[Eoas-seminar] COAPS Short Seminar Series - Monday at 11:00
eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu
eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu
Wed Jun 2 14:24:29 EDT 2021
These talks are usually scheduled for the first Monday of each month.
The first talk normally starts at 11:00AM. Each talk is typically 12
minutes long (similar to many professional meetings), with 8 minutes for
questions.
These talks will be presented via Zoom, with the following connection
information:
https://fsu.zoom.us/j/98491660566?pwd=NzBxNzN4LzdsbSs4R3B6RzliOGhhdz09
Meeting ID: 984 9166 0566
Passcode: 478314
June 7th:
Jayasankar Chempampadam Balasubramann: Climate Change Projections Over
India Through Dynamical Downscaling Using Very High-resolution Regional
Climate Model
Description: An efficient very high-resolution dynamical downscaling
model, a regional climate model (WRF-ARW) one-way nested into skillful
general circulation model (NCAR-CCSM4), is configured and implemented to
simulate Indian summer monsoon (ISM) and to obtain reliable climate
change projection over India and its orographic west coast. The analysis
of the projected changes in mean and extreme events over India and
ecologically sensitive, densely populated west coast were carried out
after the evaluation of the present-day simulation of ISM by this
high-resolution RCM. I will be discussing our findings on the projected
changes in mean and extremes of ISM and the undelaying mechanism.
Renee Richardson: /A Newly Developed Form Drag Derived from Sea Spray
Influenced Surface Wind Stress at Hurricane Force Winds/
Description: Drag, or momentum transfer, at the air-sea interface is one
of the major physical processes impacting hurricane intensity. Sea spray
is suspected of playing a major role on the drag under hurricane wind
conditions. In this study, we investigate the impact of a newly
parameterized sea spray generation mechanism on drag, as well as total
surface stress, under hurricane force winds. I will be discussing our
findings on the spray influenced surface stresses.
Xiaobiao Xu: On the spatial variability of the sea surface height
wavenumber spectra in the Atlantic Ocean
Description: This study used a series of high-resolution (1/50 deg)
Atlantic simulations to examine the impacts of (internal) tides,
high-resolution bathymetry, as well as high-frequency atmospheric
forcing on sea surface height wavenumber spectra in the Atlantic Ocean.
The results show that the inclusion of internal tides flattened the
spectra slope in the equatorial region, one of the most striking
features in the observed pattern of the spectra slope distribution.
July 12th:
Fred Soster: TBA
Dmitry Dukhovskoy: TBA
TBA: TBA
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