Spring 2026 Workshops

Mar 1, 2026ยท
Rasma Ormane
Rasma Ormane
Pieter De Vis
Pieter De Vis
ยท 2 min read

CoMet has a booked and busy Spring 2026 - with five workshops planned across the season.

These sessions are delivered with our partners across academic and professional programmes, more information about each organisation/event is linked below.

For any events where public registration is available, we will post the details closer to the date!


1. Imperial College London

๐Ÿ—“ Thursday 19th March

๐Ÿ“ Imperial College London (London, UK)

imperial


2. Wavelength Conference 2026

๐Ÿ—“ When: Thursday 9th April

๐Ÿ“ Where: National Physical Laboratory (Teddington, UK)

๐Ÿ”— More information: https://rspsoc.org.uk/

wavelength


3. ARIA

๐Ÿ—“ When: Wednesday 15th April

๐Ÿ“ Where: National Physical Laboratory (Teddington, UK)

๐Ÿ”— More information: https://aria.org.uk/

aria


4. Pangeos

๐Ÿ—“ When: Wednesday 23rd April

๐Ÿ“ Where: Online

๐Ÿ”— More information: https://pangeos.eu/

pangeos


5. Met4EO

๐Ÿ—“ When: 20th-22nd May

๐Ÿ“ Where: National Physical Laboratory (Teddington, UK)

๐Ÿ”— More information: https://www.qa4eo.org/met4eo/

met4eo


๐Ÿ—ธ In these tutorial, we will:

  • Introduce the key concepts behind metrological uncertainty propagation
  • Walk through the core components of the toolkit:
    • punpy โ€“ for robust uncertainty propagation with support for error-correlation structures
    • obsarray โ€“ for managing and storing uncertainty metadata in a self-describing, traceable format
  • Work through a sensor calibration example using Google Colab-based Jupyter notebooks

Weโ€™ll also provide support to get you started using CoMet with your own example use-case if time permits โ€” so feel free to bring a Python example from your work involving measurement uncertainty.

Whether you’re working in satellite Cal/Val, EO data processing, or any other measurement-driven field, this session will help you implement rigorous, traceable uncertainty handling in your processing chains.

๐Ÿ—ธ No installation is required beforehand โ€“ all examples will run in Google Colab!

Rasma Ormane
Authors
Rasma Ormane
Scientist, NPL
Rasma’s work aims to research and communicate relevant developments in the field of climate and earth observations.
Pieter De Vis
Authors
Pieter De Vis
Senior Scientist, NPL
Pieter works in the Climate and Earth Observation Group at the UK’s National Physical Laboratory. His expertise lies in atmospheric correction, the propagation of uncertainties through a measurement function, and uncertainties in model fitting.