Tag: Atmospheric Chemistry and Carbon

ESSIC/CISESS Lightning Team Attend Stormchaser Convention

On Oct. 26th, the CISESS Lightning Team— ESSIC/CISESS scientists Mason Quick, Jonathan Wynn Smith, and Daile Zhang— went to the Mid-Atlantic ChaserCon in Richmond, Virginia.  The conference was a forum for National Weather Service meteorologists, broadcast meteorologists, storm chasers and other professional and amateur meteorologists across the Mid-Atlantic area to network and discuss local severe storms. During the event, meteorologists promoted ideas to raise public awareness of severe …

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ESSIC/CISESS Scientists Attend Joint Satellite Conference

Last month, NOAA/AMS/EUMETSAT held their annual Joint Satellite Conference in Boston, Massachusetts. ESSIC/CISESS had a large contingent of scientists at the meeting presenting posters and giving talks, listed below. ESSIC scientists’ talks included:

  • Scott Rudlosky (SCSB/STAR/NESDIS/NOAA) on Geostationary Lightning Mapper Products
  • Hu Yang on Lunar Calibration for Space Borne Microwave Radiometers
  • Jingjing Peng on Evaluation of JPSS VIIRS Albedo Estimates against MODIS, APP-x, and

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Farquhar Named AGU Fellow

Professor James Farquhar of the University of Maryland (UMD) Department of Geology and the Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center (ESSIC) has been named a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union (AGU). AGU Fellows are recognized for their scientific eminence in the Earth and space sciences. Farquhar joins several ESSIC scientists who have received this honor, including Drs. Zhanqing Li and Dorothy Hall. The newest of UMD’s AGU Fellows, Farquhar’s research focuses on sulfur isotope …

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Nicely and Co-authors Develop New Method to Gauge Atmosphere’s Ability to Clear Methane

Assistant Research Scientist Julie Nicely was the second author on a recent publication in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that outlines a way to quantify global hydroxyl radical (OH), a central oxidizing agent that can destroy hazardous air pollutants such as methane. The authors of the piece, titled “Mapping hydroxyl variability throughout the global remote troposphere via synthesis of airborne and satellite formaldehyde observations”, have developed a …

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Indian Ocean is “Canary in the Coal Mine” for Climate Change

Early this month, India’s coastline was struck by Cyclone Fani, one of the strongest cyclones India has experienced in 20 years, according to a press release by India’s Meteorological Department.  Fani, pronounced “Foni”, brought winds estimated to be 152 mph, the strength of a Category 4 hurricane, and intense rainfall that threatened flooding and landslides. The impact of Cyclone Fani was devastating.  At the time of this article’s publication, …

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James Farquhar Elected Into National Academy of Sciences

Thursday, 2 May 2019

Professor James Farquhar of the University of Maryland (UMD) Department of Geology and the Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center (ESSIC), has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences (NAS).  The appointment is often considered as one of the more significant honors bestowed upon researchers in recognition of their scientific achievement.

“I am highly honored to be elected to the National Academy of Sciences,” said Farquhar in a recent CMNS press release. “I am very

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Farquhar Develops Method to Analyze History of Climate-Altering Volcano Eruptions

ESSIC / Geology Professor James Farquhar recently co-authored a new paper, “2600 years of stratospheric volcanism through sulfate isotopes,” in Nature Communications.  Using 2,600 years’ worth of records contained in ice cores from Antarctica, Farquhar and his colleagues developed a new isotopic method to analyze the recent history of large stratospheric volcanic eruptions. By understanding the history of these big eruptions, researchers can begin to place short cooling episodes and …

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