AGU Chapman Conference on Atmospheric Water
Vapor and Its Role in Climate
Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, USA 20–24 October 2008
Conveners
- Steven Sherwood, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
- Natalia Andronova, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
- Ray Pierrehumbert, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Program Committee
- Dieter Kley, Forschungszentrum Juelich, Juelich, Germany
- Liz Moyer, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA
- Joyce Penner, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
- Rémy Roca, LMD/IPSL, Paris, France
- Karen Rosenlof, NOAA Aeronomy Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado, USA
- Masato Shiotani, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan
- Brian Soden, RSMAS/MPO, University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, USA
- Tammy Weckwerth, NCAR, Boulder, Colorado, USA
The conveners and planning committee wish to thank the European Geosciences Union for their cooperation in the planning of this conference.
Sponsors

Program Schedule
The conference will be held at the Sheraton Keauhou Bay Resort & Spa, 78-128 Ehukai Street. Kailua-Kona, and will span five days, with Wednesday off (see below for the planned field trip). The schedule is designed to maximize discussion and debate opportunities, and to make the meeting approachable to a broad audience. Each meeting day will consist of a morning and afternoon session, beginning with a keynote lecture, then continuing with two sessions on each of the three main focus areas:
- Upper troposphere and lower stratosphere
- Interaction of water vapor and convection
- Climate, water vapor transport and the hydrological cycle
The meeting will finish with a closing session to sum up the meeting and consider future directions. Each session from 1–3 above will include two invited talks (speakers TBA) to introduce the key issues, followed by open discussions moderated by the program committee, and brief poster presentations. There will be one poster session per day for other attendees to present their work.
Please see the conference program for specific details.
Poster Presentation Guidelines
Poster presentations are scheduled as such:
Monday, 20 October
Upper Troposphere/Lower Stratosphere Poster Session
3:45 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Tuesday, 21 October
Convection Poster Session
3:30 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Thursday, 23 October
Climate/Hydrology Posters
3:40 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
[Second viewing will be held at 11:00 a.m. on Friday, 24 October]
Each presenter is provided with a 4-foot high by 8-foot wide posterboard, which will be marked with the appropriate poster number; this posterboard number will be cited in the conference program.
Poster presenters are asked to set up their posters on the day of their presentation during the lunch period. All posters must be removed by the lunch period the following day to allow other presenters to display their posters. Push pins and other general office supplies will be available.
Conference Objectives and General Description
The main objective of the proposed conference
A number of unanswered scientific questions surround atmospheric water vapor. These include:
- What allows such large vapor supersaturations to persist, as recently observed at low temperatures?
- What accounts for the reported decadal changes in stratospheric humidity, and what impact have these changes had on stratospheric chemistry or climate?
- Do we understand humidity well enough to predict it in different climates?
- How does atmospheric humidity regulate storm strength, mesoscale organization, and intraseasonal variability?
- What can we learn from isotopes of water in vapor or precipitation?
- Do paleoclimate proxies indicate surprises in past hydrological cycles, cloudiness, or poleward heat transport?
- Are recent proposals for the temperature-dependence of Earth's hydrological cycle and precipitation behavior adequate?
- Can attention to water vapor help us understand the still-mysterious role of clouds in different climates?
These questions involve a diverse array of disciplines and methods. The main purpose of this meeting is therefore to bring key groups together: those familiar with (or in the process of developing) new water vapor observing systems, those studying how atmospheric cloud, convective, and/or dynamical processes interact with water vapor, and those interested in the role of water vapor in climate change including paleoclimates, to discuss recent developments and future directions. A Chapman conference is uniquely suited to fruitful discussion of new observing system needs and possibilities, and of crosscutting science issues: a group of manageable size that includes experimental and theoretical expertise across disciplines rarely occurs in any other venue. Abstracts are solicited for new work on any topic relevant to the above, or other questions relating to water vapor and climate.
Accommodations
Housing Deadline: 25 September 2008
A block of rooms is being held at the Sheraton Keauhou Bay Resort & Spa, in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii (see local attractions). The hotel is offering conference participants sleeping rooms at the rate of $165.00 for a single or double occupancy room. Reservations can be made via the Sheraton Web site or by calling the hotel directly at (808) 930-4900. Be sure to mention that you are attending the AGU Chapman Conference.
Getting Around
Below are transportation options from the Kailua-Kona Airport to the Sheraton Keauhou Bay Resort & Spa.
- Taxis: one-way fee is approximately $45.00.
- Speedi Shuttle:
Phone: 877-242-5777
Web site: http://www.speedishuttle.com
E-mail: kona@speedishuttle.com
Note: you may reserve shuttle service in advance online.
Complimentary shuttle service is provided to various destinations in Kona
Registration
The conference registration has now passed. Please contact chapman-help@agu.org regarding the late registration process.
Expected Participation
120 including 15–20 graduate students.
Fields of Interest
Water vapor instrumentation, cloud physics, atmospheric convection, observing systems and programs, isotope chemistry, large-scale dynamics and modeling, climate theory, paleoclimate.
Further Information
If you have questions or would like to be placed on a mailing list (be sure to include the name of the meeting you are interested in), E-mail chapman-help@agu.org or call the AGU Meetings Department at +1-202-777-7329.

