Difference between revisions of "AMS Clinic4"

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* Florian Rubach, Juelich: "I've been trying to optimize the Zeppelin-AMS settings for PToF timing as well as for averaging and saving. I think I found some good settings, but I would like discuss this and hear some opinions."
 
* Florian Rubach, Juelich: "I've been trying to optimize the Zeppelin-AMS settings for PToF timing as well as for averaging and saving. I think I found some good settings, but I would like discuss this and hear some opinions."
 
* Matt Coggon, Caltech: "I don't have a full understanding of how PToF is calculated. I've been making up some image plots for people so that they can average the distributions according to their instruments time stamp. However, if I give them an image based on the saved AMS time stamp, the distributions averaged to other instrument time stamps are messy. If I give them an image based on a 5 min squirell average, the averaged distributions are nicer. I realize that this is an "average of an average", but I'm interested in learning how squirrel fundamentally calculates PToF distributions."
 
* Matt Coggon, Caltech: "I don't have a full understanding of how PToF is calculated. I've been making up some image plots for people so that they can average the distributions according to their instruments time stamp. However, if I give them an image based on the saved AMS time stamp, the distributions averaged to other instrument time stamps are messy. If I give them an image based on a 5 min squirell average, the averaged distributions are nicer. I realize that this is an "average of an average", but I'm interested in learning how squirrel fundamentally calculates PToF distributions."
 +
* Brett Palm, Colorado: m/z calibration at high organic concentrations
  
 
=== Tue, High-resolution analysis ===
 
=== Tue, High-resolution analysis ===

Revision as of 11:32, 22 March 2012

This page is a repository of information for planning the 4th AMS Clinic and the 1st Aerodyne CIMS Meeting and Clinic (March 2012). A shorcut to this page is http://tinyurl.com/AMSClinic4

Dates and Location

The 4th AMS Instrument and Data Analysis Clinic and 1st Aerodyne CIMS Meeting and Clinic will take place in the Spring of 2012 at the University of Colorado-Boulder. They are organized by the Jimenez Group and Aerodyne, and also sponsored by CIRES.

  • The location will be the Ekeley Building in the CU Campus in Boulder. The location is linked here in Google Maps and here in the CU online map. The Northeast door of the building will be the only door open on Sunday. The room is Ekeley E1B20, just to the left after entering the building. It is the same location as last year.
  • All AMS days will start at 9 am and go till 5-6 pm, with a break for lunch and additional coffee breaks.

The schedule for the meetings will be:

  • Sun March 25: AMS Hardware tutorial & Q&A (starting 9am, with an AMS in the room)
  • Mon March 26: AMS: Quantification, unit resolution issues, PToF, w/ TOF, Quad, ACSM
  • Tue March 27: AMS: High resolution issues (PIKA)
  • Wed March 28: AMS: PMF, including errors & discussion of user cases. (CIMS users may be interested to sit in) & ARI dinner
  • Thu March 29: CIMS: 1st day. Music jam at Donna Sueper's house. Bring your instrument and be ready to play!
  • Fri March 30: CIMS: 2nd day
  • Sat March 31: CIMS: 3rd day
  • Sun April 1: CIMS: small group CIMS meetings as needed / hiking or skiing for interested folks

AMS only users may want to come Sun-Wed, or a subset of those days, while CIMS-only users will come Wed-Sun, or a subset of those days. Pls fill this Doodle Poll with the dates you are planning to attend. (Mark them with "(yes)" if tentative). This is the OFFICIAL attendee list for the meeting, which is important to plan for meeting rooms, lunches, coffee breaks, etc.

Detailed program of 4th AMS Clinic

The people who should attend the AMS Clinic are those who are directly doing (or are VERY involved in directly supervising) AMS data analysis of field or lab data. The clinic will be much less useful for PIs who are not directly involved in data analysis, or for people who are just starting to learn about the AMS but haven't done serious data analysis yet. Attendees are expected to bring to the Clinic datasets in which they are currently working, and be ready to use them as a basis for discussion with the group.

As planned, this is "out of phase" with the AMS Users Meeting and the heavy Fall meeting season (AAAR, EAC, AMS Users Meeting, AGU...).

There is no registration fee, but please let us know if you are coming to plan food, coffee, tables, power, internet, name tags, hotel room block, etc.

Feedback from past Clinics has been very positive overall, and you can see the details for 2009, 2010, and 2011.

Sun, Hardware day

  • We had some interesting problems with the AMS come up during our field mission, particularly with the chopper. I just want to summarize how we went about troubleshooting the problem: Matt Coggon, Caltech
  • "We seem to be having an issue with our chopper. When doing the 'top hat' test we only get 'half a top hat'. I will bring a screen shot.": Sonya Collier, Davis
  • "We have a USB error when trying to communicate between the pump box and the pump diagnostics software. We already have taken various steps according to John Jayne and Ed Fortner's recommendations but the problem is not completely solved yet" Sonya Collier, Davis

Mon, quantification, unit resolution with TOF, quad, ACSM

  • Christine Loza, Caltech: "I'd like to talk about airbeam corrections when you deliberately vary the N2 concentration (for example, sampling from a chamber that has 0-10% Ar during an experiment"
  • Roya Bahreini, NOAA and Jill Craven, Caltech: What to measure and how to calculate AMS mass concentration uncertainty (and how to report it) for field campaigns. Roya's Auxiliary Material of her 2008 Houston paper is a great summary with numbers and references, but how to get all of those numbers exactly has been sometimes unclear to me.
  • Anna Ripoll, IDAEA-CSIC: ACSM naphthalene calibration method, and would it be applicable to the AMS
  • Florian Rubach, Juelich: "I've been trying to optimize the Zeppelin-AMS settings for PToF timing as well as for averaging and saving. I think I found some good settings, but I would like discuss this and hear some opinions."
  • Matt Coggon, Caltech: "I don't have a full understanding of how PToF is calculated. I've been making up some image plots for people so that they can average the distributions according to their instruments time stamp. However, if I give them an image based on the saved AMS time stamp, the distributions averaged to other instrument time stamps are messy. If I give them an image based on a 5 min squirell average, the averaged distributions are nicer. I realize that this is an "average of an average", but I'm interested in learning how squirrel fundamentally calculates PToF distributions."
  • Brett Palm, Colorado: m/z calibration at high organic concentrations

Tue, High-resolution analysis

  • Jill Craven, Caltech: General issues that cropped up during PIKA analysis, interpretation of high m/z ions
  • Paola Massoli, Aerodyne: Adding new ions into PIKA to account for marine organic aerosol ion fragments
  • Paola Massoli, Aerodyne: Precautions for deciding when N containing ions peaks in fits are real or not
  • Matt Coggon, Caltech: "I've been working on data from a field mission and I've found that masses at m/z 42 and m/z 99 are important in cloud processed ship emissions. I have an idea (based on HiRes data) what these ions are, but I'm interested in trying to figure out if anyone has any idea what compounds might fragment to generate these masses"
  • Lea Hildebrandt, UT-Austin: Organic H2O/CO2 ratio (frag table correction) for chamber experiments I have been analyzing
  • Sonya Collier, Davis: "During a recent field campaign in Los Angeles, measuring vehicle emissions, we ran the HR-ToF-AMS at very high sampling fequency (10 second averaging, 4 Open, 2 Closed, 6 PTOF). The data is noisy but passable. However, in the PIKA peak fitting window I've noticed various instances where the peaks in the closed panel are shifted with respect to the open and diff panels. Its not always consistent. There are also some strange overall shifts despite processing the data with a fair m/z calibration. Qi suspects it is due to the unequal open and closed times. "

Wed, PMF day

  • Jill Craven, Caltech: PMF of smog chamber experiments
  • Manuel Hutterli, Tofwerk: New Tofwerk autotuning/diagnostics software (30-45 min, incl. questions & discussion)
  • Sonya Collier, Davis: "We introduced a methane flame to create black carbon as well as had some contamination issues. Both have posed problems for properly subtracting the background. Qi had the idea of using PMF to separate them out and although I have only briefly touched on this topic and am not a PMF user (until now), the first experiment in trying it yielded promising results. This gives PMF a new and unexpected use apart from the typical use of aiding in apportioning factors to different atmospheric sources. We have just started to explore this and am not sure how detailed a presentation I can give, but I will try to put something together before the PMF day."

Details of 1st CIMS Meeting and Clinic

  • This first meeting of ToF-CIMS users is being held Thursday, March 29 through Saturday, March 31 2012, immediately following the AMS Clinic. AMS users are invited to attend any portion of the ToF-CIMS meeting and vice versa. All details related to this meeting are on the ToF-CIMS website.

Attendees

  • If you may be interested in attending the AMS Clinic, you should add yourself to the AMS Clinic Email List.
  • The list of attendees is kept on this Doodle Poll. This Poll will be the official list of attendees, so please remember to update it if your plans change. If you would like to attend but are not sure yet, please enter the "(Yes)" option (it'll show up in yellow in the poll) and update the entries later when your plans become solid either way.

Lodging

A map with three local hotels that have offered to give us a discounted rate can be found here
If you are looking for someone to share a room with we have created a spreadsheet for coordinating and posting contact information here

  • Millenium (recommended, closest to meeting location)
    • Rate: $104.00 for one King / $104.00 for two doubles / $114 for a triple / $124 for a quad (we are currently holding 10 rooms)
    • Reservations: register online here
    • Contact p.303.443.3850 / AMS Users (for discounted rate)
    • Reservations can only be made up to February 23, 2012 (for guaranteed rate)
  • Boulder Inn (farther from meeting location, but a little cheaper)
    • Rate: $82.00 for one King bed / $92.00 for two Queen Beds
    • Contact: p.800.233.8469 / AMS (for discounted rate)
    • Reservations can only be made up to February 23, 2012 (for guaranteed rate)
  • Boulder Outlook
    • Rate: $74.00 for standard outside / $84.00 inside by pool / $94 executive (can either be a king or two doubles)
    • Contact: p.800.542.0304 ext. 0 / ask for CU CIRES group rate
  • Quality Inn
    • Rate: $79.00 one queen / $79.00 two queens
    • Contact: 1.888.449.7550 / ask for AMS Conference Rates
  • If you want to find a roommate for the Clinic, please enter your information in this spreadsheet.

Please feel free to contact Michael Lechner (michael.lechner(at)colorado.edu for any further question)