UCLA and JPL Form Partnership to Enhance Understanding of Regional Climate Change and Support Future Space Missions
UCLA and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) have formed a research institute to better understand and predict regional environmental and climate change and support future space missions.
The Joint
Institute for Regional Earth System Science and Engineering will examine
relationships between global climate change and
"The effect of
global climate change on local ecosystems, water resources and weather patterns
is a critical research endeavor with profound implications on the lives of
"Understanding
the causes and effects of climate change is of paramount importance globally
and locally," said JPL Director Charles Elachi. "This institute blends the
unique strengths and resources of two world-class research organizations. The
research results will pave the way for future Earth-observing missions and help
improve the quality of life for all
UCLA and JPL officials held a signing ceremony today (Oct. 25) on the UCLA campus to commemorate the partnership. The ceremony was followed by the first meeting of the institute's governing board, which includes three representatives from each institution. The two institutions anticipate the partnership will serve as a platform for additional collaboration in the future.
The joint
institute will serve as a center for a multi-disciplinary research unit focused
on Earth systems in the
Researchers also will study the impacts of these processes on air and water quality and on the regional climate system.
The focus on Southern California will distinguish the institute's work from other national centers for environmental and climate research, said Kuo-Nan Liou, UCLA distinguished professor and former chairman of the UCLA Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, who will direct the new institute.
"One key to enhanced understanding of the climate and environment is to develop models and to use satellite data on the regional scale rather than much larger scales typical of atmospheric and climate research," Liou said.
UCLA and JPL each will contribute $300,000 annually for three years in start-up funding while the institute seeks research grants from the National Science Foundation, the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Department of Energy and other state and federal agencies. UCLA will make graduate students available to JPL researchers, and JPL researchers will serve as adjunct faculty teaching courses at UCLA.
Initially,
approximately 12 UCLA faculty members will be involved in the joint UCLA-JPL
institute. They include researchers
with the
Among those who played significant roles in forming the joint UCLA-JPL institute were Vice Chancellor for Research Roberto Peccei; Vijay K. Dhir, dean of the Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science, and Tony Chan, the former dean of physical sciences now at the National Science Foundation.
JPL involvement in the joint effort is initially focused on using satellite data to test and improve new regional modeling tools being developed within the institute. In addition, JPL scientists and technologists are developing new instruments for remote sensing of regional environments, studying such parts of the Earth system as the coastal ocean, atmospheric boundary layer and land vegetation. JPL scientists leading those efforts include Randall Friedl of JPL's Earth Science and Technology Directorate and Yi Chao, Qinbin Li, Stan Sander and Duane Waliser of JPL's Science Division.
Key support for JPL's involvement in the UCLA-JPL institute has been provided by JPL chief scientist Daniel McCleese; JPL chief technologist Paul Dimotakis; Merle McKenzie, manager of JPL's Strategic University Research Partnership, and professor Thomas Prince, the former JPL chief scientist, now back at Caltech.
About UCLA
About JPL
The Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, managed for NASA by the California Institute of
Technology, led the world into space with the first
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