Seminars
-
Seminar by Dr. Ingo Bethke — Atmospheric circulation key driver of observed regional sea level change
KST 10:30 – 11:30 | 1010 (Jasmin) – Integrated mechanical engineering building
Anthropogenic ocean warming and land ice melting is certain to cause regional sea level changes with societal impacts. Regional trends from climate models, however, poorly match the 30-year satellite record, […]
-
Seminar by Dr. Filippa Fransner — Phytoplankton Predictability in NorCPM1
KST 10:30 – 11:30 | 1010 (Jasmin) – Integrated mechanical engineering building
Phytoplankton dynamics has been shown to be predictable up to three years ahead in tropical and subtropical seas, while several studies indicate less predictability at higher latitudes. Whether this low […]
-
Online seminar by Dr. Valerio Lembo — Meridional heat transports and the general circulation: from global scale to extremes
KST 17:00 – 18:00 | Join us online click here
Poleward meridional heat transports are the fundamental driver of the inhomogeneous solar radiation absorption by the Earth’s climate system that sets the general circulation of the atmosphere and ocean in […]
-
Seminar by Prof. Niklas Schneider — A Plea for the Study of Spiciness
KST 10:00 – 11:00 | 1010 (Jasmin) – Integrated mechanical engineering building
The evolution of thermal anomalies in the ocean are key to climate fluctuations such as El Nino and longer term decadal variability. Away from the surface, the propagation of thermal […]
-
Seminar by Dr. Ja-Myung Kim — Response of natural phytoplankton assemblage to two emerging environmental treats (ocean acidification and warming) using controlled mesocosm experiments
KST 15:00 – 16:00 | 1010 (Jasmin) – Integrated mechanical engineering building
A third of CO2 released by burning fossil fuels since the industrial revolution has ended up in the ocean. The absorbed CO2 subsequently lowers the pH level, and the temperature of the […]
-
Online seminar by Prof. Jennifer Catto — Midlatitude weather systems and associated hazards in present and future climate
KST 17:00 – 18:00 | Join us online click here
Midlatitude weather systems, such as extratropical cyclones, fronts, and their embedded thunderstorms are vital for the day-to-day variability of precipitation and winds. We have used a number of objective techniques to […]
-
Seminar by Prof. Adrian McDonald — An unexplored relationship between wet day frequency and precipitation intensity distributions
KST 14:00 – 15:00 | 1010 (Jasmin) – Integrated mechanical engineering building
This presentation details work within my group which shows that where it rains more often, it also rains harder. When grouping precipitation into regions of similar wet day frequency, regardless […]
-
Seminar by Prof. Malte Stuecker — The Climate Trio: stochastic climate variability, seasonal cycle, and El Niño
KST 16:30 – 17:30 | 1010 (Jasmin) – Integrated mechanical engineering building
Climate variability has distinct spatial patterns with the strongest signal of sea surface temperature (SST) variance residing in the tropical Pacific. This interannual climate phenomenon, the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), […]