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Charles E. Miller

Researcher at California Institute of Technology

Publications -  263
Citations -  11829

Charles E. Miller is an academic researcher from California Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Arctic & Permafrost. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 229 publications receiving 9593 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles E. Miller include College of William & Mary & Haverford College.

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Assessing accuracy and precision for space-based measurements of carbon dioxide: An associated statistical methodology revisited

TL;DR: In this paper, the intrinsic discrepancy and relation between the retrieval error for a nonzero-variate CO_2 state and that for a zero−variate one were investigated.

Error and Uncertainty Degrade Topographic Corrections of Remotely Sensed Data

TL;DR: In this article , a comparison of global elevation models with locally available fine-scale DEMs showed that calculations with the global products consistently underestimate the cosine of the solar angle and underrepresent shadows.
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Quantifying Northern High Latitude Gross Primary Productivity (GPP) Using Carbonyl Sulfide (OCS)

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors optimize the OCS plant uptake fluxes across the northern high latitude (NHL) by fitting atmospheric concentration simulation with the GEOS-CHEM global transport model to the aircraft profiles acquired over Alaska during NASA's Carbon in Arctic Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment (2012-2015).
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The Carbon Balance Observatory (CARBO) instrument for remote sensing of greenhouse gases from space

TL;DR: CARBO as mentioned in this paper is a wide-swath mapping, low Earth orbit (LEO) new generation of instruments that expands on the ground-breaking CO2 and Solar Induced Fluorescence (SIF) measurements pioneered by the Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO-2/3) by adding CH4 and CO detection.
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The ν1and ν2Bands of FNO2

TL;DR: In this article, high-resolution infrared spectra of the stronga-type absorptions corresponding to the ν1(ν0∼ 1310.75 cm−1) and ν2(ν 0= 821.9387 cm− 1) bands of FNO2 have been analyzed.