Scripps Graduate Student Geoffrey Ely
Award Winning Papers
Scripps Oceanography Student Research Impresses the American Geophysical Union
Two graduate students at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC
San Diego were selected for Outstanding Student Paper Awards for
their presentations at the 2007 American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Fall Meeting in San Francisco in December 2007.
Scripps graduate student Karen Weitemeyer
Scripps Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics graduate
students Geoffrey Ely and Karen Weitemeyer were each recognized as
among the best of a strong group of student presenters, setting an
example for fellow students and the entire AGU membership.
Ely's paper, presented in the Earth and Space Science Informatics
section, was titled "Verification of SORD, and application to the
TeraShake scenario." His research focuses on numerical methods for
large-scale earthquake simulation, and, for the AGU paper, simulated
the ground motions from a magnitude 7.6 event on the southern
San Andreas Fault. Ely will soon be defending his dissertation and
will take a postdoctorate researcher position at the University of
Southern California.
Weitemeyer received an award from the Geomagnetism and
Paleomagnetism section of AGU for her paper titled,
"Electromagnetic imaging of hydrates and accretionary structure at
Hydrate Ridge, Oregon using 2.5 D model studies." Her research
focuses on the application of marine controlled-source
electromagnetics (CSEM) techniques for gas hydrate detection. She
analyzed an extensive data set collected at Hydrate Ridge, Oregon
by the Marine Electromagnetic laboratory at Scripps Institution of
Oceanography to produce a 2D model of the data.
CSEM is one of two marine-based techniques used for oil and gas
exploration. In CSEM, scientists use a deep-towed transmitter that
generates electromagnetic fields that propagate through the Earth's
crust and receivers placed on the sea floor measure the EM signal
from below the seafloor. Scientists are interested in submarine gas
hydrates because they are a hazard to drilling, a potential
hydrocarbon resource, and have been implicated as factors in both
submarine slope stability and climate change.
The Outstanding Student Paper Award winners will be recognized in
an upcoming publication of Eos, the weekly newspaper of AGU.
AGU is a scientific society with a membership of 50,000
researchers, teachers, and students. AGU conducts meetings and
conferences, publishes journals, books and a weekly newspaper, and
sponsors a variety of educational and public information programs.
Annie Reisewitz
February 20, 2008
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