th 5 NOVAC Workshop April 27 – May 1, 2015 Turrialba Volcano, Costa Rica ∼ Workshop Program ∼ (updated April 23, 2015) DECADE Monday, April 27, 2015 Official Opening Ceremony Held at the OVSICORI facilities in Heredia 8:30 Maarten de Moor Introductions and welcome 8:35 Carlos Montero Official workshop opening by OVSICORI 8:45 Bo Galle 9:25 Christoph Kern Welcome to the 5th NOVAC Workshop and overview of the Network for Observation of Volcanic and Atmospheric Change A new collaboration between the USGS Volcano Disaster Assistance Program (VDAP) and NOVAC 9:30 Coffee Break 10:00 Tim Callaghan 10:30 Maria Martinez 11:00 Lunch 12:00 Bus transfer to Guayabo Lodge, Turrialba Volcano Disaster Risk Reduction activities supported by the USAID in Latin America and the Caribbean region Volcanism in Costa Rica and how volcanic activity is monitored by OVSICORI The global Network for Observation of Volcanic and Atmospheric Change 16:00 Geoffroy Avard Monitoring gas emissions from Turrialba Volcano with NOVAC scanning DOAS instruments and current state of the volcano 16:30 Maarten de Moor Gas monitoring of Costa Rican Volcanoes 17:00 Santiago Arellano 18:30 Dinner Present status of the NOVAC network and global emission inventory 1 Tuesday, April 28, 2015 8:00 8:30 9:00 Armando Saballos, Elvis Mendoza Francisco Montalvo 9:30 Claudia Bucarey, Roxana Medina Gustavo Garzon 10:00 Coffee Break 10:30 Hugo Delgado 11:00 Fabio Vita 11:30 Ryan Rebadulla 12:00 Lunch 13:30 Freddy Vasconez 14:00 14:30 Pablo Masias, Fredy Apaza Kila Mulina 15:00 Coffee Break 15:30 16:00 16:30 Gustavo Chigna Martin LaFevers, Aaron Rinehart All 18:30 Dinner The use of the NOVAC instruments data for volcano monitoring and research in Nicaragua The SO2 emissions from San Miguel Volcano During 8 Years of Monitoring Geochemical Monitoring of Southern Andean Volcano Observatory (OVDAS) Chile Comments on the importance of NOVAC instruments during increases of activity of three Colombian volcanoes 10 years monitoring Popocatépetl using mini-DOAS systems: what we have learned and what we still have to do. A wish list. The Geochemical Continuous Monitoring Network of Vulcano Island (Italy): Long-Time Variations of SO2 and CO2 Fluxes Monitoring of SO2 emissions using NOVAC-ScanDOAS and other geochemical techniques in Mayon Volcano (Philippines) Monitoring volcanic gases with NOVAC and other instrumentation in Ecuador Results and Experiences in Volcanic Monitoring with NOVAC Equipment in Peru Monitoring SO2 emissions from Tavurvur volcano, Rabaul, PNG NOVAC in Guatemala - Main problems and possible solutions. Site Infrastructure: Telemetry Options and Grounding Techniques Discussion: What’s working and what’s not? Discussion about strengths and weaknesses of the NOVAC instrumentation and software. 2 Wednesday, April 29, 2015 Field Trip 7:00 Bus to La Central NOVAC site 9:00 Hike to La Silvia NOVAC site 11:00 Hike back to La Central 12:00 Bus leaves La Central driving back to Guayabo Lodge 12:45 Coffee Break Innovative new techniques for measuring volcanic gases 13:15 Peter Kelly Toward accurate and precise long-term volcanic gas monitoring with Multi-GAS 13:45 Claudia Rivera Gas ratios from direct solar infrared and UV measurements of the Popocatepetl plume 14:15 Ulrich Platt DOAS Evaluation of Volcanic SO2 using a Modelled (Kurucz) Background Spectrum 14:45 John Henry Reina A Regional Centre for Bioinformatics & Photonics: Perspectives on Applications to Environmental Science 15:15 Coffee Break 15:45 Christoph Kern 16:15 Robin Campion 16:45 Vladimir Conde 17:00 Christoph Kern 17:15 Ulrich Platt 17:45 All 18:30 Dinner Why bother? Aren’t SO2 cameras poised to replace NOVAC instruments anyway? UV camera measurements at Popocatépetl and Colima, two dome-bearing Mexican volcanoes The NOVAC rapid response system microDOAS – A miniature DOAS instrument built for flying on unmanned aerial systems Possible future of NOVAC measurements: Novel types of instruments, 2-D sensing, LED-LIDAR ... Discussion: What is the future of the NOVAC instrumentation and how can it best be complimented with other systems? 3 Thursday, April 30, 2015 Errors and uncertainty in remote sensing measurements of volcanic gases 8:00 Christoph Kern Errors in UV remote sensing measurements induced by scattering processes in the atmosphere 8:30 Santiago Arellano Quantification of the measurement uncertainty in NOVAC 9:00 All Discussion on errors and uncertainty in scanning DOAS measurements and paths towards mitigating them 10:00 Coffee Break So what? What can gas measurements tell us about volcanic systems? 10:30 Thor Hansteen Degassing Processes in Selected Chilean Volcanoes Forecasting eruptions using in Costa Rica and Nicaragua using NOVAC and other Assessing the Role of Scrubbing of Volcanic SO2 at Wet Volcanoes: Lessons Learned from the 2009 Redoubt Eruption 11:00 Vladimir Conde 11:30 Cindy Werner 12:00 Lunch 13:30 Francisco Barahona, Rodolfo Olmos 14:00 Zoraida Chacon 14:30 Tamar Elias 15:00 Coffee Break 15:30 Volcanic Gas Monitoring in Indonesia 16:30 Syegi Kunrat, Harry Cahyono Nicole Bobrowski, Peter Luebcke Toshiya Mori 17:00 All Discussion: What have we learned? How can we use our observations to help forecast eruptions? What is needed to improve our understanding and forecasting capability? 18:30 Dinner 16:00 Measurements of SO2 flux from active volcanoes; An important complementary tool to support volcanic monitoring program in El Salvador, 2005-2010 The reactivation of Nevado del Ruiz Volcano 2010-2015, correlation of SO2 with Volcanic Activity Gas measurements at Hawaiian Volcanoes: contributions to volcanic processes and hazards knowledge Evaluation of BrO and other gases from NOVAC spectra - how is it done and initial interpretation Lessons learned from monitoring volcanic gases in Japan 4 Friday, May 1, 2015 Time for further discussions 8:00 All 10:00 Time for further discussions on topics such as - Network maintenance and expansion - Data Policy - Next NOVAC workshop - NOVAC, VDAP, and DECADE Coffee Break Workshop Evaluation 10:30 All Brief evaluation of NOVAC workshop – did we make progress towards workshop goals and objectives? What should we do differently next time? 11:00 Lunch 12:00 Bus transfer to Hotel Bougainvillea, Heredia 5 Contact information Workshop locations OVSICORI De Copymundo Viejo 100 este y 200 norte, Heredia Tel +506-2562-4001 Hotel Bougainvillea Contiguo a la Escuela, Santo Tomas, 40302 Tel +506-2244-1414 [email protected] www.hb.co.cr/en/ Guayabo Lodge Santa Cruz, Cantón de Turrialba, Provincia de Cartago (see maps and directions below) Tel +506-2538-8492 / +506-2538-8400 [email protected] www.guayabolodge.co.cr Telephone numbers Maarten de Moor Geoffroy Avard Maria Martinez OVSICORI office Hazel Lopez Guayabo Lodge Hotel Bougainvillea Taxi Heredia +506-6071-4123 +506-8655-9316 +506-8711-0052 +506-2562-4001 +506-8316-7768 +506-2538-8492 / +506-2538-8400 +506-2244-1414 +506-2262-6262 6 Maps and Directions- Hotel Bougainvillea to OVSICORI OVSICORI - 100m east and 200m north of the campus of la Universidad Nacional in Heredia (cien metros este y 200m norte del campus de la Universidad Nacional) 7 SJO international airport to OVSICORI SJO international airport to Guayabo Lodge in Santa Cruz (between the town of Pacayas and Turrialba) 8 9 Directions to Guayabo Lodge for local drivers: Desde San Jose, ir direccion Cartago, luego Pacayas (subiendo hacia el Cristo de la carretera al volcan Irazu). Continuar hacia Capellades y Santa Cruz. 15 kilometros despues de Pacayas se encuentra el Guayabo Lodge (a la derecha del camino), un kilometro antes de llegar a Santa Cruz. El telefono del hotel es 2538 8400. NO IR A TURRIALBA - NO IR AL PARQUE DEL MONUMENTO NACIONAL GUAYABO - ESTAMOS EN SANTA CRUZ From San Jose, head towards Cartago, then Pacayas (going up towards the Christ statue of the Irazu volcano road). Continue towards Capellades and then Santa Cruz. 15 kilometers after Pacayas you will find Guayabo Lodge (right hand side of the road), one kilometer before reaching Santa Cruz. The hotel phone number is 2538 8400 DO NOT GO TO THE CITY OF TURRIALBA - DO NOT GO TO GUAYABO NATIONAL MONUMENT -WE ARE IN SANTA CRUZ 10 11 Participant Name Institution email Fredy Apaza Choquehuayta Santiago Arellano Geoffroy Avard Francisco Barahona Nicole Bobrowski Claudia Bucarey Harry Cahyono Robin Campion Zoraida Chacon Gustavo Chigna Vladimir Conde Hugo Delgado Granados Tamar Elias Bo Galle Gustavo Garzon Thor Hansteen Keith Horton Sara Jivanjee Peter Kelly Christoph Kern Syegi Kunrat Martin LaFevers Peter Luebcke Maria Martinez Cruz Pablo Masias Alvarez Roxana Medina Elvis Mendoza Francisco Montalvo Maarten de Moor Toshiya Mori Kila Mulina Rodolfo Olmos Ulrich Platt Ryan Raul Rebadulla John Henry Reina Aaron Rinehart Claudia Rivera Armando Saballos Freddy Vasconez Fabio Vita Cynthia Werner INGEMMET Chalmers University OVSICORI University of El Salvador University of Heidelberg SERNAGEOMIN VSI UNAM SGC INSIVUMEH Chalmers University UNAM USGS Chalmers University SGC GEOMAR FLYSPEC inc USGS USGS USGS VSI USGS University of Heidelberg OVSICORI INGEMMET SERNAGEOMIN INETER DGSNET-MARN OVSICORI University of Tokyo RVO University of El Salvador University of Heidelberg PHIVOLCS Universidad del Valle, Cali USGS UNAM INETER IGEPN INGV USGS [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] 12
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