Syllabus ATM625

Physical Hydrometeorology

Number: ATM625
Instructor: Carmen N. Moelders, aka Nicole Mölders
Email: cmoelders@alaska.edu
Office hours: Thursday 1-2 pm
Office location: Akasofu 309
Phone:   +1 907 474 7910
Phone conferences: Three during the semester TBA (mandatory P/F)
Teaching assistant: None

Prerequisites: ATM401 or ATM601, or graduate standing in STEM fields (physics, civil engineering, geological engineering, geography, geophysics, hydrology, technology engineering, mathematics) or permission of instructor

Course Description: The course explores hydrometeorological processes, presents how to apply analysis techniques/skills to solve fundamental hydrometeorological questions (e.g. fire weather forecasting, drought forecasting, water resource management, flood forecasting). Subjects covered are hydrographs, radar images, meteograms, lysimeter, near-surface meteorology, surface energy and water budgets, stream response, groundwater, drought-indices, observational errors.

Subjects Addressed:

  • Basic hydrometeorological concepts (watershed, spatial and temporal variability, regional water balance, storage, residence time)
  • Water and energy cycle at various scales (distribution of precipitation, runoff, evapotranspiration, energy, soil and vegetation, drought indices, climate indices, teleconnections, floods, role of ground water, permafrost, potential evaporation, etc.)
  • Observational methods in hydrometeorology (radar, precipitation gage networks, Bowen ration method, and their accuracy including error propagation, interception loss measurements, pan evaporation, flux measurements, stream-gaging methods, etc.)
  • Data processing methods like homogenization of time series of observational data after changes of site location/instruments, aggregation/disaggregation, area estimation methods, basic statistics
  • Aspects of soil properties and physical processes occurring in the soil matrix (infiltration, freezing, thawing, hydraulic conductivity, water content, Richard’s equation, Darcy’s law)
  • Stream response to water-input events (equation of motion, open channel flow, stream network
  • Impact of land-cover/land-use on the water and energy cycle
  • Hydrology and water resource management
  • Fundamentals and types of hydrometeorological models including river routing, lake models and calibration, HyrdoWRF
  • Coupling of hydrometeorological models
  • Program methods for analysis of hydrometeorolgical data
  • Presentation skills (e.g. clean readable, well labeled plots, well written discussions of results, communication in the group discussions)

Student Learning Outcome — ATM625: By the end of the semester, all students will be able to

  1. Develop skills to think as a scientist and master higher order thinking
  2. Put hydrometeorological concept together in a new context to solve a problem or very different problems
  3. Solve fundamental problems related to the basics of physical hydrometeorology and discuss the results under different aspects
  4. Apply hydrometeorological concepts to data and determine the uncertainty in their results
  5. Perform quality assurance/quality control to hydrometeorological datasets
  6. Apply energy and water fluxes aggregation/disaggregation methods
  7. Determine the accuracy/error of observations
  8. Set up water and energy balances and perform calibrations for various hydrometeorological purposes
  9. Improve skills to discuss science in an effective manner
  10. Improve skills to read papers critically
  11. Improve the quality of your presentations
  12. Develop hydrometeorological science based reasonable assumptions about missing terms, data, and information
  13. Recognize data that are not needed to solve the problem and discard them
  14. Judge in terms as is needed in thesis research
  15. Analyze the limits of validity of assumption and under which circumstance terms or processes can be neglected

Student Protections and Services Statement: Every qualified student is welcome in my classroom. As needed, I am happy to work with you, disability services, veterans’ services, rural student services, etc. to find reasonable accommodations. Students at this university are protected against sexual harassment and discrimination (Title IX), and minors have additional protections. As required, if I notice or am informed of certain types of misconduct, then I am required to report it to the appropriate authorities. For more information on your rights as a student and the resources available to you to resolve problems, please go the following site:  www.uaf.edu/handbook/.

Class Delivery: Research showed that teaching someone and active learning else are the best ways to learn (e.g. here). This class is taught online. This means you will have to do reading assignments, watch videos, take notes and have to answer the questions and solve the assigned problems by the respective deadlines. Doing so is part of your grade. I will grade the equation sheets, answers to questionnaires, problem tasks and the summary as homework. Note that this class is stacked meaning it can be taken at the upper undergraduate and the graduate level. Make sure that you have signed up at the level you want to take this class. The application assignments are tailored to the different student groups (ATM425, ATM625). However, in the discussion google group the students at both levels are in the same cohort. There will be three phone conference during the semester where I will call you to discuss class material.

Suggested Readings/Textbooks: All reading assignments will be posted as pdf files on the class webpage. We will use chapters of the following books:

Dingman, S.l., 1994. Physical hydrology, Macmillan Publishing Company, p. 575.

Bronstert, A., J. Carrera, P. Kabat, S. Lütkemeier (Eds.), 2005. Coupled models for the hydrological cycle, Springer, p. 345.

Krugger, M.I., Stern, H.P., New Permafrost and Glacier Research, Nova Science Publishers Inc., New York,

Mölders, N., Kramm, G., 2009. Permafrost modeling in weather forecasts and climate projections. 51-88.

Mölders, N., 2011. Land-Use and Land-Cover Changes, Atmospheric and Oceanographic Sciences Library 44, DOI 10.1007/978-94-007-1527-1 3, Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2012.

Fabry, F., 2015. Radar meteorology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, p. 256.

Review papers or book chapters as provided.

Reading the material assigned at your class level, watching the videos and taking notes are also homework assignment, i.e. inevitable. You will not be able to fill out the questionnaires, solve the problems assigned at the graduate level, discuss your results as assigned and/or write the summary of the material without having done the reading or watched the videos. You also will not be able to seek clarification, and will not be able to participate efficiently in the discussion projects without having watched the videos and read all the material. It saves time and is safer to do the assignments using the recommended books or provided class material. The final examination is related to this material.

Difference between ATM425 and ATM625: I try to balance the interests of undergraduate and graduate students. Therefore, I will assign special tasks for graduate students that probe the material assigned at the graduate level. The same applies for the undergraduate level. This mean there are distinct differences in the degree of difficulty in the assignments in accord with the different goals of the learning outcome. This means among other things that over the timeframe of the class, graduate students 1) will have additional reading and/or video watching assignments to achieve the learning outcomes at the graduate level, 2) will be required to discuss results under a given aspect (while undergraduate students are not asked to do so), 3) will be required to read a research review paper relevant to the topic of the respective unit, 4) will always be assigned different or additional homework problems at a higher degree of difficulty that will probe applying methods discussed in the additional readings/videos, and/or 5) will have to answer additional or different questions on the questionnaires, 6) will be required to summarize the material in less than 200 words in the questionnaire, 7) will be asked to program simple concepts, and 8) will get quizzes and exams that also probe for the material related to the additional learning outcomes. In other words, tasks designed for graduate students will require skills that undergraduate students usually do not have yet (e.g. programming) and/or that are not an expected learning goal at the undergraduate level (e.g. making reasonable assumptions, justify assumption, testing of the limits of assumptions, identify data not needed to solve the question, just to mention a few points). Exams and quizzes will have additional tasks to be solved at the graduate level. Thus, make always sure you solve the tasks assigned for graduate students to be best prepared for the quizzes and exams. Note that (just) solving the problems at the undergraduate level will not prepare you sufficiently to pass the quizzes and exams at the graduate level.

Required Technology Software: Students must have regular access to a computer and the Internet to access online materials on this classroom page. Students need a laptop, PC, Mac or tablet with a browser, a UAF email address to access the questionnaires and quizzes, and access to the internet. On the device software to watch mp4 videos has to be installed. I expect that you can handle and work with Adobe reader, google forms, google doc, google sheets, and excel. 😉 You can download them from the OIT software catalog. I expect that you can handle and work with Adobe reader, google forms, google doc, google sheets, and excel. 😉 You can download them from the OIT software catalog. You can find what software you can use to open the MP4 videos at the link. You can find information on the google accessibility and the wordpress accessibility at the links. Students will be expected to download course material as well as upload assignments. Students also will need an old-fashioned (offline) calculator for the exam.

Other Course Resources: Please realize that when students enroll in university-level courses they may need to employ skills that are not directly related to the course content. As a student, you might be required to learn something new to succeed in class even though that skill/material will not specifically be on the final exam. Thus, students should expect to learn techniques/tools that are needed to fulfill the requirements listed in this course syllabus.

Course Policies: As part of this course, you will be asked to participate in public spaces on the internet. For example, you will be asked to write a blog post, comment on someone else’s blog post, or post to online services like YouTube. You will create an account and a screen name for each of these services; it’s important to understand that the screen name you choose will be public to the world. If you do not wish to use your real name, we suggest using your university username (your login username for Blackboard or you may choose to use a nickname alias instead). If you are working in WordPress, from the Dashboard edit your profile and set your display name to the nickname of your choice. Contact your instructor directly if you have questions or concerns.

Each unit gets graded. You will have to do your reading, video watching, questionnaire, and problem assignments as posted and/or stated in schedule. Participation in the google group discussions are mandatory and part of your grade. Excused late submissions are approved in advance (prior to the due date) or due to a documented emergency. Such documentation must be made immediately upon the student’s being able to access the internet. However, unexcused late submissions lead to an F on the units you missed. Please understand that this is a college course – you are expected to submit your assignments on time.

All problems have to be solved in readable style, scanned in and submitted by email with clear identification of the unit number and your name. “Readable style” means either clear hand writing or typed, double-spaced, using at least a 12-point font, one-inch margins, and in hard copy format. Latex is a great software to write equations. If you have not met these stipulations, I will return it to you ungraded. Submission will not be accepted via fax unless you make prior arrangements with me. When programming tasks are assigned the code has to be submitted as part of the assignment, i.e. it is not sufficient to just submit the results. I want to see how you got there. All results of problem tasks will have to be discussed what they mean for the water cycle.

It is the student’s responsibility to submit the assignments and participate in the discussion group in time. I strongly suggest that you plan and schedule your work and start working on your assignments before it is due. I recommend having backup systems in place so you can have all work completed on schedule. Getting work done on time is a key to early success in your business or scientific career. A major complaint of employers is that faculty do not instill a sense of responsibility in students.

I encourage teamwork, as teamwork will be the way to work in future work places. Research also showed that students working together typically become better presenters (a goal of this class) and are more successful in class. If you co-work in groups, everybody of the group must submit the work and it has to be stated as group work with a disclosure of the team and a brief summary of the discussion. The latter is to ensure that nobody takes group work as a free ride.

Examinations: There will be one final examination. The exams will be different at the graduate and undergraduate level. Make sure you address the tasks assigned at the graduate level. Solving only the tasks at the undergraduate level will not provide enough points to pass the exam. It is the student’s responsibility to find out when and where the examination will take place and to be there in time. Only in case of emergency, I will allow you to start later on the exam. There is usually another exam scheduled in this classroom right after your own exam so the room has to be free in time. This means that I cannot give you extra time if you arrive late. The exam is scheduled for finals week. However, if students bring a reasonable scheduling conflict to my attention by the end of the first week of classes (e.g., absence for field work, attendance of a conference during finals week) I will work with the student for arrangements. I will not do the exam prior to AGU as that would take off 14 days of class material.

Additional Policies:

  1. No weapons allowed in the final examination or during office hours.
  2. Due dates are firm, with the exceptions mentioned above as well as documented emergencies.
  3. If you have a disability and require any auxiliary aids, services or accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act, please contact me after class, see me in the my office, or call me during the first week of the semester to be able to define specific accommodation needs and have enough time for any necessary preparation. Also contract UAF’s Office of Disability Services. If you have any kind of a physical or learning disability you must tell me about it. All disabilities are documented by UAF’s Center for Health & Counseling and instructors receive a formal letter requesting that accommodation are made for any student with disabilities.
  4. Any student who is an UAF sponsored athletic or who has other personal or situational difficulty that might affect class performance is invited to contact me in the first week of the semester (or as soon as such matters emerge) so that ways of accommodating the difficulty may be anticipated.
  5. If you intend to go to AGU or another scientific conference or on a field trip, you must tell me this in the first week of class. It is your responsibility to make up for the classes missed.
  6. Switch your cell phones off during the final exam.
  7. I do not answer emails Saturday to Sunday, i.e. I answer within 24h to emails on Monday to Friday afternoon only between 1000 and 1700. When I am on university related travel, I do not answer to emails as I cannot guarantee email access.

All students in the class were informed about the policies at the beginning of the class and in the syllabus, and it would be unfair to everyone else to give one person an exception.

Other Important Information: It is essential that you (1) keep up with the reading of the book, paper and video materials, (2) budget your time wisely to complete all of your reading and viewing assignments, and (3) seek clarification on any material, which you do not understand, during office hours or on the class discussion board. Note there is a Quiz Your Professor section on the right sidebar of our class page where you can contact me. If I am not covering subjects adequately, or the problems are confusing or difficult, or if you do not understand the questions in your problem assignment, quiz or examination, and you didn’t find a solution in the FAQ or discussion board, please let me know. I want you to understand the material and that you can apply the material to solve problems. Please use the office hours to seek clarification.

Expectation of Student Effort: Students should expect to spend 10-12 hours per week on this class. Students are expected to complete the weekly assignments by their due dates. If circumstances arise that cause you to need extra time on any assignment(s), email your instructor for guidance. Extensions of due dates may be granted, but your instructor expects to be informed in advance if you are not able to submit your assignment on time. (Emergency situations will be dealt with as needed.) Students are expected to maintain a working backup plan to be implemented in the event of a computer malfunction or an interruption of their normal Internet service during the course.

Academic Integrity, Honor Code and Plagiarism: I expect students to submit own original work and reference all other work and intellectual ideas with appropriate reference and citation. As described by UAF, scholastic dishonesty constitutes a violation of the university rules and regulations and is punishable according to the procedures outlined by UAF. Scholastic dishonesty includes, but is not limited to, cheating on an exam, plagiarism, and collusion. Cheating includes providing answers to or taking answers from another student. Plagiarism includes use of another author’s words or arguments without attribution. Collusion includes unauthorized collaboration with another person in preparing written work for fulfillment of any course requirement. Scholastic dishonesty is punishable by removal from the course and a grade of “F.’ For more information go to Student Code of Conduct.

Grading Policy: This class is a success-oriented course. My aim is for all students to meet their individual learning and grade goals. Of course, this does not mean that you can avoid working hard or work hardly. Instead, it means that (1) all students who do well in the assignments, group discussions (attendance), and final examination as well as regularly answer peer questions on the discussion board (attendance) will be rewarded accordingly, and (2) the grade distribution will not be adjusted to make sure it fits a bell-shaped curve. I expect that (1) you aim to give your personal best in the course, and (2) use the peer-questions, questionnaires, quizzes, problems and the final examination as an opportunity to demonstrate your understanding of the material. To obtain an “A” grade you will need to produce work that far exceeds my normal expectations. My normal expectations are hard work evidence of time spent with the material and an ability to demonstrate knowledge of the material and ability to apply the material.

Grading for this class will follow the UAF guidelines. Your grade will be 10% questionnaires, notes/summary, 30% applications problems, and 40% final exam, 10% participation in group discussions, and 10% quizzes. There will be 26 units, each has a questionnaire, notes/summary, and application problem section. It is mandatory to participate in the online group discussions (letter grade) and phone conferences (P/F). The latter are graded in the group discussion section. I reserve the right to schedule quizzes as seems appropriate to achieve the learning outcomes. There will be no more than 13 quizzes.

grading illustration pie

To get a “C” grade, 50% of the points in each category have to be earned. I will give +/- grades with the following UAF rules A 4.0, A- 3.7, B+ 3.3, B 3.0, B- 2.7, C+ 2.3, C 2.0, C- 1.7, D+ 1.3, D 1.0, D- 0.7, and F 0.0, respectively. Thus, 90% and better is an A, 85-89% is A-, 77-84% is B+, 70-76% is B, 64-69% is B-, 57-63% is C+, 50-56% is C, 44-49% is C-, 40-43% is D+, 34-39% is D, 30-33% is D-, less than 30% is F. Grades of “incomplete” will be given only in cases where an extraordinary, exceptional reason, submitted in writing by the student and judged valid by me. See UAF policies for details.

Explanation of NB/I/W Grades: This course adheres to the UAF regarding the granting of NB Grades. The NB grade is for use only in situations in which the instructor has No Basis upon which to assign a grade. In general, the NB grade will not be granted.

Your instructor follows the University of Alaska Fairbanks Incomplete Grade Policy: “The letter “I’ (Incomplete) is a temporary grade used to indicate that the student has satisfactorily completed (C or better) the majority of work in a course but for personal reasons beyond the student’s control, such as sickness, he has not been able to complete the course during the regular semester. Negligence or indifference are not acceptable reasons for an “I’ grade.’

Successful, timely completion of this course depends on committing yourself early and maintaining your effort. Failure to submit assignments in a timely manner may result in faculty-initiated Withdrawal from the course, which can result in a W on your transcript.

Instructor Response Time: It generally takes me about a week or so to grade written assignments after submission. There are voluntary quizzes that provide immediate feedback. In addition to your grade, you will receive feedback from me either in the comment box, or as an attachment. Each unit has a FAQ section as well.

Support Services: Go to the Student Handbook for things like academic advising, tutoring, library and academic support, disability services, computing and technology, veteran and military support, academic complaint and appeals, late withdrawals, “classroom’ behavior expectations and more.

UAF eLearning Student Services helps students with registration and course schedules, provides information about lessons and student records, assists with the examination process, and answers general questions. Our Academic Advisor can help students communicate with instructors, locate helpful resources, and maximize their distance learning experience. Contact the UAF eLearning Student Services staff at 907.455.2060 or toll free 1.800.277.8060 or contact staff directly — for directory listing see: https://elearning.uaf.edu/contact

UAF Help Desk: Go to https://www.alaska.edu/oit/ to see about current network outages and technology news. For technical questions, contact the Help Desk at: e-mail at helpdesk@alaska.edu, phone: 450.8300 (in the Fairbanks area) or 1.800.478.8226 (outside of Fairbanks)

Effective Communication: Students who have difficulties with oral presentations and/or writing are strongly encouraged to get help from UAF Department of Communication’s Speaking Center (907.474.5470, speak@uaf.edu) and/or UAF English’s Department’s Writing Center (907.474.5314, Gruening 8th floor); CTC’s Learning Center (604 Barnette Street, 907.455.2860)

Notice of Non-discrimination: UA is an AA/EO employer and educational institution and prohibits illegal discrimination against any individual: www.alaska.edu/titleIXcompliance/nondiscrimination.

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