März 2024: Anlässlich des Tages der Meteorologie hat das BMBF auf den FONA Seiten einen Beitrag zum Integrierten Treibhausgas Monitoring System (ITMS) mit Beteiligung der Universität Bremen veröffentlicht (mehr...)
05 Feb. 2024: iup-awi block seminar "Developing the Earth observing system of the future" (mehr...)
Dez. 2018: Satellitendaten des IUP zeigen auch in 2018 unverminderten Anstieg der CO2 Konzentrationen (mehr...)
Nov. 2018: online Kurs über "air pollution" mit IUP Beteiligung (mehr...)
Congratulations to Evgenia Galytska, who has been awarded an Outstanding Student Poster and PICO (OSPP) Award 2018 from the European Geosciences Union (EGU) General Assembly 2018 for the PICO entitled: "NO2 and O3 changes in tropical mid-stratosphere during 2004-2012 by means of a chemistry-transport model". More about Evgenia’s research interests and PICO is here.
PIP Summer School on Machine Learning
PIP Summer School on Machine Learning took place on 24-28 September 2018 at the University of Bremen and was initiated by the Postgraduate International Programme in Physics and Electrical Engineering (PIP) and organised by members of the Institute of Environmental Physics (IUP), Ilias Bougoudis and Evgenia Galytska, and the Institute of Automation (IAT), Muhammad Abdul Haseeb and Maria Kyrarini. The major focus of the Summer School was set on supervised and unsupervised machine learning in Physics, Chemistry, and Materials Science, Energy Systems and Neuroscience. This event brought together tutors from the University of Bremen, Cambridge University and the University of California, Berkeley. Apart from lectures, practical exercises, interactive sessions and group assignments, students also participated in the Open Discussion session, which included oral talks and poster presentations devoted to the application of Machine Learning in various scientific areas.For more information regarding the Summer School, please, see official PIP webpage.
IUP-Wissenschaftler analysieren mit Satellitendaten die Moorbrand-Abgase (mehr...) [79 KB]
Prominenter Besuch der NASA an der Universität Bremen (mehr...) [81 KB]
We regret to announce the death of Professor Arthur C. Aikin, Art, who had a long and illustrious scientific career at NASA and developed with the Institute of Environmental Physics/ Institute of Remote Sensing the retrieval of the metal atoms and ions layer from the measurements of GOME and SCIAMACHY. These metal layers result from the ablation of dust in the upper atmosphere and provide an important source of condensation nuclei for stratospheric aerosol and in upper atmospheric chemistry.
Obituary published in the Washington Post
Arthur Coldren Aikin, Jr., 84, a pioneer in space research who worked in areas of ionospheric physics, planetary atmospheres, and cometary structure, died September 28 at Howard County General Hospital of congestive heart failure.
Dr. Aikin began his career helping launch scientific sounding rockets in Algeria for the French Government before joining NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in 1961, and for several years he served as head of a NASA scientific branch involved in rocket exploration of the ionosphere and middle atmosphere. He went on to head multiple sounding rocket campaigns in the U.S. as well as Argentina, Brazil, Greece, India, Norway, Spain, and Sweden. He served as a consultant to the NASA lunar landing program, and as a scientific investigator on several satellite projects. A co-investigator on the Voyager planetary mission, he developed the first model of atmospheric species on Saturn’s moon Titan. As a scientific advisor to Senator Pete Domenici, Dr. Aikin assisted in drafting the amendment to the Clean Air Act that regulated ozone-destroying CFC’s. He lectured on ozone and global warming in Japan on a fellowship from the Japanese government, and taught courses at the University of Maryland and the U.S. Naval Academy. The author of over 100 scientific publications, one of Dr. Aikin’s papers is among the ten most cited articles in geophysics.
Following his retirement from Goddard, Dr. Aikin served as an emeritus scientist at Goddard. He was a research professor in the Physics Department of the Catholic University of America and also served as a consultant to Howard University. He was principal investigator of an Air Force project in cooperation with the University of Bremen in Germany.
Dr. Aikin was born in 1932 in Gettysburg, Pa., to the late Arthur C . and Kathryn (Bender) Aikin. He is survived by his wife of 53 years, Dorothy Jeanne; his daughter Kathryn Aikin (Daniel Gross); his son Jeffrey Aikin (Shelly Smith); his granddaughter Eleanor Gross, and his grandsons Jeffrey Gross and Oliver Aikin.
A graduate of Gettysburg College, Dr. Aikin received his Ph.D. in physics from Penn State, and served on advisory boards for both institutions. He was an elder in the Colesville Presbyterian Church, in Silver Spring, Md. In lieu of flowers, gifts in his memory may be sent to the Scholarship Fund at Gettysburg College or to Colesville Presbyterian Church. A memorial service will be held at Colesville Presbyterian Church at 10:30 a.m. on November 4, 2017.
Juli 2017: Neue Professorin in der Umweltphysik berichtet über Pläne des Weltklimaforschungsprogramms (WCRP) im Bereich der Klimamodellierung (mehr...) [78 KB]
Mai 2017: Neue Initiative - Advancing Earth Observation Sciences, das Institut für Umweltphysik entwickelt derzeit eine neue Initiative im Bereich der Erdbeobachung „Advancing Earth Observation Sciences (AEOS)“ mit dem Ziel, die Auswirkungen natürlicher Prozesse von menschlichen Einflüssen auf Atmosphäre, Kryosphäre und Hydrosphäre zu unterscheiden und zu quantifizieren. Dazu sollen Satellitendaten in Kombination mit Modellen genutzt werden, sowie zukünftig Schwärme von Kleinsatelliten. Eine entsprechende Antragsskizze für einen Exzellenz Cluster wurde im April 2017 von der Universität Bremenbei der DFG für die neue Runde der Exzellenzförderung von Bund und Länder eingereicht. (mehr...)
Euronews Knowledge: Prof. J. P. Burrows about the importance of tracking air pollution (mehr)
Bewerbungsverfahren für das Studium in Master of Science in Environmental Physics (PEP) für 2014 ist eröffnet, Bewerbungschluss ist der 31. Mai. Informationen zu PEP finden sie hier
14. Februar - 26. April 2014: Ausstellung EINFACH WISSENSWERT: ZUKUNFTSFÄHIG im Haus der Wissenschaft, Bremen, mit IUP-Beteiligung (http://www.einfach-wissenswert.de/).
Februar 2014: IUP-AWI Blockseminar "Climate Change" am 03.02.2014 (mehr...) [48 KB]
November 2013: Dr. Thomas Krings gewinnt Promotionspreis (mehr...) [36 KB]