216:
Future Innovative Incoherent Scatter Radar Techniques Leading to New Insights II


Session ID#: 43055

Session Description:
The purpose of this session is to present potential future uses of the existing Incoherent Scattering Radar (ISR) facilities as well as discuss how innovative techniques can provide new physical insights for Space Sciences. For decades, the ISR’s have proven to be a powerful tool for obtaining key measurements from the near-Earth environment. Rather than reviewing the well-known and successful past of the ISR’s, this session invites papers that propose new uses of the existing capabilities and also possible expansions of them. We encourage speculative and innovative ideas.
Primary Convener:  Jesper W Gjerloev, Applied Physics Laboratory Johns Hopkins, Laurel, MD, United States
Conveners:  Christiano Garnett Marques Brum, Arecibo Observatory, Arecibo, PR, United States, Alessandra Abe Pacini, InSpace LLC, Camuy, PR, United States and Philip John Erickson, MIT Haystack Observatory, Westford, MA, United States
Chairs:  Alessandra Abe Pacini, NorthWest Research Associates Boulder, Puerto Rico, United States, Jesper W Gjerloev, Johns Hopkins University - Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, MD, United States, Christiano Garnett Marques Brum, SRI International Menlo Park, Arecibo Observatory, Menlo Park, CA, United States and Philip John Erickson, MIT Haystack Observatory, Westford, MA, United States
Index Terms:

7599 General or miscellaneous [SOLAR PHYSICS, ASTROPHYSICS, AND ASTRONOMY]

Abstracts Submitted to this Session:

Beyond the Incoherent Scatter Radar (Invited) (334714)
Frank David Lind, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States
Discovery Science in Space Science using Incoherent Scatter (Invited) (334395)
David L Hysell, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States
On the Role of ISR in a Distributed Heliophysics Observatory (Invited) (336140)
Joshua L Semeter, Boston Univ, Boston, MA, United States
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