Difference between revisions of "EE DSS Webinar"

From Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP)
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<noinclude>{{Exceptional Air Pollution Event Analysis Community Workspace Backlinks}}</noinclude>
 
<noinclude>{{Exceptional Air Pollution Event Analysis Community Workspace Backlinks}}</noinclude>
  
This series of two webinars will introduce the Exceptional Event Decision Support System (EE DSS) of which purpose is to identify and to document observations that are candidates for exceptional event flagging. The first session will be focused on screening the AQS data for exceedances above "normal" values and to indicate potential smoke or dust causes. The webinars and the [[Exceptional_Air_Pollution_Event_Analysis_Community_Workspace|associated wiki workspace]] are provided to give States and EPA Regions the opportunity to ask questions and provide feedback on how to improve the EE DSS. A second webinar is planned for the end of May on the same topics, incorporating feedback from State analysts and pursuing further flagging use cases.   
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This series of two webinars will introduce the Exceptional Event Decision Support System (EE DSS) of which purpose is to identify and to document observations that are candidates for exceptional event flagging. The first session will be focused on screening the AQS data for exceedances above "normal" values and to indicate potential smoke or dust causes. The webinars and the '''[[Exceptional_Air_Pollution_Event_Analysis_Community_Workspace|associated wiki workspace]]''' are provided to give States and EPA Regions the opportunity to ask questions and provide feedback on how to improve the EE DSS. A second webinar is planned for the end of May on the same topics, incorporating feedback from State analysts and pursuing further flagging use cases.   
  
 
During the first 90-minute webinar we will cover the following topics:  
 
During the first 90-minute webinar we will cover the following topics:  
  
* Formulation EE DSS to address the clauses required by the Exceptional Event Rule;  
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* The approach of EE DSS to address the clauses required by the Exceptional Event Rule;  
 
* Datasets (FRM, satellite, model) and tools used in the EE DSS
 
* Datasets (FRM, satellite, model) and tools used in the EE DSS
 
* Analysis approach: finding exceedances and those above normal variations;  
 
* Analysis approach: finding exceedances and those above normal variations;  
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* Demonstration of specific flagging examples   
 
* Demonstration of specific flagging examples   
  
The main output of this decision support effort will be a national-scale list of candidate samples for EE flagging for 2010-2012. Based on this screening, States can identify and select candidate samples for EE flagging, to be submitted to EPA by the July 1, 2012 deadline.  These are not "official". The selection of the submitted flagged samples is the responsibility of the States.  The anticipated outcomes and benefits of the EE Decision Support will include: reduction of the effort required by the States for EE flagging; simpler and more uniform EE flag evaluation by the EPA Regions.
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The '''main output''' of this decision support effort will be a national-scale list of candidate samples (these are not "official") for EE flagging for 2010-2012. Based on this screening, States can identify and select candidate samples for EE flagging, to be submitted to EPA by the July 1, 2013 deadline. The anticipated '''outcomes''' and benefits of the EE Decision Support will include: reduction of the effort required by the States for EE flagging as well as a simpler and more uniform EE flag evaluation process by the EPA Regions.
  
 
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Revision as of 14:40, April 17, 2013

< Exceptional Air Pollution Event Analysis Community Workspace | Discussion | News | Participants | About

This series of two webinars will introduce the Exceptional Event Decision Support System (EE DSS) of which purpose is to identify and to document observations that are candidates for exceptional event flagging. The first session will be focused on screening the AQS data for exceedances above "normal" values and to indicate potential smoke or dust causes. The webinars and the associated wiki workspace are provided to give States and EPA Regions the opportunity to ask questions and provide feedback on how to improve the EE DSS. A second webinar is planned for the end of May on the same topics, incorporating feedback from State analysts and pursuing further flagging use cases.

During the first 90-minute webinar we will cover the following topics:

  • The approach of EE DSS to address the clauses required by the Exceptional Event Rule;
  • Datasets (FRM, satellite, model) and tools used in the EE DSS
  • Analysis approach: finding exceedances and those above normal variations;
  • Suggested exceptional (dust or smoke) sources for candidate samples
  • Demonstration of specific flagging examples

The main output of this decision support effort will be a national-scale list of candidate samples (these are not "official") for EE flagging for 2010-2012. Based on this screening, States can identify and select candidate samples for EE flagging, to be submitted to EPA by the July 1, 2013 deadline. The anticipated outcomes and benefits of the EE Decision Support will include: reduction of the effort required by the States for EE flagging as well as a simpler and more uniform EE flag evaluation process by the EPA Regions.

Webinar #1 Outline

The hour and a half webinar will have three parts:

Intro

  1. What are exceptional events?
    • Description of steps (1) state observation (2) compare to standard - Ozone (daily max), PM2.5 (daily max, yearly average), PM10 (daily max) (3) Four steps that mgmt has to consider
  2. We have tool set that are nationally applicable for both flag id and documentation therefore there is a decision support system that is to be applicable to any of the exceedance types, regardless of cause, pollutant, and of region.
  3. Identify two dates flag submission (July 1) and documentation submission (Dec. 15)
  4. Priority is on screening for flagging event and what is the potential cause - categories
  5. Intro to the EE DSS by Rudy Husar, Washington University;

EE DSS is to screen for exceedances from all four standards (those above normal variations) and identify the type of cause (by EPA category).

EE DSS

Describe steps and how EE DSS deals with them

  1. Exceedance
  2. Exceeding normal variation
  3. Exploration of potential causes (Dust/smoke- NAAPS; Fire pixels, wind speeds etc, console)

Use Cases

  1. Hands-on session to try the EE DSS for your own State;
    1. List of all exceedances for each of standards above normal and corresponding "high normal" value in 2012 to see how far above normal you are; cut-off for how far above normal is flexible. - to be distributed
    2. Compare list to NAAPS dust/smoke
      1. Some easily attributable
      2. Left over neither dust or smoke
  2. Wrap-up Q&A

Resources

Webinar Details and Registration

Topic: Exceptional Event Documentation Training
Host: CAPITA at Washington University, ESIP Federation AQ Workgroup
Date: Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Time: 3:00 pm, Eastern Daylight Time (New York, GMT-04:00)

Session Number: 920 523 275


To register for this training session


Go to https://esipfed.webex.com/esipfed/k2/j.php?ED=222698102&UID=1560585307&HMAC=6a9d5b20eee6a53faab07902334301cbbdf01cc1&RT=MiMxMQ%3D%3D&FM=1 and register.

Once you are approved by the host, you will receive a confirmation email with instructions for joining the session.

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