2003-2004 USAP Field Season

Oceans & Climate

Dr. Bernhard Lettau
Program Manager

O-202-M/P/S

NSF/OPP 01-26262
Station: McMurdo Station, Palmer Station
RPSC POC: Patricia Jackson
Research Site(s): McMurdo Station, Palmer Station, Atmospheric Research Facility
Dates in Antarctica: Instruments operate year-round, mid November to mid December (project team deploys)

Antarctic Meteorological Research Center (AMRC) (2002-2005)
Dr. Charles R. Stearns
University of Wisconsin Madison
Space Science and Engineering Center/AMRC
chucks@ssec.wisc.edu
http://amrc.ssec.wisc.edu
 
 
Antarctic Meteorological Research Center (2002-2005)
Deploying Team Members: Shelley L. Knuth
Research Objectives: The Antarctic Meteorological Research Center (AMRC) was created in 1992 to improve access to meteorological data from the Antarctic. The AMRC’s mission is to conduct research in observational meteorology and the stewardship of meteorological data, along with providing data and expert assistance to the antarctic community to support research and operations. The AMRC continues to fulfill its mission this season by:

+ Maintain and expanding the long-term record of all meteorological data on Antarctica and the Southern Ocean, and make these data available to the scientific community for multidisciplinary use. Special attention is given to obtaining data not normally or readily available by other means.

+ Generating satellite products, including but not limited to antarctic composite imagery, and expand and improve on them as much as possible

+ Conducting research in observational meteorology especially with regard to climatological analyses and case studies

Conducting and expanding educational and public outreach activities associated with antarctic meteorology and related fields.

Using available meteorological interactive processing software and other standard computing tools, the research team will collect data from all available sources for processing, archiving, and distribution.

The mission of the AMRC not only includes the opportunity to advance the knowledge of antarctic meteorology, but with the free availability of its data holdings, the AMRC gives others the opportunity to advance the frontiers of all antarctic science. Continuing educational outreach activities on meteorology and the Antarctic, an important component of this work, have the potential to raise the science literacy of the general public, as well as the level of K-12 science education.