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个人简介
As a student, he concentrated on topics related to tropical climate variability including El Nino/Southern Oscillation, monsoons, tropical cyclones and large-scale Atlantic climatology. The focus of his more recent studies, including his postdoctoral work, has been on observational aspects of hurricane structure and intensity variations and prediction. Much of that work has led to the development of forecast applications that have been transferred to operations at the NESDIS, the National Hurricane Center, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center, and tropical cyclone warning centers worldwide. These efforts have led to many awards. In 2004, he received the NOAA David Johnson Award for basic research for improving the understanding of tropical phenomenon and predicting tropical cyclone intensity, accompanied by exemplary transfer of the results into operational products. He has also been awarded Department of Commerce Bronze Medals in 2007, 2010, and 2012, was a member of a team that received the Colorado Governor’s Award for High Impact Research in 2012 and in 2014 was recognized for his support of JTWC operations.
His PhD concentrated on tropical climate variability including El Nino/Southern Oscillation, monsoons, tropical cyclones and large-scale Atlantic climatology. Since that time, most of his research has dealt with observational aspects of hurricane structure and intensity variations and prediction. That work has led to the development of many forecast applications that have been transferred to operations at the NESDIS, the National Hurricane Center, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center, and tropical cyclone warning centers worldwide. These efforts have led to many awards including the NOAA David Johnson Award (2004), Department of Commerce Bronze Medals (2007, 2010, 2012), the Colorado Governor's Award for High Impact Research in (team member, 2012) and recognition for the best paper in STAR (2016).
Current applied research interests are focused on the utilization of satellite and other observations to improve scientific understanding, diagnosis and forecasting capabilities of tropical cyclone genesis and structure change, the development and documentation of operational tropical cyclone forecasting techniques, the transfer of such techniques to the operational setting. Existing scientific endeavors have been aimed at understanding the various types of tropical vorticies their formation, maintenance, and lifecycles and the occasional foray into inter-annual climate variations. Since 1991, he has published more than 80 articles on tropical cyclones, forecast techniques, mesoscale meteorology and tropical climatology in the refereed literature.
His PhD concentrated on tropical climate variability including El Nino/Southern Oscillation, monsoons, tropical cyclones and large-scale Atlantic climatology. Since that time, most of his research has dealt with observational aspects of hurricane structure and intensity variations and prediction. That work has led to the development of many forecast applications that have been transferred to operations at the NESDIS, the National Hurricane Center, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center, and tropical cyclone warning centers worldwide. These efforts have led to many awards including the NOAA David Johnson Award (2004), Department of Commerce Bronze Medals (2007, 2010, 2012), the Colorado Governor's Award for High Impact Research in (team member, 2012) and recognition for the best paper in STAR (2016).
Current applied research interests are focused on the utilization of satellite and other observations to improve scientific understanding, diagnosis and forecasting capabilities of tropical cyclone genesis and structure change, the development and documentation of operational tropical cyclone forecasting techniques, the transfer of such techniques to the operational setting. Existing scientific endeavors have been aimed at understanding the various types of tropical vorticies their formation, maintenance, and lifecycles and the occasional foray into inter-annual climate variations. Since 1991, he has published more than 80 articles on tropical cyclones, forecast techniques, mesoscale meteorology and tropical climatology in the refereed literature.
研究兴趣
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MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEWno. 1 (2024): 319-343
WEATHER AND FORECASTINGno. 2 (2024): 333-349
arxiv(2024)
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SURVEYS IN GEOPHYSICSno. 5 (2023): 1447-1448
WEATHER AND FORECASTINGno. 12 (2023): 2631-2640
Tropical Cyclone Research and Reviewno. 1 (2023): 30-49
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Galina Chirokova,John a. Knaff,Michael j. Brennan, Robert t. Demaria, Monica Bozeman, Stephanie n. Stevenson, John l. Beven,Eric s. Blake,Alan Brammer, James w. Darlow,Mark Demaria,Steven d. Miller,
WEATHER AND FORECASTINGno. 12 (2023): 2527-2550
WEATHER AND FORECASTINGno. 9 (2023): 1661-1671
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WEATHER AND FORECASTINGno. 7 (2023): 1209-1227
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