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<Title>UMBC Graduate Student Nicole Trenholm</Title>
<Tagline>Ocean Research Project Sets Sail To Help Save Oceans</Tagline>
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<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p>Capital Gazette Article by:  </p><div><span><span><a href="http://www.capitalgazette.com/cgnews-eb-pat-furgurson-iii-20150512-staff.html#nt=byline" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">E.B. Furgurson III</a> - </span><a href="mailto:pfurgurson@capgaznews.com?subject=Regarding:%20%27Ocean%20Research%20Project%20vision%20sets%20sail%20to%20do%20its%20part%20to%20help%20save%20oceans%27" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Contact Reporter</a><span><a href="mailto:pfurgurson@capgaznews.com">pfurgurson@capgaznews.com</a></span><span><br></span><span>August 4, 2018</span><div><br></div></span></div><p>Matt Rutherford and Nicole Trenholm weren’t going to let bad news about a grant for this year’s arctic marine expedition stop them. So they hitched a ride. Friends with boats, right?  “The deal is they will take us into Greenland waters for our research in exchange for me helping them navigate the toughest sections of the Northwest Passage,” Rutherford said. He met the owners of the boat while delivering a boat from Panama to San Diego a few years back.  The couple, who make up the Ocean Research Project using the small platform of a sailboat to perform marine research delving into man’s effect on the world’s oceans, was determined to get back into the Arctic for follow up research from their 2016 mission to northern Greenland.  And they were buoyed after co-publishing a paper with <a title="NASA" href="http://www.capitalgazette.com/topic/science/space/nasa-ORGOV000098-topic.html" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">NASA</a> scientists and the Oceans Melting Greenland (OMG) project, published by Oceanography magazine in June, based on their research into ocean temperatures affecting Greenland glacier melt.  And further boosted by the donation of a 65-foot steel-hulled Bruce Roberts sailboat to their cause. It needs some sprucing up, but should prove to be a vessel for the long haul.  They took off from their home base in Annapolis July 23, flying to Reykjavik, Iceland, then to Greenland.  The scientist half of the operation is Trenholm while Rutherford, famous for his 2012 single-handed nonstop voyage around the Americas — the first to ever accomplish the sailing feat — is the captain and spark plug.  Trenholm, who also has a blog and teaching arrangement with Anne Arundel County Public Schools STEM program, posted some details after they made it to Aasiaat, Greenland, a small village about a third of the way up the icy coast.  They boarded Toboggan, the boat they hitched a ride on, and took off up Disko Bay to record water temperatures approaching Jakobshavn Glacier, known to calf off chunks of ice the size of New York City.  “With our CTD instrument, which measures conductivity, temperature and depth, we indeed found that warm water,” Trenholm wrote.  From there they moved north to Upernavik to check ice charts and gear up to cross Baffin Bay into the Northwest Passage, a three-day sail.  By Friday night they were just off Devon Island, the largest uninhabited island on earth, at the eastern end of the passage.</p><p>They plan to conduct more research.</p><p>Read more at...</p></div>
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<Summary>Capital Gazette Article by:    E.B. Furgurson III - Contact Reporterpfurgurson@capgaznews.com August 4, 2018     Matt Rutherford and Nicole Trenholm weren’t going to let bad news about a grant for...</Summary>
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<PostedAt>Wed, 15 Aug 2018 14:11:30 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="77115" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/jcet/posts/77115">
<Title>Lipi Mukherjee Wins Best Student Poster Award</Title>
<Tagline>Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS) 2018</Tagline>
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<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><span>Lipi Mukherjee
    receives the Best Student Poster Award for Atmospheric Science Section in the
    2018 annual meeting of Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS). In addition to
    receiving an award certificate, Lipi will also receive a complimentary
    registration to attend the AOGS Annual Meeting the following year.<br>
    <br>
    </span><div><p><span>Summary of Work:</span></p><p><span>The study of ocean color is important for understanding the
    ocean ecology and biogeochemistry, which leads to a better understanding of the
    carbon cycle and its impact on climate change. Water leaving radiance from
    oceans, obtained from satellite sensors contains information about ocean
    constituents including sediments, phytoplankton and pollutants in water.
    Radiative transfer models can be used to interpret and extract information from
    measurement data. However, radiative transfer simulations are computationally
    expensive and generally cannot be used on the fly in the retrieval algorithms.
    In this work, we present a semi-analytical optical model approach to extract
    information about in-water constituents by analyzing the ocean reflectance. The
    model is based on two-stream approximation and can predict reflectance due to
    both open ocean with phytoplankton and coastal waters consisting of
    phytoplankton and sediments. We compare this model with the successive order of
    scattering based radiative transfer code. A good correlation was found to exist
    between the semi-analytical optical model results for both open and coastal
    waters. Major inelastic scattering contributors like Raman scattering and
    fluorescence from chlorophyll will be included in the reflectance model as part
    of the future work.</span></p><p><img src="https://jcet.umbc.edu/files/2018/06/Lipi-Mukherjee-AOGS-Poster.bmp" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></p></div></div>
]]>
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<Summary>Lipi Mukherjee receives the Best Student Poster Award for Atmospheric Science Section in the 2018 annual meeting of Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS). In addition to receiving an award...</Summary>
<Website>http://www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2018/public.asp?page=posterAwards2.htm</Website>
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<Sponsor>Joint Center for Earth Systems Technology</Sponsor>
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<PostedAt>Tue, 12 Jun 2018 07:57:05 -0400</PostedAt>
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