Originally presented 19 April 2000 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND by Dr. Michael Passow Powerpoint Presentation (view the HTML version of this presentation) 1. GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT STUDYING THE SEA FROM SPACE 2. CLASSROOM-READY ACTIVITIES ABOUT “SATELLITE...
Remote Sensing of Earth and the Terrestrial Planet with Christopher Small (Oct 2002)
by admin | Jul 28, 2023 | Remote Sensing
Originally present Oct 2002 An Introduction by Dr. Michael J. Passow PowerPoint | HTML To download this presentation, if you have a Windows machine, right click on the PowerPoint link, and choose Save Target As…. Choose a location in the dialogue window that...
“Remote Sensing of Our Planet” with Christopher Small and “Shipboard Studies of Our Planet” with Gregory Mountain (Apr 2002)
by admin | Jul 28, 2023 | Remote Sensing
Originally presented 13 Apr 2002 Introduction to this Workshop Exploring the Ocean Floors An Introductory Presentation by Dr. Michael J. Passow PowerPoint | HTML You can find a list of all the resources cited in this PowerPoint in the Resources section of...
“Night On Earth – Mapping Human Settlements with Night Lights” with Christopher Small (May 2007)
by admin | Jul 28, 2023 | Remote Sensing, Uncategorized
Originally presented 5 May 2007 Artificial nocturnal lighting is a uniquely human phenomenon on Earth. Human settlements can be mapped from space by imaging nocturnal emissions from illuminated habitation. Spatial analysis of night lights reveals unexpected properties...
“Remote Sensing of Lake Vostok” with Michael Studinger (Feb 2006)
by admin | Jul 27, 2023 | Polar Research, Remote Sensing
with Michael Studinger Originally presented 11 Feb 2006 Buried under 4 km (2 1/2 miles) of ice in the heart of the Antarctic continent lies Lake Vostok, one of the world’s biggest freshwater lakes. For up to 25 million years the Lake has been covered by an ice sheet...
“Exploring the Southern Oceans with Ships and Satellites” and “Beneath the Ocean Floor: What Do We Know and How Do We Know It?” with Christopher Small and Gregory Mountain (Mar 2004)
by admin | Jul 27, 2023 | Ocean and Atmospheric Physics, Remote Sensing
with Guests: Christopher Small and Gregory Mountain Originally presented 20 Mar 2004 Introductory Presentation by Dr. Michael J. Passow PowerPoint This is a large PowerPoint/html, best opened on a high-speed network system. To download the PowerPoint to your computer,...
“A Virtual Ride of Discovery: Exploring the Earth’s Climate Using Drones”
by admin | Jul 27, 2023 | Marine and Terrestrial Biology, Ocean and Atmospheric Physics, Polar Research, Remote Sensing, Scientific research vessels
Supported by NSF Grants OCE 20-49546 and OCE 19-23935 and the Schmidt Ocean Institute with Christopher Zappa Originally presented 19 February 2022 Youtube video of this session Christopher Zappa is a Lamont Research Professor in Ocean and Climate Physics,...
“Sea Floor Structures and Evolution” with Christopher Small and Gregory Mountain (Apr 2001)
by admin | Jul 21, 2023 | Continent-Ocean Margins, Remote Sensing, Uncategorized
with Dr. Christopher Small and Dr. Gregory MountainApr 2001 Originally presented April 28, 2001 Background information about “Sea Floor Structures and Evolution” – Dr. Michael J. Passow PowerPoint slides HTML version Satellite orbits (java application where you can...
“Polar Ice Sheets and Sea Level Rise” with Indrani Das
by admin | Jul 20, 2023 | Climate Change, Ocean and Atmospheric Physics, Polar Research, Remote Sensing
Indrani Das c.v. My research interests are very broad- ranging from Glaciology to Atmospheric Physics. I study ice surface and basal processes and ice-atmosphere interactions on ice sheets and mountain glaciers. I have worked...
Nathan Lenssen: “How Do We Know the Temperature of the Earth?”
by admin | Jul 20, 2023 | Climate Change, Ocean and Atmospheric Physics, Remote Sensing, Sustainable Future, Uncategorized, Using Data Sets
The annual global mean temperature anomaly is an important and highly publicized index of climate change. Changes in the global mean temperature are a result of an energy imbalance in the Earth system. Over the past 150 years, human emission of greenhouse gases has...