Sessions for the 2020 American Meteorological Society (AMS) Annual Meeting are being announced. If you will be leading a session relevant to the Atmospheric System Research (ASR) program or Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) user facility, please let us know. We are collecting this information to be shared on the ASR and ARM websites as they are provided.
Abstracts can now be submitted for the 100th AMS Annual Meeting, which will be held January 12 to 16, 2020, in Boston, Massachusetts. Abstracts are due by August 1, 2019.
The 2020 meeting includes a number of interesting conferences organized by ASR/ARM researchers or relevant to ASR/ARM themes, which cover various session topics in atmospheric chemistry, aerosols, clouds, and precipitation as well as topics related to measurements and data analysis.
Learn more for each meeting and find details about the proposed sessions at the following web pages:
- 10th Symposium on Advances in Modeling and Analysis Using Python
Symposium chair: Scott Collis, Argonne National Laboratory, Python ARM Radar Toolkit (Py-ART) science lead and ARM radar translator - 12th Symposium on Aerosol-Cloud-Climate Interactions
Symposium chairs: Adele Igel, University of California, Davis; Ottmar Moehler, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (Germany); Yuan Wang, California Institute of Technology; and Nicole Riemer, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Aerosol-Cloud Interactions in Mixed-Phase Clouds session co-chaired by Igel
Aerosol-Climate Interactions From Regional to Global Scale joint session co-chaired by Wang and Bin Guan, UCLA Joint Institute for Regional Earth System Science and Engineering - 22nd Conference on Atmospheric Chemistry
- 24th Conference on Integrated Observing and Assimilation Systems for the Atmosphere, Oceans, and Land Surface
- 33rd Conference on Climate Variability and Change
- 34th Conference on Hydrology
Soil-Plant-Atmosphere Interactions in Amazonia session chaired by Jose D. Fuentes, Pennsylvania State University; Courtney Schumacher, Texas A&M University; and Gilberto Fisch, Institute of Aeronautics and Space (Brazil) - Tropical Meteorology and Tropical Cyclones Symposium
Special conference session Women in the Tropics co-organized by Courtney Schumacher, Texas A&M University, with potential for additional sessions
This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science, through the Biological and Environmental Research program as part of the Atmospheric System Research program.