Member Since 2004
Dalia Kirschbaum
Director of the Earth Sciences Division, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Professional Experience
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Director of the Earth Sciences Division
2022 - Present
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Research Physical Scientist
2011 - 2022
Education
Doctorate
2009
Honors & Awards
Joanne Simpson Medal
Received December 2023
Citation
Dalia began her research journey in the early 2000s when the possibility of having global and high-frequency observations of precipitation data was becoming very real with the planning of the Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission built on the success of the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM). There is a unique Joanne Simpson connection here with TRMM and GPM. In 1988, Dr. Simpson published with very clear foresight a paper titled “A Proposed Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) Satellite.” According to Dr. Simpson, TRMM was very much needed for the scientific community “to determine the distribution and variability of precipitation and latent-heat release.” Fast-forward to 2014; Dalia went on to represent the GPM mission as deputy project scientist and served as a disaster response coordinator for NASA.
Dalia has led the development of a suite of innovative and societally critical products for landslide hazard assessment that require precipitation estimates as a key input. Dalia’s response to this global menace of landslides wasn’t just improving our scientific understanding of landslides; she actually went on to gift the world the Landslide Hazard Assessment for Situational Awareness (LHASA) model as a tangible and publicly available solution for the most vulnerable regions.
Dalia has led international efforts to encourage sharing of remote sensing data and landslide inventories. This includes her contribution as a founding member of the LandAware international consortium on landslide early-warning systems (LEWS) and working as a co-chair of the LandAware LEWS Data Working Group. Dalia coordinated with other leading landslides researchers to lead the Landslide Pilot for the Committee on Earth Observing Satellites (CEOS) Disaster Working Group. From 2020 to 2022, she served as the president of AGU’s Natural Hazards section.
Dalia is also an outstanding communicator of science for outreach. In celebration of the 50th anniversary of Earth Day in 2020 (when COVID-19 was still raging), she unleashed a wide array of multimedia and communication products on GPM. Looking back, this is what I wrote to NASA upper management about Dalia’s impact:
“Challenges never stopped NASA from getting to the moon. Similarly, the pandemic hasn’t stopped Dalia’s team @ NASA from creating timely and user-ready educational content that will inspire a generation to solve more problems… I hope Dalia can keep doing what she is doing for eternity.”
On behalf of the nominating team (Christa Peters-Lidard, Marshall Shepherd, George Huffman and myself), congratulations, Dalia, on winning this richly deserved award!
— Faisal Hossain
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
Dalia has led the development of a suite of innovative and societally critical products for landslide hazard assessment that require precipitation estimates as a key input. Dalia’s response to this global menace of landslides wasn’t just improving our scientific understanding of landslides; she actually went on to gift the world the Landslide Hazard Assessment for Situational Awareness (LHASA) model as a tangible and publicly available solution for the most vulnerable regions.
Dalia has led international efforts to encourage sharing of remote sensing data and landslide inventories. This includes her contribution as a founding member of the LandAware international consortium on landslide early-warning systems (LEWS) and working as a co-chair of the LandAware LEWS Data Working Group. Dalia coordinated with other leading landslides researchers to lead the Landslide Pilot for the Committee on Earth Observing Satellites (CEOS) Disaster Working Group. From 2020 to 2022, she served as the president of AGU’s Natural Hazards section.
Dalia is also an outstanding communicator of science for outreach. In celebration of the 50th anniversary of Earth Day in 2020 (when COVID-19 was still raging), she unleashed a wide array of multimedia and communication products on GPM. Looking back, this is what I wrote to NASA upper management about Dalia’s impact:
“Challenges never stopped NASA from getting to the moon. Similarly, the pandemic hasn’t stopped Dalia’s team @ NASA from creating timely and user-ready educational content that will inspire a generation to solve more problems… I hope Dalia can keep doing what she is doing for eternity.”
On behalf of the nominating team (Christa Peters-Lidard, Marshall Shepherd, George Huffman and myself), congratulations, Dalia, on winning this richly deserved award!
— Faisal Hossain
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
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Union Fellow
Received December 2023
Publications
Landslide Hazard Is Projected to Increase Across High Mountain Asia
High Mountain Asia has long been known as a hotspot for landslide risk, and studies have suggested that landslide hazard is likely to increase in t...
October 03, 2024
A Scalable Framework for Post Fire Debris Flow Hazard Assess...
September 23, 2022
Ensemble Representation of Satellite Precipitation Uncertain...
August 15, 2022
Landslide Hazard and Exposure Modelling in Data‐Poor Regions...
February 02, 2021
Changes in Extreme Precipitation and Landslides Over High Mo...
February 12, 2020
AGU Abstracts
Satellite based precipitation estimation in orographic regions within the southwestern United States
AGU 2024
hydrology | 11 december 2024
Jessica R. Sutton, Thomas Stanley, Elijah D. Orlan...
Predicting precipitation-induced landslides requires accurate estimation of orographic precipitation. Many research studies have been done to estimate...
View Abstract
NASA's High Mountain Asia Team (HiMAT): Advancing Understanding of Historical and Future Changes in High Mountain Asia
AGU 2024
global environmental change | 10 december 2024
Summer Rupper, Lauren C. Andrews, Manuela Girotto,...
NASA's High Mountain Asia Team (HiMAT) is a collaborative group composed of 13 funded research teams. HiMAT's primary objectives are to assess and pro...
View Abstract
Unravelling the role of global and downscaled rainfall forecasts in landslide hazard prediction over the Lower Mekong Region
AGU 2024
global environmental change | 10 december 2024
Nishan Kumar Biswas, Thomas Stanley, Dalia Kirschb...
The objective of this study is to build a robust, cloud computing and machine learning-based framework to provide landslide hazard forecasting over th...
View Abstract
Volunteer Experience
2023 - 2024
Immediate Past President
Natural Hazards Executive Committee
2022 - 2022
Member
Natural Hazards Fellows Committee
2021 - 2022
President
Natural Hazards Executive Committee
Check out all of Dalia Kirschbaum’s AGU Research!
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