Studies of the coupled carbon-climate system

Carbon cycle feedbacks to the climate system may determine much of the
future intensity of climate change.  Results from multiple coupled-carbon
climate models produce divergent and often conflicting results in
simulations of the future.  Today we have unparalleled tools for observing
carbon cycle dynamics on land, in the oceans and in the atmosphere.  An
emerging area addresses observing human emissions of carbon cycle gases in
urban environments and linking anthropogenic emissions to socio-economic and
climatic drivers.  

At JPL, we seek to develop and use advanced observing systems to improve our
understanding of the carbon system, integrating space-based, airborne and in
situ observations.  Ongoing carbon cycle-related research, mission and
planning activities at JPL address atmospheric, terrestrial marine and human
systems.  Examples include:

•       OCO-2, a spaceborne sensor that will observe global patterns of carbon
dioxide with a planned launch in 2014,
•       SMAP, which will observe soil moisture, inundation, wetlands and soil
freeze-thaw beginning in 2015,
•       CARVE, a Venture-class airborne mission studying Arctic climate-carbon
interactions
•       AirMOSS, a Venture-class airborne mission making observations of 
root-zone
soil moisture to quantify the impact of variations in soil moisture on
regional carbon fluxes
•       Megacities, a unique study of the urban carbon metabolism of major urban
areas using in situ and remote sensing approaches
•       AIRIS and AVIRISng, airborne imaging spectrometers that can quantify key
terrestrial ecosystem properties
•       PRISM, an advanced coastal zone imaging spectrometer,
•       HyspIRI, a planned spaceborne imaging spectrometer that will provide
global coverage of terrestrial vegetation chemistry and evapotranspiration,
•       DESDynI, a planned spaceborne synthetic aperture radar that will 
quantify
forest structure globally
•       Global and regional, high-resolution carbon data assimilation modeling
•       Global and process-oriented ecosystem process modeling

We invite applications for post-doctoral research positions in carbon cycle
analysis and modeling as part of JPL’s Carbon Initiative.  The successful
applicants should be interested in analysis and modeling of carbon-climate
interactions, with experience in process modeling, data assimilation and
their integration with global or regional remote observations (airborne and
spaceborne).  The group’s remote sensing foci are in microwave and
hyperspectral remote sensing, however, research is not limited to these
areas.  The successful applicants will have significant freedom to develop
their own research focus, taking advantage of JPL’s relevant capabilities,
including but not limited to those described above.

JPL’s focus is on the coupled global carbon cycle, and scientists with, for
example, remote sensing, modeling, terrestrial, atmospheric oceanic or
energy systems science backgrounds should all consider this opportunity.

Reply via email to