Doreen O. Neil
Langley Research Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Doreen O. Neil.
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2005
Jassim A. Al-Saadi; James J. Szykman; R. Bradley Pierce; Chieko Kittaka; Doreen O. Neil; D. Allen Chu; Lorraine A. Remer; Liam E. Gumley; Elaine M. Prins; Lewis Weinstock; Clinton MacDonald; Richard Wayland; Fred Dimmick; Jack Fishman
Accurate air quality forecasts can allow for mitigation of the health risks associated with high levels of air pollution. During September 2003, a team of NASA, NOAA, and EPA researchers demonstrated a prototype tool for improving fine particulate matter (PM2.5) air quality forecasts using satellite aerosol observations. Daily forecast products were generated from a near-real-time fusion of multiple input data products, including aerosol optical depth (AOD) from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)/Earth Observing System (EOS) instrument on the NASA Terra satellite, PM2.5 concentration from over 300 state/local/national surface monitoring stations, meteorological fields from the NOAA/NCEP Eta Model, and fire locations from the NOAA/National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service (NESDIS) Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) Wildfire Automated Biomass Burning Algorithm (WF_ABBA) product. The products were disseminated via a Web interface to a small g...
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2012
Jack Fishman; Laura T. Iraci; Jassim A. Al-Saadi; Kelly Chance; F. Chavez; Mike Chin; P. Coble; Cory P. Davis; Paul M. DiGiacomo; David P. Edwards; Annmarie Eldering; Joaquim I. Goes; Jay R. Herman; Chuanmin Hu; Daniel J. Jacob; C. Jordan; S. R. Kawa; R. Key; X. Liu; S. Lohrenz; Antonio Mannino; Vijay Natraj; Doreen O. Neil; Jessica L. Neu; M. J. Newchurch; K. E. Pickering; Joseph E. Salisbury; Heidi M. Sosik; Ajit Subramaniam; Maria Tzortziou
The Geostationary Coastal and Air Pollution Events (GEO-CAPE) mission was recommended by the National Research Councils (NRCs) Earth Science Decadal Survey to measure tropospheric trace gases and aerosols and coastal ocean phytoplankton, water quality, and biogeochemistry from geostationary orbit, providing continuous observations within the field of view. To fulfill the mandate and address the challenge put forth by the NRC, two GEO-CAPE Science Working Groups (SWGs), representing the atmospheric composition and ocean color disciplines, have developed realistic science objectives using input drawn from several community workshops. The GEO-CAPE mission will take advantage of this revolutionary advance in temporal frequency for both of these disciplines. Multiple observations per day are required to explore the physical, chemical, and dynamical processes that determine tropospheric composition and air quality over spatial scales ranging from urban to continental, and over temporal scales ranging from diu...
ieee aerospace conference | 2011
Mark Andraschko; Jeffrey Antol; Stephen Horan; Doreen O. Neil
In a commercially hosted operational mode, a scientific instrument or operational device is attached to a spacecraft but operates independently from the spacecrafts primary mission. Despite the expected benefits of this arrangement, there are few examples of hosted payload programs actually being executed by government organizations. The lack of hosted payload programs is largely driven by programmatic challenges, both real and perceived, rather than by technical challenges. Partly for these reasons, NASA has not sponsored a hosted payload program, in spite of the benefits and visible community interest in doing so. In the interest of increasing the use of hosted payloads across the space community, this paper seeks to alleviate concerns about hosted payloads by identifying these programmatic challenges and presenting ways in which they can be avoided or mitigated.
ieee aerospace conference | 2012
Mark Andraschko; Jeffrey Antol; Rosemary R. Baize; Stephen Horan; Doreen O. Neil; Pamela L. Rinsland; Rita Zaiceva
The 2010 National Space Policy encourages federal agencies to “actively explore the use of inventive, nontraditional arrangements for acquiring commercial space goods and services to meet United States Government requirements, including...hosting government capabilities on commercial spacecraft”. NASAs Science Mission Directorate has taken an important step towards this goal by adding an option for hosted payload responses to its recent Announcement of Opportunity (AO) for Earth Venture-2 missions. Since NASA selects a significant portion of its science missions through a competitive process, it is useful to understand the implications that this process has on the feasibility of successfully proposing a commercially hosted payload mission. This paper describes some of the impediments associated with proposing a hosted payload mission to NASA, and offers suggestions on how these impediments might be addressed. Commercially hosted payloads provide a novel way to serve the needs of the science and technology demonstration communities at a fraction of the cost of a traditional Geostationary Earth Orbit (GEO) mission. The commercial communications industry launches over 20 satellites to GEO each year. By exercising this repeatable commercial paradigm of privately financed access to space with proven vendors, NASA can achieve science goals at a significantly lower cost than the current dedicated spacecraft and launch vehicle approach affords. Commercial hosting could open up a new realm of opportunities for NASA science missions to make measurements from GEO. This paper also briefly describes two GEO missions recommended by the National Academies of Science Earth Science Decadal Survey, the Geostationary Coastal and Air Pollution Events (GEO-CAPE) mission and the Precipitation and All-weather Temperature and Humidity (PATH) mission. Hosted payload missions recently selected for implementation by the Office of the Chief Technologist are also discussed. Finally, there are technical differences specific to hosted payloads and the GEO environment that must be considered when planning and developing a hosted payload mission. This paper addresses some of payload accommodation differences from the typical NASA LEO mission, including spacecraft interfaces, attitude control and knowledge, communications, data handling, mission operations, ground systems, and the thermal, radiation, and electromagnetic environment. The paper also discusses technical and programmatic differences such as limits to NASAs involvement with commercial quality assurance processes to conform to the commercial schedule and minimizing the price that makes hosted payloads an attractive option.
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2017
Travis Knepp; James S. Szykman; Russell W. Long; Rachelle M. Duvall; Jonathan Krug; Melinda R. Beaver; Kevin Cavender; Keith Kronmiller; Michael Wheeler; Ruben Delgado; Raymond M. Hoff; Timothy A. Berkoff; Erik R. Olson; Richard D. Clark; Daniel E. Wolfe; David van Gilst; Doreen O. Neil
Differing boundary/mixed-layer height measurement methods were assessed in moderately-polluted and clean environments, with a focus on the Vaisala CL51 ceilometer. This intercomparison was performed as part of ongoing measurements at the Chemistry And Physics of the Atmospheric Boundary Layer Experiment (CAPABLE) site in Hampton, Virginia and during the 2014 Deriving Information on Surface Conditions from Column and Vertically Resolved Observations Relevant to Air Quality (DISCOVER-AQ) field campaign that took place in and around Denver, Colorado. We analyzed CL51 data that were collected via two different methods (BLView software, which applied correction factors, and simple terminal emulation logging) to determine the impact of data collection methodology. Further, we evaluated the STRucture of the ATmosphere (STRAT) algorithm as an open-source alternative to BLView (note that the current work presents an evaluation of the BLView and STRAT algorithms and does not intend to act as a validation of either). Filtering criteria were defined according to the change in mixed-layer height (MLH) distributions for each instrument and algorithm and were applied throughout the analysis to remove high-frequency fluctuations from the MLH retrievals. Of primary interest was determining how the different data-collection methodologies and algorithms compare to each other and to radiosonde-derived boundary-layer heights when deployed as part of a larger instrument network. We determined that data-collection methodology is not as important as the processing algorithm and that much of the algorithm differences might be driven by impacts of local meteorology and precipitation events that pose algorithm difficulties. The results of this study show that a common processing algorithm is necessary for LIght Detection And Ranging (LIDAR)-based MLH intercomparisons, and ceilometer-network operation and that sonde-derived boundary layer heights are higher (10-15% at mid-day) than LIDAR-derived mixed-layer heights. We show that averaging the retrieved MLH to 1-hour resolution (an appropriate time scale for a priori data model initialization) significantly improved correlation between differing instruments and differing algorithms.
Remote Sensing of Clouds and the Atmosphere V | 2001
Doreen O. Neil; Larry L. Gordley; Benjamin T. Marshall; Glen W. Sachse
Remote sensing of atmospheric trace gases form geostationary orbit has unique scientific value and unique measurement interpretation advantages. This paper describes a proposed measurement method and analysis strategy for inferring CO concentration in the troposphere. Gas filter correlation radiometry is found to be very well suited for remote sensing using full globe images from geostationary orbit. Strengths of the gas correlation technique include measurement efficiency, effective high spectral resolution, excellent spectral calibration, manageable data rate, and measurements over the full spectral bandpass simultaneously.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2011
P. W. Sullivan; W. K. Edens; Edward Hugo Darlington; Doreen O. Neil
Although originally developed for astronomical applications, the space qualification and availability of the Teledyne HAWAII detector make it appealing for high-precision Earth-observing systems such as the carbon monoxide correlation radiometer required for GEO-CAPE. In this shot noise-limited application, the signal-to-noise ratio of a co-averaged measurement is driven by the detectors temporal stability. To assess the stability, we operated the H2RG under monitored blackbody illumination. The Teledyne SIDECAR ASIC provided 16-bit digitization and clocking for integration times faster than the frame conversion time. With proper application of reference signals, the co-averaging of hundreds of frames is possible. Integrations of one-quarter of the full well depth can attain precision to the 200 ppm level in the co-averaged result. For integrations above three-quarters the well depth, the precision reaches 111 ppm.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2008
Jack Fishman; Jassim A. Al-Saadi; Doreen O. Neil; John K. Creilson; Kurt Severance; Larry W. Thomason; David R. Edwards
When the first observations of a tropospheric trace gas were obtained in the 1980s, carbon monoxide enhancements from tropical biomass burning dominated the observed features. In 2005, an active remote-sensing system to provide detailed information on the vertical distribution of aerosols and clouds was launched, and again, one of the most imposing features observed was the presence of emissions from tropical biomass burning. This paper presents a brief overview of space-borne observations of the distribution of trace gases and aerosols and how tropical biomass burning, primarily in the Southern Hemisphere, has provided an initially surprising picture of the distribution of these species and how they have evolved from prevailing transport patterns in that hemisphere. We also show how interpretation of these observations has improved significantly as a result of the improved capability of trajectory modeling in recent years and how information from this capability has provided additional insight into previous measurements form satellites.
Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy & Radiative Transfer | 2017
Peter Zoogman; Xiong Liu; R. M. Suleiman; W.F. Pennington; David Flittner; Jassim A. Al-Saadi; B.B. Hilton; D. K. Nicks; M. J. Newchurch; J.L. Carr; Scott J. Janz; M.R. Andraschko; Antti Arola; Brian Baker; B.P. Canova; Christopher Miller; R. C. Cohen; J.E. Davis; M.E. Dussault; David P. Edwards; Jack Fishman; Abduwasit Ghulam; Gonzalo González Abad; M. Grutter; Jay R. Herman; J. Houck; Daniel J. Jacob; Joanna Joiner; Brian J. Kerridge; Joo-Hang Kim
Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry | 2015
Travis Knepp; M. Pippin; J. H. Crawford; G. Chen; Jim Szykman; R. Long; L. Cowen; Alexander Cede; Nader Abuhassan; J. Herman; R. Delgado; J. Compton; T. Berkoff; Jack Fishman; Douglas K. Martins; Ryan M. Stauffer; Anne M. Thompson; Andrew J. Weinheimer; D. J. Knapp; D. D. Montzka; Donald H. Lenschow; Doreen O. Neil