricardo Alcafuz (Direccion Meteorologica de Chile) 4. Regional Air Quality in the Megacity of São Paulo with the on-line WRF/CHEM air quality model Leila Droprinchinski Martins (University of São Paulo,Brasil) Coauthors: Carolini R.M. Rocha, Jorge A. Martins, Edmilson Dias de Freitas, Ricardo Hallak, Rosiberto S.S. Junior, Rosmeri P. Rocha, Maria de Fatima Andrade 5. Impact of emission inventories on air quality forecasting performance Marcelo Mena (UNAB, Chile) Coauthors: Gregory Carmichael, Elliott Campbell 6. Regional representativity of AERONET observation sites in South America determined by correlation studies with MODIS Aerosol Optical Depth for data assimilation purposes Judith Johanna Hoelzemann ( CPTEC / INPE, Brasil) Coauthors: Karla M. Longo, Rafael M. Fonseca, Nilton M. Rosrio, Hendrik Elbern, Saulo R. Freitas 7. Meteorological and chemical prediction web based system using RAMS and CAMx numerical models Maria Victoria Toro Gomez (Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia) Coauthors: Nestor Alvarez, Carlos Gabriel Sanchez 8. A computational grid proposal for SAEMC project, Eugenio Sper de Almeida (Centro de Previsão de Tempo e Estudos Climáticos (CPTEC) - Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE), Brasil) Coauthors: Karla Longo, Saulo Freitas, Luiz Flávio Rodrigues, Laura Gallardo Klenner, Rodrigo Delgado Urzúa, Juan Carlos Maureira, Ricardo Alcafuz 9. Source inverse problems Axel Osses (Universidad de Chile) Coauthors: Galina García, Marcelo Tapia, Carlos Castillo, Tania Faúndez, Laura Gallardo Oral Session 3: Aerosol and trace gases measurements • Opening: Water-soluble ions in airborne particles over three South American urban areas Pérola de Castro Vasconcellos (Institute of Chemistry - University of São Paulo, Brasil) Coauthors: Davi Zacarias, Maria P. Araújo, Ana Maria Córdova, Eduardo Beherentz 1. Ozone observations in São José dos Campos City, Brazil Plínio Carlos Alvalá ( INPE, Brasil) Coauthors: Sales, A. B., Longo, K. M 2. Atmospheric fine particles in the megacity of São Paulo, Brazil Maria de Fátima Andrade (Atmospheric Sciences Department (University of São Paulo, Brasil) 3. Evolution of mass and number size distributions of atmospheric aerosol in the metropolitan area of São Paulo Márcio Gledson Lopes Oliveira (University of São Paulo - USP, Brasil) Coauthors: Maria de Fátima Andrade 4. Fractionation of eleven elements by chemical bonding from airborne particulate matter collected in an industrial city of Argentina and from particles accumulated by electrostatic precipitation in a thermal power plant Patricia Smichowski (CNEA, Argentina) Coauthors: Marina Dos Santos, Fabián Fujiwara, Griselda Polla, Julieta Marrero, Darío Gómez, Laura Dawidowski Poster Session All participants, including the ones with oral presentation, are invited to present a poster. The posters will be up during the entire event in the coffee-break room. 1. SAEMC: How far have we reached? What is next? Laura Gallardo 2. The use of environmental satellites to estimate trace gas and aerosol emissions from biomass burning and assimilation into Air Quality Numerical Models Gabriel Pereira (DSR / INPE, Brasil) Coauthors: Saulo Ribeiro de Freitas, Nelson Jesus Ferreira, Elisabete Caria Moraes 3. Development of vehicular emission inventories from satellite imagery to be used in air quality models Jorge Alberto Martins (Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná, Brasil) Coauthors: Leila D. Martins, Edmilson D. Freitas, Caroline R. Mazzoli da Rocha, Ricardo Hallak, Maria de Fatima Andrade 4. Postprocessing Web based application for the CAMx model PSAT and OSAT Probing Tools Carlos Gabriel Sánchez Toro, (Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia) Coauthors: Maria Victoria Toro Gómez, Nestor Alvarez, Nestor Waldyd Alvarez Villa 5. Lessons learned while updating Bogota's pollutant emissions inventory: stationary sources Magdalena Fandiño (Universidad de los Andes, Colombia) Coauthors: Robinsson A. Rodriguez, Mauricio Gaitan, Mauricio Gaitan, Eduardo Behrentz 6. Comparison of a static and a dynamic IVE on-road mobile emission inventories for the City of Buenos Aires and the Metropolitan Area Ariela d'Angiola (IAI, CNEA, Argentina) Coauthors: Dário Gomez, Laura Dawidowski, Fabian Fujiwara, Mauricio Osses, Pilar Henriquez, Arie Araya 7. Improving Santiago's CO emissions inventory by means of inverse modeling Pablo Saide (Universidad de Chile, DIMEC, CMM, Chile) Coauthors: Axel Osses, Laura Gallardo, Mauricio Osses 8. Evaluation of a regional climate model over the subtropical southeast Pacific Isabel Ramos Rodriguez (Dirección Meteorológica de Chile (Chilean Weather Service) and Dep. of Geophysics, U. of Chile, Chile) Coauthors: Laura Gallardo K., Maisa Rojas C. 9. Scenarios evaluation of the pollution dispersion in the Vale do Rio Paraíba: Preliminary results Patrícia Moreno Simões Veiga (Computação Aplicada - CAP/INPE, Brasil) Coauthors: Haroldo Fraga de Campos Velho, Saulo Ribeiro de Freitas 10. Diskless HPC Cluster for Parallel & Grid Computing on Fedora Nestor Waldyd Alvarez Villa and Maria Victoria Toro (Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia) 11. Networking HPC facilities within the framework of South American Emissions, Megacities and Climate Rodrigo Delgado (SAEMC, CMM - U. de Chile, Chile) Coauthors: Juan Carlos Maureira, Eugenio Sper de Almeida, Ricardo Alcafuz 12. Regional representativity of AERONET observation sites in South America determined by correlation studies with MODIS Aerosol Optical Depth for data assimilation purposes Judith Johanna Hoelzemann ( CPTEC / INPE, Brasil) Coauthors: Karla M. Longo, Rafael M. Fonseca, Nilton M. Rosário, Hendrik Elbern, Saulo R. Freitas 13. Air quality measurements in The Metropolitan Area of Santiago de Chile: review Ana Maria Cordova L. (Universidad Valparaíso, Chile) Coauthors: Laura Gallardo Klenner 14. Particulate Matter in Buenos Aires City Fabian Fujiwara (CNEA, Argentina) Coauthors: Laura Dawidowski, Marina Dos Santos, Patricia Smichowski, Griselda Polla, Rita Pla, Dario Gomez 15. Improvement of emission inventories through observations Germán Ariel Torres (Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Argentina) Coauthors: Axel Osses, Laura Dawidowski, Ariela D'Angiola, Rodrigo Delgado 16. Characterization of local atmospheric pollution sources in the megacity of São Paulo, Brazil Maria de Fatima Andrade (Atmospheric Sciences Department, University of São Paulo, Brasil Coauthors: Leila D. Martins 17. Emission Factors for Urban Vehicles: Measuring and Analysis for Metropolitan Region of Santiago, Chile David Carrasco Manriquez (Universidad de Chile, Chile) Coauthors: Mauricio Osses 18. Lessons learned while updating Bogota's pollutant emissions inventory: mobile sources Eduardo Behrentz (Universidad de los Andes, Colombia) Coauthors: Mauricio Osses, Nancy P. Sánchez, Sebastian Tolvett, Paula Rodriguez 19. Past (1970 – 2005) and Prospective (2005 – 2025) Trends of CO2 Emissions from the Argentinean Energy Sector, Laura Dawidowski (CNEA, Argentina) Coauthors: Laura Dawidowski, Norberto Coppari, Jorge Giubergia, Regina Mancuso, Darío Gómez, Diego Maur, Florencia Precensio Deck, Francisco Rey 20. How accurate are our emission factors for mobile sources? Mauricio Osses Alvarado, Departamento de Ingenieria Mecanica, Universidad de Chile 21. A chemical weather and climate studies system for South America: from regional scale to mega cities Karla Longo (INPE, Brazil) 22. CCATT-BRAMS modeling system: numerical tools and data description Saulo Freitas (CPTEC /INPE, Brazil) 23. Chemical Weather Forecasting and Climate Change in South America: from regional scale to mega-cities Marcelo Felix Alonso (INPE, Brasil) Coauthors: Karla M. Longo, Saulo R. Freitas 24. Towards chemical weather forecasting using CCATT-BRAMS in Chile: carbon monoxide in Santiago during summer. Rodrigo Arroyo (CMM, University of Chile) Coauthors: Laura Gallardo, Karla M. Longo, Saulo R. Freitas, Marcelo Alonso 25. Regional Air Quality in the Megacity of São Paulo with the on-line WRF/CHEM air quality model Leila Droprinchinski Martins (University of São Paulo,Brasil) Coauthors: Carolini R.M. Rocha, Jorge A. Martins, Edmilson Dias de Freitas, Ricardo Hallak, Rosiberto S.S. Junior, Rosmeri P. Rocha, Maria de Fatima Andrade 26. Operational Chemical Weather Forecast at Chilean Weather Service Ricardo Alcafuz (Direccion Meteorologica de Chile) 27. Impact of emission inventories on air quality forecasting performance Marcelo Mena (UNAB, Chile) Coauthors: Gregory Carmichael, Elliott Campbell 28. Aplicación del modelo CCATT-BRAMS en el area metropolitana de Buenos Aires, Argentina Ana Graciela Ulke (Departamento de Ciencias de la Atmósfera y los Océanos Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Argentina) Coauthors: Marcelo F. Alonso, Karla Longo, Saulo Freitas 29. Meteorological and chemical prediction web based system using RAMS and CAMx numerical models Maria Victoria Toro Gomez (Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, Colombia) Coauthors: Nestor Alvarez, Carlos Gabriel Sanchez 30. A computational grid proposal for SAEMC project, Eugenio Sper de Almeida (Centro de Previsão de Tempo e Estudos Climáticos (CPTEC) - Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE), Brasil) Coauthors: Karla Longo, Saulo Freitas, Luiz Flávio Rodrigues, Laura Gallardo Klenner, Rodrigo Delgado Urzúa, Juan Carlos Maureira, Ricardo Alcafuz 31. Source inverse problems Axel Osses (Universidad de Chile) Coauthors: Galina García, Marcelo Tapia, Carlos Castillo, Tania Faúndez, Laura Gallardo 32. Water-soluble ions in airborne particles over three South American urban areas Pérola de Castro Vasconcellos (Institute of Chemistry - University of São Paulo, Brasil) Coauthors: Davi Zacarias, Maria P. Araújo, Ana Maria Córdova, Eduardo Beherentz 33. Ozone observations in São José dos Campos City, Brazil Plínio Carlos Alvalá ( INPE, Brasil) Coauthors: Sales, A. B., Longo, K. M 34. Atmospheric fine particles in the megacity of São Paulo, Brazil Maria de Fatima Andrade (Atmospheric Sciences Department (University of São Paulo, Brasil) 35. Evolution of mass and number size distributions of atmospheric aerosol in the metropolitan area of São Paulo Marcio Gledson Lopes Oliveira (University of São Paulo - USP, Brasil) Coauthors: Maria de Fátima Andrade 36. Particulate matter characterization and source aportionment in Bogotá Juliana Rivera (Universidad de los Andes, Colombia) Coauthors: Daniela M.E. Parra, Nancy P. Sanchez, Eduardo Behrentz 37. Fractionation of eleven elements by chemical bonding from airborne particulate matter collected in an industrial city of Argentina and from particles accumulated by electrostatic precipitation in a thermal power plant Patricia Smichowski (CNEA, Argentina) Coauthors: Marina Dos Santos, Fabián Fujiwara, Griselda Polla, Julieta Marrero, Darío Gómez, Laura Dawidowski 38. Comparison of code performance and complexity between light programs developed in IDL and Fortran Rafael M. Fonseca (INPE / CPTEC) 39. Development of a website to visualize chemical weather forecast and emission data provided by the CCATT-BRAMS model for South America Rafael Stockler Santos Lima (CPTEC / INPE) Coauthors: Karla Longo, Saulo Freitas, Daniela de Azeredo França, Judith J. Hoelzemann, Marcelo Alonso, Rafael M. Fonseca 40. Updating the surface maps of the models BRAMS and 3BEM Daniela Azeredo França (CPTEC / INPE) Coauthors: Karla Longo, Saulo Freitas, Rafael Stockler 41. Effects of Air Pollution Dispersion from Megacity So Paulo, Brazil in the Ozone Air Quality of Other Metropolitan Region Claudia Boian (Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of São Paulo) Coauthors: Andrade, M.F. 42. Behavior of atmospheric sulphur dioxide (SO2) based on the data from Brewer Spectrophotometers in South America Ericka Voss Chagas (DGE / INPE) Coauthors: Neusa Maria Paes Leme, Plínio Carlos Alvalá