Previous events - Page 10
Upcoming seminar in meteorology and oceanography:
Speaker: Dr. Barbara Scarnato
Title: How to account for ‘more realistic’ aerosol properties in climate models and remote sensing retrievals?
Upcoming short presentation from MSc/PhD students in meteorology and oceanography:
Speaker: Ada Gjermundsen
Title: The buoyancy-driven ocean circulation with realistic bathymetry (EGU talk)
Supervisor: Joe LaCasce
Upcoming short presentation from MSc/PhD students in meteorology and oceanography:
Speaker: Helle Kristine Fuhr
Title: Partition between barotropic and baroclinic modes in the ocean
Supervisor: Joe LaCasce
Upcoming short presentation from MSc/PhD students in meteorology and oceanography:
Speaker: Christine Smith-Johnsen
Title: The secondary ozone layer during the southern hemispheric major stratospheric warming
Supervisor: Yvan Orsolini and Frode Stordal
Upcoming short presentation from MSc/PhD students in meteorology and oceanography:
Speaker: Marta Trodahl
Title: Eddy characteristics in the Subarctic Seas, and the potential eddy generation mechanisms
Supervisor: Pål Erik Isachsen
Upcoming short presentation from MSc/PhD students in meteorology and oceanography:
Speaker: Eivind Grøtting Wærsted
Title: Timescales of surface-to-stratosphere transport in the tropics, using FLEXPART
Supervisor: Kirstin Krüger
Upcoming short presentation from MSc/PhD students in meteorology and oceanography:
Speaker: Andreas Vogel
Title: Volcanic ash
Upcoming seminar in meteorology and oceanography:
Speaker: Graham Feingold (NOAA, Boulder)
Title: Two-way transitions between closed and open cellular shallow convection
Upcoming seminar in meteorology and oceanography:
Speaker: Rodrigo Caballero (Univ. Stockholm)
Title: Dynamics and sensitivity of very warm climates
Upcoming seminar in meteorology and oceanography:
Speaker: Gwendal Riviere (LMD, Paris)
Title: Dynamical and moist processes governing the motion of mid-latitude surface cyclones
Harold Mc Innes ved Institutt for geofag vil forsvare sin avhandling for graden ph.d.: An observation-based study of Arctic high-impact weather systems.