Environmental Monitoring & Remote SensingDifferential absorption LIDAR for remote sensing of CO2 developed at MSU by the K. Repasky lab.
Researchers in ERI have developed and deployed systems to monitor energy resource development and utilization.  Monitoring systems / methods include Differential Absorption Lidar (DIAL), hyperspectral, multispectral and infrared imaging, proton transfer mass spectrometry, and eddy covariance. Investigators also use satellite imaging datasets in addition to ground and airborne systems developed at MSU.  
Differential absorption LIDAR for remote sensing of CO2 developed at MSU by the K. Repasky lab.Eddy covariance station at field site in north central MontanaCollecting baseline CO2 soil gas flux near the proposed CO2 injection well.Collecting well water samples for lab analysis of baseline water chemistry of the shallow subsurface in the Kevin Dome project area.Collecting surface water for lab analysis in the Kevin Dome project area.

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Researchers

Andrew Laskowski

Andrew Laskowski is an assistant professor in the Earth Sciences Department and is a structural geologist with expertise in continental tectonics, deformation of the Earth’s crust, and relationships between geologic structure and economic resources. Dr. Laskowski is interested in the tectonic processes that create and destroy mountain belts. His research integrates geologic mapping and structural analysis with detrital and igneous U-Pb geochronology, (U-Th)/He thermochronology, and metamorphic petrology to test and/or create tectonic models. He is involved in field-based research focused on extension dynamics, continental subduction, and the suturing process in the western United States and southern Tibet (Xizang), China. Dr. Laswoski is also involved in research that applies detrital zircon geochronology to test provenance, determine maximum depositional ages, and track changes in the geochemistry of magmatism throughout the orogenic cycle.

W. Berk Knighton

Berk Knighton is a Research Professor in the Chemistry and Biochemistry Department. He has been actively involved in the development and application of chemical ionization mass spectrometry for nearly 20 years. That interest continues today and is primarily focused on using drift tube reaction mass spectrometry for the quantification of trace level volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions from a wide variety of natural and anthropogenic sources.

Dr. Knighton can be reached at 406-994-5419 or walter.knighton@montana.edu.

Website: http://www.chemistry.montana.edu/people/knighton-berk.html
Scott Powell

Scott Powell is an assistant professor in the Land Resources and Environmental Services Department. Research in our group seeks to integrate geospatial data and tools (remote sensing, GIS, and GPS) to develop monitoring systems that characterize landscape and vegetation patterns to improve understanding of ecosystem processes and drivers. Our research contributes to the development of monitoring systems at a variety of scales (from site to continental) and across a variety of applications across the broad field of environmental science.

Dr. Powell can be reached at 406-994-5017 or spowell@montana.edu.

Website: http://www.montana.edu/spowell/index.html

Kevin Repasky

Kevin Repasky is an associate professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department and an affiliate assistant professor in the Physics Department. His areas of expertise include laser research and development, laser remote sensing, electro-optics, feedback and control, and optical technology development for communications.

Dr. Repasky can be reached at 406-994-6082 or repasky@montana.edu.

Website: http://www.montana.edu/krepasky/
Joseph Shaw

Joe Shaw is a professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department. He is also the Director of the Optical Technology Center. Dr. Shaw designs, builds, and calibrates optical remote sensing systems and uses them to explore the natural Earth environment. From infrared imaging of clouds to laser detection of fish, optical remote sensing helps answer intriguing scientific questions while providing fascinating engineering challenges.

Dr. Shaw can be reached at 406-994-7261or jshaw@montana.edu.

Website: http://www.montana.edu/jshaw/index.html
Paul C. Stoy

Paul Stoy is an assistant professor in the Land Resources and Environmental Sciences Department. His research interests are surface-atmosphere exchange of water, energy, and trace gases with an emphasis on plot scale measurements and regional and global scale synthesis. Specific interests including quantifying the impacts of land use change and climate change on the surface energy balance, the carbon cycle, and hydrology in temperate, boreal, and arctic ecosystems.

Dr. Stoy can be reached at 406-994-5927 or paul.stoy@montana.edu.

Website: http://landresources.montana.edu/dept/faculty/stoy-p.html