- Physics - 15:00
Mirrors provide candles for Golden Gate Bridge’s 75th birthday - Business - 14:01
PennMOVES Sale Will Be Held Saturday, June 2 - Arts - 14:00
Martha Roth reappointed to second term as dean of Humanities - Medicine - 13:01
UC San Diego Researchers Receive New CIRM Funding - Business - 12:01
Gains in consumer confidence continue, depend on job growth - History - 11:01
Taiwanese president praises new fellowship fund at University of Michigan - Medicine - 11:00
Insertable Robot Offers New Approach to Minimally Invasive Surgery - Computer Science - 10:00
Is that smile real or fake? - Literature - May 24
UChicago to honor historian Black, theater director Bogart at Convocation - Agronomy - May 24
Diagnostic labs analyze anything from bugs to toenails - Medicine - May 24
UCLA launches first face transplantation program in western U.S - Administration - May 24
’Click It or Ticket’ Enforcement on Penn Campus
By category
Official EventAdministration
Chemistry
Physics
Computer Science
Environmental Sciences
Earth Sciences
Life Sciences
Medicine
Business
Law
Literature
History
Arts
» » more
Research flights from the Arctic to Antarctic paint a vivid portrait of the atmosphere
6 September 2011 - HARVARD

NSF’s Gulfstream V aircraft, or HIAPER, in Anchorage, Alaska, during a HIPPO mission. (Credit: UCAR, Carlye Calvin.)
A three-year series of research flights from the Arctic to the Antarctic has successfully produced an unprecedented portrait of greenhouse gases and particles in the atmosphere.
The far-reaching field project, known as HIPPO, ends this week, and has enabled researchers to generate the first detailed mapping of the global distribution of gases and particles that affect Earth’s climate.
HIPPO, which stands for HIAPER Pole-to-Pole Observations, has brought together scientists from organizations across the nation, including the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), Harvard University, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Scripps Institution of Oceanography, the University of Miami and Princeton University.
The National Science Foundation (NSF), which is NCAR’s sponsor, and NOAA are funding the project.
"With HIPPO, we now have views of whole slices of the atmosphere," says Steven Wofsy, HIPPO principal investigator and atmospheric scientist at Harvard University. "We’ve been quite surprised by the abundance of certain atmospheric components and the locations where they are most common."
The flights have helped scientists compile extraordinary detail about the atmosphere.
For more, see the complete press release from the NSF.
Links
Harvard UniversityLast job offers
- Law - 21.5
Doctoral Programme at the Law School of the University of Basel - Life Sciences - 18.4
Senior Expert - Genetic Biomarker Oncology (PhD) m/f - Business - 22.5
Research Associate - Civil Engineering - 15.5
Research Specialist - Beckman Institute (A1200274) - Life Sciences - 15.5
Staff Research Associate II - Medicine - 12.5
Research Specialist - Business - 4.5
Assistant Professor of Economics, Non Tenure Track, Fall 2012 - Business - 3.5
Post Doctoral Fellow





» Share this page: