Title: GeoSpace Sciences MOWG Activities
1GeoSpace Sciences MOWGActivities
- SECAS Meeting
- February 21, 2001
- D. M. Klumpar
- Montana State University,
- Space Science and Engineering Laboratory
- klump_at_physics.montana.edu
2Current GMOWG
- Geospace Sciences Management Operations Working
Group - Appointed October 2000
- Report to Mary Mellott, Jim Sharber, Jim Spann,
Geospace Sciences/SEC Program - First meeting November 16-17, 2000
- Charge to the GMOWG
- Communications to from the community
- Special Senior Review of SRT/LCAS
3GMOWG Membership
- Dave Klumpar, Chair Montana State Univ.
- Don Brautigam AFRL
- Jim Clemmons Aerospace Corp.
- Greg Earle Univ. of Texas at Dallas
- Bob Ergun Univ. of Colorado
- Miguel Larsen Clemson Univ.
- Jimmy Raeder UCLA
- Geoff Reeves Los Alamos Natl Lab.
- Phil Richards Univ. of Alabama
- Jim Slavin GSFC
- Harlan Spence Boston Univ.
- Gary Swenson Univ. of Illinois
4GMOWG Issues The Access Instrument
Development Crisis
- Diminished LCAS Opportunities
- Sounding Rocket Program Privatization impacts
- Cost overrun cut launch rate from 30/yr (95) to
8 (01) - Loss of Wallops civil servants - uncompensated
- UNEX Program Scuttled
- Paucity of funded Geospace Instrument development
activity - in FY2000 4 of program award for instr dev
- How will flight hardware for LWS and Roadmap get
developed and proven?
5SEC Sounding Rocket Launches
- In 21 years the Sounding Rocket flight rate has
decreased - 21-year average 22 launches/yr
- 2000 5 flights
- 2001 8 flights
- Factors
- Complexity
-
UNEX 20Hit
6The Access and Development Issue
- We are choking off at the source
- Instrument development for future missions
- Space qualification of these instruments
- The replacement generation of trained scientists
and engineers - Who will carry out our missions in 2010 if the
source of young talent dries up? - Solution Generous support for instrument
development and both suborbital orbital access
to space. A new initiative
7Senior Review SRT/LCAS
- Evaluation Criteria
- What is the science quality and productivity of
the science cluster, and to what degree does the
cluster support or enable the strategic goals and
objectives of the Space Science Enterprise? - Judging by the priorities in the SSE strategic
plan, is the current funding distribution across
the nine science clusters the optimum one, or
would the Panel recommend changes? - Is the current science cluster structure optimal
for attaining the long-term strategic goals of
the Office of Space Science?
Guenter Riegler, SECAS Presentation, October 26,
2000
8Senior Review Report Progress
- Outline drafted, section page counts assigned
- Formed writing teams
- Canvassed community for key science results
(email letter and response template) - 131 Investigators were asked to
- describe your key scientific result
- provide a figure and a reference
- describe future planned effort
- PI responses collected at http//sec.gsfc.nasa.g
ov/sec_gmowg_sr.htm - 59 responses from 43 investigators
9Geospace Cluster Report Outline
- Section 0 (electronic) Mary Mellott
- Proposal oversubscription
- Budget info for FY2002-FY2004
- Section I. (1-2 pages) Dave Klumpar
- Science content of the cluster -- program
overview - Supporting Research and Technology
- Suborbital Program (LCAS)
- Section II. (12-14 pages) Consolidation
Teams - Recent Program Highlights (two to three tell
a story could constitute more than one PIs
work relevance to OSS Strategic Plan science
discoveries, detector/instrument development or
test flight. - Section III (6-8 pages)
- Highlights of RA work currently in progress
(relevance to strategic goals) - Section IV (2-4 pages) Miguel Larsen
- New Initiative and vision for the future
Development program for instruments - fold in a vital sounding rocket orbital access
program for flight verification
10SPACE SCIENCE PROCESS
STRATEGICGOAL
- SRT Contributions to PROCESS
- Strategic Goal
- Requires development of
- - theory
- - DA techniques
- - instruments
- Which are tested via the
- - laboratory and/or
- - suborbital program
- Leading to Flight Program
- and analysis of mission data
-
Which leads to either - - achievement of the goal
- - or a new cycle which then
leads to - - achievement of the goal
Theory/Technique/ Instrument development
Validation via laboratory/ suborbital program
New Theory
Flight Program
Refined questions
Mission specific Data analysis
STRATEGIC GOAL
11Consolidation Teams
- Collect and consolidate key science results from
community (Section II) - Mesosphere, lower thermos chemistry/dynamics
(Swenson) - Magnetosphere/empirical (include planetary mag)
(Spence) - Magnetosphere/modeling (Raeder)
- LCAS, instruments, techniques, ionosphere (Earle)
- Auroral/plasma interations (Clemmons)
12PI Response Collection Page http//sec.gsfc.nas
a.gov/sec_gmowg_sr.htm
13(No Transcript)
14Example PI Response
- Short Title Metallic Ion Separation Within
Ionospheric Layers - Short statement of Result in Bullet form
- A rocket experiment has confirmed a 30-year old
theory regarding the ability of neutral winds to
separate metallic ions of meteoric origin into
distinct layers in the lower ionosphere. - Narrative Description
- A suborbital rocket launched from Puerto Rico in
1998 carried a sensitive mass spectrometer to
measure the content and fine-scale structure of
meteoric ions in layered structures within the
lower ionosphere (100-115 km). The instrument
flew through such a layer and measured the
concentrations of Fe, Mg, O2, and NO versus
altitude. Results (see accompanying figure) show
that the metallic ions are not intermixed, but
instead are segregated into distinct overlapping
layers by the action of neutral winds blowing in
the vacuum of space. This finding confirms a
theoretical prediction by Chimonas J. Geophys.
Res., 74, 4189, 1968 regarding the action of
such winds on ions with differing collision
cross-sections. - What role does this result play in the overall
program and its contribution to OSS Strategic
Goals) - The coupling of atmospheric plasmas to the
neutral atmosphere is of fundamental importance
to a variety of ionospheric processes, including
layered structures, scintillation-inducing
irregularities, and tidal variations. The above
example helps to quantify our understanding of
part of this coupling.
Reference Ion layer separation and equilibrium
zonal winds in midlatitude sporadic E, Geophys.
Res. Lett., 27, 461, 2000. (G.D. Earle, T.J.
Kane, R.F. Pfaff, and S.R. Bounds)
15Geospace RA Sr Rev Goals-1
- Geospace Sciences Senior Review Report will
- Show relevance to OSS Strategic Plan
- Demonstrate scientific vitality of the program
- Report major scientific findings-past 3 years
16Geospace RA Sr Rev Goals-2
- The report will also Air the issues
- SRT
- Level then-yr dollars program funding
- Abysmal proposal win rate --gt It is nearly a
lottery - 146 proposals, 40 rated Ex or Ex/VG, 27 funded
- Marginal annual funding for winning proposals
(83k/yr) - LCAS
- Privatization implementation impacts 95 --32
01-- 8(?) - Loss of UNEX program - Barrier to entry for all
but the largest research institutions. - New meaning of LCAS Lack of Consistent Access
to Space
17Geospace RA Sr Rev Goals-3
- The Report will Propose Solutions
- Geospace Instrument Development Program GIDEP --
A new initiative - Full Cycle
- Concept instrument development
- Brassboard/breadboard
- Instrument preparation and testing
- Flight validation under Low-Cost Access
18Geospace Cluster Report Schedule
- Section initial drafts
- March 7
- GMOWG normalization and polishing
- March 7-16
- Draft for red team review/comment/rework
- March 15 - 30
- http//sec.gsfc.nasa.gov/mowgs
- GMOWG working meeting
- Week ending March 30 or April 6
- Finalize and submit
- April 1 - April 15
19GEOSPACE SCIENCES CLUSTER