ITPA Newsletter Vol. 2 No 1, January 7-11, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


Hello, 

welcome to the first issue of Volume 2; a Happy New Year to all of you. Classes are still out of session, but we have some exciting news this week. One of our faculty members has made history, because a mountain Ridge in Antarctica will bear his name: Bob de Zafra. Here is how the United States board on Geographic names describes the newly named DeZafra Ridge 79o17’S, 157o27’E:

A narrow but prominent rock ridge, 5 miles long, located in the Cook Mountains, Antarctica. The ridge is 2.5 miles West of Fault Bluff and rises 350 m above the ice surface North of the Longhurst Plateau. Named after Robert L. de Zafra, Professor of Physics, State University of New York, Stony Brook, whose research at the South Pole and McMurdo Sound provided breakthrough contributions to understanding the formation of the Antarctic ozone hole.

More information can be found at http://geonames.usgs.gov.

Who would think that Bob DeZafra is retired? He and and his former student/recent postdoc Giovanni Muscari leave on Jan 9th for Thule, Greenland (77.5N, 69.2W) for a field campaign that will last two months; Bob will be back at the end of January. This campaign is organized in collaboration with the italian Lidar group of the University of Rome “La Sapienza” led by Giorgio Fiocco. While the Stony Brook mm-wave spectrometer will measure the mixing ratio of several chemical species, primarily HNO3, O3, N2O, and CO, in the range 18-50 km, the Lidar from the university of Rome will carry out concurrent measurements of the concentration and physical state (liquid vs solid) of stratospheric aerosol and PSC particles. This should provide an exciting data set to study PSC formation and evolution as HNO3 is removed from the gas-phase and contributes to the growth of PSC particles. Giovanni will be back in mid-March and will give you an update on how the campaign went.

ITPA faculty John Mak has officially started his sabbatical visit to the Laboratoire du Glaciologie et Geophysique de l’Environnement (LGGE), in France. During the visit, he will collaborate with France researchers to determine the isotopic composition of trace gas species trapped in ice cores. A greeting card from him in France to ITPA members is in Gina’s office.

The American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting will be held in Orlando, Florida this month. The opening night reception will take place in the Orange County Convention Center, Exhibit Hall 4 on Saturday, January 12 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. ITPA will have a table in the Exhibit Hall displaying undergraduate, graduate, and postdoc opportunities in atmospheric sciences at Stony Brook. ITPA graduate student Jingbo Wu will be available for questions. Several ITPA faculty members will attend the meeting. More information will be posted in the next newsletter.

Have a nice week,

Petra Udelhofen

 


THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

January 7-11, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR no seminar EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium no seminar EN120
2:00 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

NEW GRADUATE COURSE IN SPRING 2002

Synoptic and Mesoscale Meteorology (MAR597-4 credits) Spring 2002, lecture and lab: M and W 12:50-3:15

Prerequisite: Theoretical. Met II (dynamics) or permission This course will investigate the structure and evolution of mid-latitude cyclones, fronts, convective systems, coastal, and orographic phenomena. In lab, the relevant dynamics of representative cases will be explored using observations and numerical model output. All students are required to complete a synoptic/mesoscale research project that is hopefully related to his/her thesis or research interest (cyclone structure in GCM’s, synoptic flow predictability, tropical convection influence on mid-latitude flow, gravity waves and convection, landfalling cyclones, orographic precipitation, etc…).

Please let Brian Colle know if you have any questions.

 


OPPORTUNITIES


STUDENTS 

Scholarships

Students Type of Scholarship Deadline Information
High School Seniors AMS/Industry Minority Scholarships February 22, 2002 http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS
College Sophomores AMS/Industry Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Juniors AMS Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Seniors AMS/Industry/Government Graduate Fellowships February 15, 2002
Graduate Students AMS Graduate History of Science Fellowship February 15, 2002

Conferences

Conference Name Dates Further Information
First Annual Student Conference January 12-13, 2002 http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS

POSTDOCTORAL Scholarships

Title Sponsor Deadline Further Information
NOAA Postdoctoral Program in Climate and Global Change University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) January 15, 2002 http://fundingopps.cos.com/cgi-bin/getRec?id=3631

 

 


 

ITPA Bulletin Board Updates 
Full Details on Board Next to Endeavour Hall 114

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedTue, Jan 15, 2002

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 2 No 2, January 14-18, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


Hello everybody, 

good news for ITPA students, all student phones are up and running. Gina will soon distribute the graduate student phone directory to all members of ITPA. Mr. Xiaosong Yang, a former ITPA graduate student, who transferred one year ago to Cornell University, has decided to return to our program. He will join his old classmates in ITPA starting in January just in time for spring classes 2002.

Spring classes start in about a week. Whilst most of you may be busy preparing for the upcoming classes, a few ITPA members are in Florida this week and attend 82nd meeting of the American Meteorological Society. Here are the ITPA highlights :

On Wednesday at 1:30 pm, Duane Waliser will be presenting Potential Predictability of the Madden-Julian Oscillation in the Joint Session 7 of the 13th Symposium on Global Change and Climate Variations and the Symposium on Observations, Data Assimilation, and Probabilistic Prediction. Minghua Zhang will present the invited paper on Cloud Structure Anomalies over the Tropical Pacific during the 1997/98 El Nino:, co-authors, R. D. Cess, M. H. Zhang, P. H. Wang and B. A. Wielicki in the Session 9 of the 13th Symposium on Global Change and Climate Variations on Tuesday at 4pm. On Thurday at 1:45pm, Edmund Chang will speak on Interdecadal variations in the northern hemisphere storm tracks in the 13th Symposium on Global Change and Climate Variations. In addition, he is a co-author on the paper entitled Interdecadal storm track variations as seen in NCEP/NCAR reanalysis data and radiosonde observations with Nili Harnik, which will be presented in the Symposium on Observations, Data Assimilation, and Probabilistic Prediction, Wednesday at 2pm.

A detailed program may be found at http://ams.confex.com/ams/annual2002/13GlobClim/. The AMS meeting is held between January 13-17 in Orlando, FL.

At the January 2002 meeting of the Council of the American Meteorological Society, Marv Geller was elected by the Council to be a member of the AMS Executive Committee.

We are pleased to hear that Marvin Geller has been recently designated a lifetime National Associate of the National Academies. Marv received a letter from Bruce Alberts, President of the National Academy of Sciences and Chair of the National Research Council which stated “In recognion of extraordinary service to the National Academies in its role as advisor in matters of science, engineering, and health, by authority of the council of the National Academy of Sciences and the Governing Board of the National Research Council Marvin A. Geller is hereby designated a lifetime National Associate of the National Academies.” The certificate is dated December 2001. This is the first group to be so designated. Congratulations, Marv.

Enjoy the week,

Petra Udelhofen

 


THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

January 14-18, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR no seminar EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium no seminar EN120
2:00 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

NEW GRADUATE COURSE IN SPRING 2002

Synoptic and Mesoscale Meteorology (MAR597-4 credits) Spring 2002, lecture and lab: M and W 12:50-3:15

Prerequisite: Theoretical. Met II (dynamics) or permission This course will investigate the structure and evolution of mid-latitude cyclones, fronts, convective systems, coastal, and orographic phenomena. In lab, the relevant dynamics of representative cases will be explored using observations and numerical model output. All students are required to complete a synoptic/mesoscale research project that is hopefully related to his/her thesis or research interest (cyclone structure in GCM’s, synoptic flow predictability, tropical convection influence on mid-latitude flow, gravity waves and convection, landfalling cyclones, orographic precipitation, etc…).

Please let Brian Colle know if you have any questions.

 


OPPORTUNITIES


STUDENTS 

Scholarships

Students Type of Scholarship Deadline Information
High School Seniors AMS/Industry Minority Scholarships February 22, 2002 http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS
College Sophomores AMS/Industry Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Juniors AMS Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Seniors AMS/Industry/Government Graduate Fellowships February 15, 2002
Graduate Students AMS Graduate History of Science Fellowship February 15, 2002

Conferences

Conference Name Dates Further Information
First Annual Student Conference January 12-13, 2002 http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS

POSTDOCTORAL Scholarships

Title Sponsor Deadline Further Information
NOAA Postdoctoral Program in Climate and Global Change University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) January 15, 2002 http://fundingopps.cos.com/cgi-bin/getRec?id=3631

 

 


 

ITPA Bulletin Board Updates 
Full Details on Board Next to Endeavour Hall 114

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedFri, Jan 18, 2002

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 2 No 3, January 21-25, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


Hello everybody, 

At the last week’s Annual Meeting of the American Meteorological Society, Stony Brook alumni Dr. Ramanathan received the most prestigeous award of the society, the Rossby Award. Congratulations, Ram!

Some of the students and also Minghua attended a workshop on tropical waves at NYU November 30th and December 1st. This group likes to get together with anyone else seeking a “meeting report” about that conference. There will be a VERY INFORMAL brown-bag lunch meeting in Endeavour 113, 12p-1:30p, Tues. Jan 22nd (day before classes resume). Bring your lunch. More information is available from David Myers.

Bob Cess and Petra Udelhofen will be in Brussels this week to attend the CERES Science Team Meeting.

The International Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) Open Science Conference will be held 22-26 July 2002 at the Hyatt Regency Waikiki in Honolulu, Hawaii. Abstracts are due before February 1, 2002.

Classes start this week. Enjoy!

Petra Udelhofen

 


THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

January 21-25, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Tuesday 12-1:30pm Informal Meeting NYU Tropical Waves Workshop Meeting Report Discussion EN113
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Land-Atmosphere Interaction Over Complex Terrain: Improving Numerical Simulations of the Atmospheric Boundary Layer Through New Generation of Field Experiments, Speaker: Marc Parlange, Center for Environmental and Applied Fluid Mechanics, John Hopkins University EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium no seminar EN120
2:00 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

NEW GRADUATE COURSE IN SPRING 2002

Synoptic and Mesoscale Meteorology (MAR597-4 credits) Spring 2002, lecture and lab: M and W 12:50-3:15

Prerequisite: Theoretical. Met II (dynamics) or permission This course will investigate the structure and evolution of mid-latitude cyclones, fronts, convective systems, coastal, and orographic phenomena. In lab, the relevant dynamics of representative cases will be explored using observations and numerical model output. All students are required to complete a synoptic/mesoscale research project that is hopefully related to his/her thesis or research interest (cyclone structure in GCM’s, synoptic flow predictability, tropical convection influence on mid-latitude flow, gravity waves and convection, landfalling cyclones, orographic precipitation, etc…).

Please let Brian Colle know if you have any questions.

 


OPPORTUNITIES


STUDENTS 

Scholarships

Students Type of Scholarship Deadline Information
High School Seniors AMS/Industry Minority Scholarships February 22, 2002 http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS
College Sophomores AMS/Industry Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Juniors AMS Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Seniors AMS/Industry/Government Graduate Fellowships February 15, 2002
Graduate Students AMS Graduate History of Science Fellowship February 15, 2002

 


 

ITPA Bulletin Board Updates 
Full Details on Board Next to Endeavour Hall 114

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Jan 28, 2002

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 2 No 4, January 28 – February 2, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


Hello everybody, 

usually our newsletter cover the events from Monday to Friday. This week is an exception, because many of us have volunteered as moderators, science and rules judges, or score and time keepers for the2002 New York Regional Ocean Sciences Bowl on Saturday 02 February 2002. The event is being held at the Student Activities Center (SAC). Go to http://www.NOSB.org to learn more about the competion, or click here if you want to find out the agenda for this Saturday. Registration of teams begins at 7:45 am and the opening remarks at 8:30 am. If you are a volunteer, please arrive no later than 8:00 am. You can park in the University parking garage by the Administration building. Parking is free in the garage on weekends.

Other than the NOSB event, the semester is now in full swing with both TAOS seminar and MSRC colloqium featuring speakers from ITPA faculty. Hope to see you there.

Enjoy the week,

Petra Udelhofen

 


THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

January 28 – February 2, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Dynamic Predictability of the Madden-Julian Oscillation: Implications for Monsoon and Long-Lead Weather Predictions. Speaker: Duane E. Waliser, Associate Professor, Institute for Terrestrial and Planetary Atmospheres, SUNY Stony Brook EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Simulation and Prediction of North American Coastal Weather Using High Resolution Atmospheric Models. Speaker: Brian Colle of SUNY, Stony Brook University. Host: Duane Waliser. Refreshments will be served starting at 12:15 PM. EN120
2:00 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139
Saturday 7:45am-5pm NOSB 2002 New York Regional Ocean Sciences Bowl SAC

 


 

NEW GRADUATE COURSE IN SPRING 2002

Synoptic and Mesoscale Meteorology (MAR597-4 credits) Spring 2002, lecture and lab: M and W 12:50-3:15

Prerequisite: Theoretical. Met II (dynamics) or permission This course will investigate the structure and evolution of mid-latitude cyclones, fronts, convective systems, coastal, and orographic phenomena. In lab, the relevant dynamics of representative cases will be explored using observations and numerical model output. All students are required to complete a synoptic/mesoscale research project that is hopefully related to his/her thesis or research interest (cyclone structure in GCM’s, synoptic flow predictability, tropical convection influence on mid-latitude flow, gravity waves and convection, landfalling cyclones, orographic precipitation, etc…).

Please let Brian Colle know if you have any questions.

 


OPPORTUNITIES


STUDENTS 

Scholarships

Students Type of Scholarship Deadline Information
High School Seniors AMS/Industry Minority Scholarships February 22, 2002 http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS
College Sophomores AMS/Industry Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Juniors AMS Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Seniors AMS/Industry/Government Graduate Fellowships February 15, 2002
Graduate Students AMS Graduate History of Science Fellowship February 15, 2002

 


 

ITPA Bulletin Board Updates 
Full Details on Board Next to Endeavour Hall 114

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedSun, Feb 3, 2002


Vol 2 No 5 February 4 – 8, 2002


Hello everybody,

Welcome to the first issue of the on-line MSRC newsletter SoundingsSoundings will keep you informed about news of MSRC members, features special events and a weekly calendar. With the advent ofSoundings the ITPA newsletter departs.

Did you know…..

The MSRC fleet has a spot on our web-page. Go to the links below to find out about schedules and specifications for the R/V Seawolf and the R/V Pritchard. Fair winds and a following sea….

Vessel page: http://www.msrc.sunysb.edu/~vessels
Seawolf page: http://www.msrc.sunysb.edu/~vessels/Seawolf/seawolf.htm
Pritchard page: http://www.msrc.sunysb.edu/~vessels/Pritchard/Pritchard.htm

Read the latest news about our weather forecasters Brian Colle and Joe Olson at http://newsday.com/news/printedition/longisland/ny-limete302570125jan30.story

Sandy Lucas will run a very basic Introduction to the Macintosh Computer for all interested MSRC students on Tuesday Feb. 5, 2002 – 5:00 PM in Endeavour 120. This 1 hour short course will cover the most very basic things you should know about how to use your Macintosh. You can find the at http://terra.msrc.sunysb.edu/~slucas for more information. Please e-mail Sandy if you would like to attend.

Come check out the first Virtual Career Fair for MA / MS and PhD Students. This on-line event is open to many members of the academic community, including many of the prestigious institutions affiliated with the American Association of Universities. Drop off your resume or look for jobs from February 1-15 at http://www.career.sunysb.edu/students/jobfair/ GOOD LUCK!!!

Don’t forget to let us know what will be happening the following week. We need your input!

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen and Alex Kolker

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

February 4 – 8, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Tuesday 5:00pm MacIntosh Introduction to the MacIntosh Computer, Sandy Lucas EN120
5:00pm Club Meteorology Club Meeting Okubo
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Quantifying Uncertainties in Climate System Properties Using Recent Climate Observations, Speaker: Peter H. Stone Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium New Results from Tracer Studies of advection, dispersion and gas exchange in the ocean and in rivers Speaker: Peter Schlosser, Columbia/LDEO,Host: Nick Fisher EN120
2:00 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 


OPPORTUNITIES


Atmospheric Sciences Scholarships

Students Type of Scholarship Deadline Information
High School Seniors AMS/Industry Minority Scholarships February 22, 2002 http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS
College Sophomores AMS/Industry Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Juniors AMS Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Seniors AMS/Industry/Government Graduate Fellowships February 15, 2002
Graduate Students AMS Graduate History of Science Fellowship February 15, 2002

 

 


 

ITPA Bulletin Board Updates 
Full Details on Board Next to Endeavour Hall 114

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Atmospheric Sciences Faculty Positions

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Feb 11, 2002


Vol 2 No 6 February 11-15, 2002


Hello everybody,

Marv Geller would like to congratulate and thank all of those whose volunteer efforts helped make the New York Regional Ocean Sciences Bowl such a great success on February 2. Special thanks are expressed to Bill Wise and Paula Rose who put in many long hours preparing for this event. The winners were from Mount Sinai and were coached by an MSRC alumni.

Long Island Geology: The 9th Annual Meeting on “The Geology of Long Island and Metropolitan New York” is coming up. This student- friendly event is an opportunity to present results and learn about all things geological in our region. While the website lists the submission date for titles Feb. 1, 2002, our sources indicate that titles may still be submitted. The deadline for abstract submissions in March 1. Seehttp://pbisotopes.ess.sunysb.edu/lig/ and http://pbisotopes.ess.sunysb.edu/lig/Conferences/abstracts_02/call_for_papers.htm.

The son, Yang Li, of a former MSRC student, Xiaohua Yang, has just been named as an Intel Finalist. For those of you who don’t know Intel has a science contest for high school students. Nationwide, 300 students were named as semifinalists and only 40 as finalists. Each finalist is given a $5000 prize and is eligible to compete for a $100,000 grand prize. A number of former Intel winners have received Nobel Prizes or other prestigious awards. Yang Li’s research was on a protein related to Lyme’s disease. Ocean Sciences Meeting

WE NEED YOU!
No, it’s not the US Army searching for inductees. Soundings needs YOU to contribute. Send us a little bit about what’s new at your end of The Center. Have you recently returned from a cruise? A scientific meeting? Are there upcoming meetings you might want others to know about? Is there exciting new equipment you might want others at the Center to know about. Professors: are you looking for a graduate student to work on a new project? (Or visa versa?) Are there social events you might want others at the Center to know about? Please send us your material. In principle, atmospheric related material should be to Petra Udelhofen and Marine Sciences related material should be sent to Alex Kolker. In practice, you can make the choice whom to send it to. Thank you.

Ocean Sciences Meeting

A number of MSRC members will present their research results at the Ocean Sciences Meeting in Honolulu, Hawaii this week. Among them are the Faculties Jackie Collier, Mary Scranton, Gordon Taylor, post-doc Pere Masque, and graduate students Vicki Ferrini, Diane Greenfield, Maria Iabichella, and Melissa Jump. Please find below a list of presentations sorted alphabetically by author. To find out research details click on the respective title.

Astor, Y.M., Muller-Karger, F.E. and M.I. Scranton, Evidence of ventilation events in the Cariaco Basin.

Baker K. M. and J. L. Collier, Development and use of molecular techniques to identify urea-degrading microorganisms.

Ferrini, V.L., and R.D. Flood, 2002. Multibeam imagery and surface sediment distribution of the dynamic inner shelf of the Eel margin, northern California.

Greenfield D I and Londsdale D J, Growth and 14C absorption efficiencies of juvenile hard clams fed diets containing Aureococcus anophagefferens.

Hein, C., G.T. Taylor, M. Iabichella, and M.I. Scranton, Viral Dynamics in the Permanently Anoxic Cariaco Basin.

Iabichella, M., G.T. Taylor, M.I. Scranton, and C. Gomes, Dynamics of Heterotrophic Nanoflagellates (HNAN) in the Anoxic Cariaco Basin, Venezuela.

Jump, M. J. and K. M. Lwiza, Kamazima, Coastal circulation of the southeastern Bering Sea shelf.

Kaseta T. and J. L. Collier, Picocyanobacteria of the Hudson River Estuary, NY.

Masque P., J.K. Cochran, D.J. Hirschberg , A. Winkler, D. Dethleff and D. Hebbeln, Sea ice as a transport agent of radionuclides to the Fram Strait.

Scranton, M.I., G.T. Taylor, Y.M. Astor and F.E. Muller-Karger, Comparison of controls on the structure of the oxic/anoxic interface in the Cariaco Basin and the Black Sea.

Taylor, G.T., M. Iabichella, M.I. Scranton, A. Chistoserdov, Y. Astor, and F. Muller-Karger, Prodigious production by chemoautotrophs in the Cariaco’s suboxic zone: fact or artifact?

Thunell, R., F. Muller-Karger, R. Varela, Y. Astor, M. Scranton, G. Taylor, M. Goni, and E. Tappa, The Cariaco time series study: climate forcing, particle fluxes, and sediment accumulation.

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen and Alex Kolker

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

February 11 – 15, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Tuesday 5:00pm Club Meteorology Club Meeting Okubo
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Downscaling to Inter- and Intraseasonal Precipitation Statistics in Southern Africa Speaker: Willem Landman, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Expedited Trends Analysis and Tidal Wetlands Loss in Nassau and Suffolk CountiesSpeaker: Fred Mushacke, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, Host: Steve Goodbred EN120
2:00 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 


OPPORTUNITIES


Atmospheric Sciences Scholarships

Students Type of Scholarship Deadline Information
High School Seniors AMS/Industry Minority Scholarships February 22, 2002 http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS
College Sophomores AMS/Industry Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Juniors AMS Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Seniors AMS/Industry/Government Graduate Fellowships February 15, 2002
Graduate Students AMS Graduate History of Science Fellowship February 15, 2002

 

 


 

Positions

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Atmospheric Sciences Faculty Positions

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Feb 18, 2002


Vol. 2 No 7 February 18-22, 2002


Hello everybody,

Ocean Sciences participants, how was the conference? We hope you let us know for next week’s issue.

While you were away, several MSRC members were recognized for long service to Stony Brook University. This includes the faculties Bob Cess with 40 years our most senior member and Malcolm Bowman as a close follow-up with 30 years of service. Our most senior staff member is Mae Johnson with 20 years. Congratulations.

It happened some time ago, but we just found out that Malcom Bowman testified at a public hearing before the Pew Oceans Commission last November. On November 29, the Pew Oceans Commission held at public hearing at the American Museum of Natural History’s Hall of Ocean Life. In all, commissioners heard over three hours of public testimony on such issues as polluted runoff, sustainable fishing, and coastal development. Museum president Dr. Ellen Futter welcomed the commission to famous hall, well known for the 96-long replica of a blue whale suspended from the ceiling. Theodore Roosevelt IV began the hearing with a call to extend America’s conservation ethic to the sea. Fred Krupp of Environmental Defense followed with a request for new approaches to protect America’s fisheries, coral reefs, and estuaries. Malcom’s testimony follows that of Gov. George Pataki and Theodore Roosevelt IV. See http://www.pewoceans.org/articles/2001/12/13/pr_22601.asp for more details.

Students, did you know….
that all Stony Brook graduate students qualify for up to $250 per year to attend conferences. If you are presenting your material at a professional conference, then you are eligible for up to $250 from the GSO sponsored Research Access Program. All the paperwork you need to get reimbursed can be found at: http://www.sinc.sunysb.edu/Clubs/gso/RAP/travel.html Be mindful that: 1) you are entitled to $250 per academic year, and not per conference. 2) you must be presenting your work, and not simply attending the conference. (Though you need not be sole or first author). 3) Only grad students who pay fees are eligible, those obtaining fee waivers are not.

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen and Alex Kolker

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

February 18-22, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Tuesday 3:45pm Club Meteorology Club Meeting Okubo
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Climate Forcing by Changing Solar Radiation, Speaker: Judith Lean, Office of Naval Research, Washington, DC EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Biochemical Indicators of Contamination in Fish from the Southeast Coast of Brazil, Speaker: Afonso Bainy, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Host: Julia Todorov EN120
2:00 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 


OPPORTUNITIES


Atmospheric Sciences Scholarships

Students Type of Scholarship Deadline Information
High School Seniors AMS/Industry Minority Scholarships February 22, 2002 http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS
College Sophomores AMS/Industry Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002
College Juniors AMS Undergraduate Scholarships February 22, 2002

 

 


 

Positions

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Atmospheric Sciences Faculty Positions

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Feb 25, 2002


Vol. 2 No 8 February 25-March 1, 2002


Hello everybody,

Following a suggestion by Anne McElroy we would like to make monthly announcements of new research projects within MSRC. You have the opportunity promote yourself in Soundings if you provide a brief description of the project, the funder, the duration, and whether or not there would be any field measurements. This may give your colleagues possibilities of collaborating or piggy backing on field efforts. We hope you will jump on this opportunity, so please let us know if you just started a new project. We will advertise it in next week’s issue. Thanks.

Minghua Zhang will give a lecture in Keller College on Thursday Feb. 28 about the scientific debate on global warming. The lecture will start at 5:30 pm.

Graduate student application files will be available for review by faculty in Room 120 on Monday and Tuesday. Breakfast is set up in Room 120 for faculty who would like to review admissions files.

Students are you looking for an alternative career in science? Then don’t miss this week’s MSRC colloquium. Richard Kerr from Science will talk about an alternative career in oceanography: science writing.

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen and Alex Kolker

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

February 25-March 1, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Tuesday 3:45pm Club Meteorology Club Meeting Okubo
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Multispectral Cloud Retrievals and the MODIS Algorithm, Speaker: Steven Platnick, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center EN120
Thursday 5:30pm Lecture Scientific Debate on Global Warming, Speaker: Minghua Zhang Keller College
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium An Alternative career in oceanography: From geldstoff to science in the media, Speaker: Richard Kerr AAAS / Science, Host: Cindy Lee EN120
2:00 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 


OPPORTUNITIES


 

 


 

Positions

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Atmospheric Sciences Faculty Positions

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Mar 4, 2002


Vol. 2 No 9 March 4-8, 2002


Hello everybody,

We have added a section to the MSRC newsletter that will announce new research projects on a monthly basis. Malcolm Bowman and Steven Goodbred have taken the lead and listed their recent endeavors. We are waiting for information on yours…

Undergraduates, are you interested in a career in weather forecasting? Then visit this week’s Meteorology Club meeting and question guest speaker Ken Widelski, former graduate and forecaster at the National Weather Service office in San Antonio/Austin, TX.

Report from the Ocean Sciences Meeting:

“The meeting was well organized, with good equipment for diverse option of presentation that made talks more enjoyable. ..”

Ocean Sciences presentations by graduate students Dianne Greenfield (5th from left) and Vicki Ferrini (6th from left).

Last but not least, congratulations to Mandy and Lee Ferguson on the birth of Thomas Lee.Born Saturday, February 23 at 5:22 a.m. and is 22 inches long (9 lb. 6 oz. sister of beautiful Kelsey).

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen and Alex Kolker

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

March 4-8, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Tuesday 3:45pm Club Meteorology Club Meeting, Guest speaker: Ken Widelski, former graduate and forecaster at the National Weather Service office in San Antonio/Austin, TX EN137
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Developments in Terrain-Following Ocean Models, Speaker: Tal Ezer, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, Princeton University EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Microplankton community structure in Eastern Long Island Bays: ecosystem recovery from brown tides?” Speaker: Michael E. Sieracki, Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, W. Boothbay Harbor, Maine EN120
2:00 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

March 2002 New Projects


Feasibility of using Storm Surge Barriers to Protect the Metropolitan New York – New Jersey Region.
Co-PI’s. Malcolm Bowman, Robert Wilson, Douglas Hill, Roger Flood.
Sponsor: Sea Grant, jointly with NY City Department of Environmental Protection. Duration: 2 years.

Purpose: To evaluate and select a suitable, existing, community storm surge model. To run a series of storm (hurricane and nor’easter) scenarios over the New York Bight to evaluate the potential effectiveness of protecting the metropolitan region from storm surge damage in an era of rising sea level by constructing storm surge barriers. Three barriers are proposed in principle: Verrazano Narrows, Upper East River, and the entrance to Arthur Kill behind Staten Island. The model(s) will be run both with and without storm surge barriers in hindcast and nowcast modes against a background of slowly rising, but accelerating sea level rise (presently 1 foot/century) to see what amelioration can be expected from coastal flooding with barrier emplacement and smart management.

 


Climate change and sediment dispersal to the continental margin: Provenance of Late Quaternary deposits in the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta. 

PI Steven Goodbred, Sponsor: American Chemical Society.


OPPORTUNITIES


 


 

Positions

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Atmospheric Sciences Faculty Positions

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Mar 11, 2002


Vol. 2 No 10 March 11-15, 2002


Hello everybody,

If you want to know what’s going on with the boats, read the latest message from Mark Wiggins.

This year, as in the last 2 years, Larry Swanson, Frank Roethel, and Mark Wiggins have been conducting the EPA’s National Coastal Assessment sampling in New York waters (http://www.epa.gov/emap/nca/ ). Find out more about the details in the Projects Section.

Students, Have you been to the new student lounge? Our lounge is in Discovery 109. It’s our own space, a place to eat lunch, hang out, drink Friday Beers…. There’s even a blackboard for those more intellectual moments. So come over hang out. There is one thing we need, and that’s furniture. If anyone knows of couches, tables, chairs etc. bring them by. Someone suggested getting beanbag chairs. (The editors of Sounding strongly endorse the concept of beanbag chairs.) One final note…. The cleaning staff is not responsible for cleaning the lounge. So clean up after yourself!!!!!!! Have fun…..

From the GSO:
ALL MSRC and ITPA Students: Please sign the petition approving our request for GSO funds. Our department gets several hundred dollars each year for departmental activities. We can use these funds as we choose. This year they cover events such as the upcoming Vax to Flax run, on May 4. However, we can only get these funds if 30% of all students sign the petition. PLEASE REVIEW THE BUDGET AND SIGN THE PETITION ON THE MAILROOM DOOR!!!!! Please contact Aaron Rust if you have any questions.

Check out our new job announcements.

Please note this week’s living world lecture. Prof. Futuyama from the Department of Ecology and Evolution speaks on “Why we need to teach evolution” on Friday 7:30pm in Earth and Space Sciences.Details can be found below.

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen and Alex Kolker

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

March 11-15, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Direct Observations of Estuarine Dispersion: Results from a Recent Dye Experiment, Speaker: Dr. Robert Chant, Institute for Marine and Coastal Studies, Rutgers University EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium A New Fish Story: Application of Transgenic Fish for the Assessment of Mutations in Vivo, Speaker: Richard N. Winn, University of Georgia, Host: Anne McElroy EN120
2:00 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139
Public Lectures of SUNY, Stony Brook
Friday 7:30pm Living World Lecture WHY WE NEED TO TEACH EVOLUTION, Distinguished Professor Douglas J. Futuyma, Department of Ecology and Evolution, SUNY Stony Brook ESS101

March 2002 New Projects


EPA’s National Coastal Assessment Sampling in New York Waters 
This year, as in the last 2 years, Larry Swanson, Frank Roethel, and Mark Wiggins have been conducting the EPA’s National Coastal Assessment sampling in New York waters (http://www.epa.gov/emap/nca/ ). They collect water, sediment, and fish samples at a multitude of stations in all of NY’s marine waters (including the Hudson River to the Troy Dam). The samples are analyzed for a plethora of parameters. This project is expected to continue through at least 2004. If you need funding, boat experience, or just like to work hard, they need people. If interested please come see Mark or Larry, or e-mail mark at mark.wiggins@sunysb.edu. Also if you need samples taken over a wide area we would be more than willing. Come see or e-mail Mark.

Feasibility of using Storm Surge Barriers to Protect the Metropolitan New York – New Jersey Region.
Co-PI’s. Malcolm Bowman, Robert Wilson, Douglas Hill, Roger Flood.
Sponsor: Sea Grant, jointly with NY City Department of Environmental Protection. Duration: 2 years.

Purpose: To evaluate and select a suitable, existing, community storm surge model. To run a series of storm (hurricane and nor’easter) scenarios over the New York Bight to evaluate the potential effectiveness of protecting the metropolitan region from storm surge damage in an era of rising sea level by constructing storm surge barriers. Three barriers are proposed in principle: Verrazano Narrows, Upper East River, and the entrance to Arthur Kill behind Staten Island. The model(s) will be run both with and without storm surge barriers in hindcast and nowcast modes against a background of slowly rising, but accelerating sea level rise (presently 1 foot/century) to see what amelioration can be expected from coastal flooding with barrier emplacement and smart management.

 


Climate change and sediment dispersal to the continental margin: Provenance of Late Quaternary deposits in the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta. 

PI Steven Goodbred, Sponsor: American Chemical Society.


OPPORTUNITIES


Teaching Assistant for WISE

 


 

Positions

Science Publications Specialist, University of Maine

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Mar 18, 2002


Vol. 2 No 11 March 18-22, 2002


Marine Animal Disease Lab Breaks Walls!

You may have wondered what all the boxes marked Lobster Lab have been doing in Dana Hall for the past couple of months. They are the makings of the new Marine Animals Disease Lab at MSRC. After a seemingly endless wait, things are finally happening. Demolition of the former lab space began last week, coincident with the arrival Alistar Dove, the Cornell part of the team. We hope the second faculty member, Bassem Allam will arrive in the middle of May.

Alistair Dove hails from down under having received his Ph.D. in 1999 from the University of Queensland. His thesis was titled Parasite and the Exotic and Native Freshwater Fishes of Australia. The following year he came to New York to become the Aquatic Pathologist for the New York Aquarium on Coney Island where he was responsible for diagnosing and treating everyone but the marine and terrestrial mammals. While at the NYA he also was an adjunct lecturer at Columbia. It will be a while before Al’s lab is ready, but please stop by to say hello to him in his office, Dana 153. His phone is 9251. Although Al will be employed by Cornell, and be a faculty member of the vet school, he will be in residence at MSRC full time. We hope that in May, Al will be joined by the MSRC part of the team, Bassem Allam. We will let you know more details once he has arrived.

Travel Awards

The SBU Chapter of Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society, is pleased to announce that it is accepting student applications in Excellence in Research and Educationally-related Travel. Click here for details.

MSRC T-shirts

Doug Potts and Ann Zulkosky would like to thank everyone for making the “Unofficial” MSRC T-shirt a rousing success! Sales exceeded all expectations with 133 shirts ordered by 58 people. We would especially like to thank the shirt’s graphic designer, Daniel Frey, for volunteering his services (http://www.danielfrey.com). If anyone would still like a t-shirt, a 2nd and final printing will be done later this spring. Details to follow…

Environmental Studies Career Night

The Environmental Studies Career Night takes place Tuesday night in the Dreiser College Lounge.

Farewell

As you may already know, Pat Corn will be leaving us. Pat’s last day of work is Wednesday, March 27th. Please join us for coffee and cake on Tuesday, March 26 at 4:00 pm in room 120 to wish her well in her new position.

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen , and Alex Kolker

This week’s contributors: Anne McElroy, Ann Zulkosky

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

March 18-22, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Tuesday 5:30-7:30pm Career Night Environmental Studies Career Night Dreiser College Lounge
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR A Correct Treatment of Large Droplets in Radiative Transfer and Its Effect on Cloud Absorption, Speaker: Alexander MarshakNASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Climate and Radiation EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Environmental change in the Arctic: The Arctic Ocean Section 1994 Expedition, Speaker: Lawson BrighamUS Arctic Research Commission, Host: Marv Geller EN120
2:00 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

March 2002 New Projects


EPA’s National Coastal Assessment Sampling in New York Waters 
This year, as in the last 2 years, Larry Swanson, Frank Roethel, and Mark Wiggins have been conducting the EPA’s National Coastal Assessment sampling in New York waters (http://www.epa.gov/emap/nca/ ). They collect water, sediment, and fish samples at a multitude of stations in all of NY’s marine waters (including the Hudson River to the Troy Dam). The samples are analyzed for a plethora of parameters. This project is expected to continue through at least 2004. If you need funding, boat experience, or just like to work hard, they need people. If interested please come see Mark or Larry, or e-mail mark at mark.wiggins@sunysb.edu. Also if you need samples taken over a wide area we would be more than willing. Come see or e-mail Mark.

Feasibility of using Storm Surge Barriers to Protect the Metropolitan New York – New Jersey Region.
Co-PI’s. Malcolm Bowman, Robert Wilson, Douglas Hill, Roger Flood.
Sponsor: Sea Grant, jointly with NY City Department of Environmental Protection. Duration: 2 years.

Purpose: To evaluate and select a suitable, existing, community storm surge model. To run a series of storm (hurricane and nor’easter) scenarios over the New York Bight to evaluate the potential effectiveness of protecting the metropolitan region from storm surge damage in an era of rising sea level by constructing storm surge barriers. Three barriers are proposed in principle: Verrazano Narrows, Upper East River, and the entrance to Arthur Kill behind Staten Island. The model(s) will be run both with and without storm surge barriers in hindcast and nowcast modes against a background of slowly rising, but accelerating sea level rise (presently 1 foot/century) to see what amelioration can be expected from coastal flooding with barrier emplacement and smart management.

 


Climate change and sediment dispersal to the continental margin: Provenance of Late Quaternary deposits in the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta. 

PI Steven Goodbred, Sponsor: American Chemical Society.


OPPORTUNITIES


Teaching Assistant for WISE

 


 

Positions

Science Publications Specialist, University of Maine

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Mar 25, 2002


Vol. 2 No 12 March 25-29, 2002


It’s spring break, we will have a quiet week with no seminars to attend. Timothy Essington has announced that the informal seminar will be revived, it is going to be held on Friday afternoons at 3:30pm. Next Friday, however, will be occupied by a Symposium in honor of Prof. Bob Cess’ retirement.

Symposium April 5, 2002

The Institute for Terrestrial and Planetary Atmospheres (ITPA) is sponsoring a symposium, “Radiative Transfer and Global Climate Change” in honor of Professor Bob Cess’ retirement and forty years of service to the university. The symposium will be held on Friday, April 5, 2002 at 9:00 a.m. in Endeavour 120. An evening dinner is planned at the Port Jefferson Country Club at a cost of $38 per person. Officially registered participants may want to pay an optional registration fee of $50 for the symposium; this will include the dinner, name tags, and conference material. Students are encouraged to attend the lectures; they will not be asked to pay anything unless they want to attend the evening dinner. Faculty and staff who are not registered are welcomed to sit in, but won’t get name tags or conference material. The agenda and additional information can be found at http://atmos.msrc.sunysb.edu/npages/symp.html.

Vax to Flax Race May 4, 2002

Get ready for this year’s annual Vax to Flax race on Saturday, May 4! For newcomers, this race is a 4.6 mile (7.5 km) jaunt from Endeavor (Vax) to Flax Pond. Participants can run, walk, or bike. People traveling to Flax on foot are considered part of a team (students or faculty/staff), but the biking is separate. The run/walk team MUST have members of both genders to be legitimate, and all participants are rewarded with a rousing BBQ at Flax Pond at the end of the event. If you’re not interested in traveling the 4.6 miles but still want to participate, we will need timers and perhaps a water station. Sign up on the poster by the mailroom.

Farewell to Pat Corn March 26, 2002 4pm

As you may already know, Pat Corn will be leaving us. Pat’s last day of work is Wednesday, March 27th. Please join us for coffee and cake on Tuesday, March 26 at 4:00 pm in room 120 to wish her well in her new position.

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen , and Alex Kolker

This week’s contributors: Dianne Greenfield

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

March 25-29, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR no seminar EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium no seminar EN120
2:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139
3:30pm Informal Seminar no seminar EN120

March 2002 New Projects


EPA’s National Coastal Assessment Sampling in New York Waters 
This year, as in the last 2 years, Larry Swanson, Frank Roethel, and Mark Wiggins have been conducting the EPA’s National Coastal Assessment sampling in New York waters (http://www.epa.gov/emap/nca/ ). They collect water, sediment, and fish samples at a multitude of stations in all of NY’s marine waters (including the Hudson River to the Troy Dam). The samples are analyzed for a plethora of parameters. This project is expected to continue through at least 2004. If you need funding, boat experience, or just like to work hard, they need people. If interested please come see Mark or Larry, or e-mail mark at mark.wiggins@sunysb.edu. Also if you need samples taken over a wide area we would be more than willing. Come see or e-mail Mark.

Feasibility of using Storm Surge Barriers to Protect the Metropolitan New York – New Jersey Region.
Co-PI’s. Malcolm Bowman, Robert Wilson, Douglas Hill, Roger Flood.
Sponsor: Sea Grant, jointly with NY City Department of Environmental Protection. Duration: 2 years.

Purpose: To evaluate and select a suitable, existing, community storm surge model. To run a series of storm (hurricane and nor’easter) scenarios over the New York Bight to evaluate the potential effectiveness of protecting the metropolitan region from storm surge damage in an era of rising sea level by constructing storm surge barriers. Three barriers are proposed in principle: Verrazano Narrows, Upper East River, and the entrance to Arthur Kill behind Staten Island. The model(s) will be run both with and without storm surge barriers in hindcast and nowcast modes against a background of slowly rising, but accelerating sea level rise (presently 1 foot/century) to see what amelioration can be expected from coastal flooding with barrier emplacement and smart management.

 


Climate change and sediment dispersal to the continental margin: Provenance of Late Quaternary deposits in the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta. 

PI Steven Goodbred, Sponsor: American Chemical Society.


OPPORTUNITIES


Teaching Assistant for WISE

 


 

Positions

Science Publications Specialist, University of Maine

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Apr 1, 2002


Vol. 2 No 13 April 1-5, 2002


Bob Cess Symposium April 5, 2002

The Institute for Terrestrial and Planetary Atmospheres (ITPA) is sponsoring a symposium, “Radiative Transfer and Global Climate Change” in honor of Professor Bob Cess’ retirement and forty years of service to the university. The symposium will be held on Friday, April 5, 2002 at 9:00 a.m. in Endeavour 120. An evening dinner is planned at the Port Jefferson Country Club at a cost of $38 per person. Officially registered participants may want to pay an optional registration fee of $50 for the symposium; this will include the dinner, name tags, and conference material. Students are encouraged to attend the lectures; they will not be asked to pay anything unless they want to attend the evening dinner. Faculty and staff who are not registered are welcomed to sit in, but won’t get name tags or conference material. The agenda and additional information can be found at http://atmos.msrc.sunysb.edu/npages/symp.html.

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen , and Alex Kolker

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

April 1-5, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Regulation of Convection in the Tropical Pacific, Speaker: James Ridout, Naval Research Laboratory, Monterey California EN120
Friday 9:20am Symposium Bob Cess Symposium 9am-5pm EN120
6pm Dinner $38
12:30pm MSRC Colloquium no colloquium EN120
2:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

March 2002 Projects



Vax to Flax Race May 4, 2002

Get ready for this year’s annual Vax to Flax race on Saturday, May 4! For newcomers, this race is a 4.6 mile (7.5 km) jaunt from Endeavor (Vax) to Flax Pond. Participants can run, walk, or bike. People traveling to Flax on foot are considered part of a team (students or faculty/staff), but the biking is separate. The run/walk team MUST have members of both genders to be legitimate, and all participants are rewarded with a rousing BBQ at Flax Pond at the end of the event. If you’re not interested in traveling the 4.6 miles but still want to participate, we will need timers and perhaps a water station. Sign up on the poster by the mailroom.


OPPORTUNITIES


Teaching Assistant for WISE

 


 

Positions

Science Publications Specialist, University of Maine

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Apr 8, 2002


Vol. 2 No 14 April 8-12, 2002


Informal Seminar on Thursdays at 11:45am

The revived Informal Seminar has been moved to Thursdays 11:45 am. The seminar will be held in Endeavour Hall 120. Ben Twining will give this week’s presentation (see below).

MSRC Winners of SBU’s “What is Leadership?” Contest

Two members of the MSRC community know what leadership is. As you may or may not remember, Stony Brook University initiated a contest for the “What is leadership?” banner, which will be exposed on April 29. From the 10 selected definitions, two of the winning entries are from MSRC faculty and staff. Lynn Bianchet crafted leadership is “the art of helping others find the best in themselves”. The winning entry by an undisclosed MSRC/ITPA adjunct faculty reads leadership is “imagining the future, exploring new ideas, listening to others, and learning from mistakes”. The winners will receive $100 and a poster of the banner on April 29 in the SAC . Congratulations!

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

April 8-12, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Climate Warming of Atlantic Intermediate Waters, Speaker: Brian Arbic, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, Princeton University EN120
Thursday 11:45 am-12:45pm Informal Seminar Pictures, observations, and preliminary data from a Southern Ocean Iron Experiment, Speaker: Ben Twining, MSRC, SUNY EN120
Friday 12:30pm MSRC Colloquium Arabian Sea: Macrozooplankton and fishes. Should they be considered in food web and vertical flux investigations? Speaker: Pat Kremer, University of Connecticut EN120
2:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

March 2002 Projects



Vax to Flax Race May 4, 2002

Get ready for this year’s annual Vax to Flax race on Saturday, May 4! For newcomers, this race is a 4.6 mile (7.5 km) jaunt from Endeavor (Vax) to Flax Pond. Participants can run, walk, or bike. People traveling to Flax on foot are considered part of a team (students or faculty/staff), but the biking is separate. The run/walk team MUST have members of both genders to be legitimate, and all participants are rewarded with a rousing BBQ at Flax Pond at the end of the event. If you’re not interested in traveling the 4.6 miles but still want to participate, we will need timers and perhaps a water station. Sign up on the poster by the mailroom.


OPPORTUNITIES


Teaching Assistant for WISE

 


 

Positions

Science Publications Specialist, University of Maine

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Apr 15, 2002


Vol. 2 No 15 April 15-19, 2002


Hello,

We’d like to announce that one of the recent MSRC Ph.D’s, Patrick Lee Ferguson , has won the Stony Brook University President’s Award to Distinguished Doctoral Students. Congratulations!

We have a busy week this week, with three seminars, a Master thesis defense, and a blood drive. I hope you will have the time to take advantage of some of these offers.

Master Thesis defense

Laurie Zaleski will defend her Master thesis on Tuesday 10:00 Am in Endeavour Hall 120.

Blood Drive April 18, 2002 8:30-2:00PM

On Thursday, there will be a blood drive from 8:30 am to 2:00 PM in Endeavour Hall 120.

Informal Seminar on Thursdays at 11:45am

The Informal Seminar gives students and faculty the opportunity to discuss their research within MSRC. If you always wanted to know what your colleagues next door are working on, but were afraid to ask, come to this seminar. This week’s seminar will be held in Endeavour Hall 113 due to the Blood Drive in EN120. Stephan Munch will be the speaker.

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

April 15-19, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Tuesday 10:00-11:00 M.S. Defense Changes in Geomorphology and Backscatter Patterns as Revealed through Multiple Multibeam Surveys, Speaker: Laurie Zaleski, MSRC, SBU EN120
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR The Role of Site-Specific Research in Anticipating Global Change, Speaker: George Hendrey, Department of Environmental Sciences, Brookhaven National Laboratory EN120
Thursday 11:45 am-12:45pm Informal Seminar Costs of growth in Atlantic silversides: implications for growth rate evolution in fishes. Speaker: Stephan Munch, MSRC, SBU EN113
Friday 12:30pm MSRC Colloquium Why the meiobenthos make excellent models for assessment of reproductive and endocrine toxicity in estuaries — Cultured they are!”, Speaker: Tom Chandler, University of South Carolina EN120
2:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

March 2002 Projects



Vax to Flax Race May 4, 2002

Get ready for this year’s annual Vax to Flax race on Saturday, May 4! For newcomers, this race is a 4.6 mile (7.5 km) jaunt from Endeavor (Vax) to Flax Pond. Participants can run, walk, or bike. People traveling to Flax on foot are considered part of a team (students or faculty/staff), but the biking is separate. The run/walk team MUST have members of both genders to be legitimate, and all participants are rewarded with a rousing BBQ at Flax Pond at the end of the event. If you’re not interested in traveling the 4.6 miles but still want to participate, we will need timers and perhaps a water station. Sign up on the poster by the mailroom.


OPPORTUNITIES


Teaching Assistant for WISE

 


 

Positions

Science Publications Specialist, University of Maine

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Apr 22, 2002


Vol. 2 No 16 April 22-26, 2002


Hello MSRC,

this week marks new arrivals, defenses, seminars and even concerts by talented MSRC members.

Defenses

We have two defenses this week, the M.S. defense on Thursday 9:30 am by Maureen Dunn, and the Ph.D. defense by Dianne Greenfield on Friday morning 9:30 am. Both defenses take place in Endeavour Hall 120 (see below for more details).

MSRC Colloquium joins Provost Lecture Series

This week’s MSRC Colloquium takes place on Main Campus in the Humanities Building Room 101. The speaker is Robert Dunbar from Stanford University. See below for further details.

Informal Seminar on Thursdays at 11:45 am

The Informal Seminar gives students and faculty the opportunity to discuss their research within MSRC. If you always wanted to know what your colleagues next door are working on, but were afraid to ask, come to this seminar. This week’s seminar will be held by Timothy Essington. (more here)

New Positions

We have listed a new position Ocean Biologist/Ecologist at the University of Hawaii.

MSRC and Culture

On Saturday, April 27, at 8:00 pm, MSRC professor David Conover and graduate students Vanessa Madrid and Rebecca Marzec will be participating in the Stony Brook Chorale concert, which will be held in the Staller Center Recital Hall. The chorale will perform Robert Ray’s “Gospel Mass,” Nancy Telfer’s “The Spell of Times Long Past,” and Harry Somers’ “Five Songs of the Newfoundland Outports.” Tickets are $4 for students and seniors and $8 for everyone else. Please come out and support our singers.

Arrivals

Congratulations to Brian and Jennifer Colle for the birth of Justin Anthony Colle at 1:47 p.m. on Sunday, April 21.

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

April 22-26, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR The Relationship Between Subtropical and Eddy-Driven Jets: Implications for the NAO, Speaker: Sukyoung Lee, Department of Meteorology Pennsylvania State University EN120
Thursday 9:30am M.S. Defense A Description of the Barotropic Tide on Georges Bank Based Upon Five Years of Shipboard ADCP Observations, Speaker: Maureen Dunn,MSRC, SBU EN120
11:45 am-12:45pm Informal Seminar “Mercury bioaccumulation, fish consumption rates, and food web stability: a survey of research projects from Hawai’i to Sweden “, Speaker: Timothy Essington, MSRC, SBU EN120
Friday 9:30am Ph.D. Defense The influence of variability in plankton community composition on the growth of juvenile hard clams Mercenaria mercenaria (L.), Speaker: Dianne Greenfield, MSRC, SBU EN120
12:30pm MSRC Colloquium Southern Ocean Impacts on Global Climate: Clues from the Antarctic Margin, Speaker Robert Dunbar, Stanford University HUM101
2:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

March 2002 Projects



Vax to Flax Race May 4, 2002

Get ready for this year’s annual Vax to Flax race on Saturday, May 4! For newcomers, this race is a 4.6 mile (7.5 km) jaunt from Endeavor (Vax) to Flax Pond. Participants can run, walk, or bike. People traveling to Flax on foot are considered part of a team (students or faculty/staff), but the biking is separate. The run/walk team MUST have members of both genders to be legitimate, and all participants are rewarded with a rousing BBQ at Flax Pond at the end of the event. If you’re not interested in traveling the 4.6 miles but still want to participate, we will need timers and perhaps a water station. Sign up on the poster by the mailroom.


OPPORTUNITIES


Teaching Assistant for WISE

 


 

Positions

Science Publications Specialist, University of Maine

The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has a full time opening for a Research Analyst. E-mail applications to mcfarq@atmos.uiuc.edu

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year. http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, Apr 29, 2002


Vol. 2 No 17 April 29-May 3, 2002


Hello MSRC,

take a look at this week’s seminars and learn more about climate, carbon and fish. Then prepare yourself for this weekend’s run/walk from Vax to Flax. Hope to see you there.

Final Results from National Weather Forecast Contest 2001-2002

The National Forecast Contest is now over. During the 8 month contest the 12-member Stony Brook team made 1-2 day temperature and precipitation forecasts M-Th for 8 cities around the U.S. For our 1st time in the contest we did quite well, finishing 9th out of 39 schools (see below for the Top 10 list). Here are some individual standouts: (1) Graduating Senior Brian Pederson finished 12th out of 515 junior/seniors across the country. (2) Chris Balliro, who left the contest early because of Dec graduation, was 15th in the country. (3) 1st year graduate student Yong Song finished 36th out of 165 graduate students. (4) Brian Colle finished 3rd out of 91 faculty/staff and 9th overall (out of 1115).

Graduate Student Paula Rose wins Travel Award

Paula Rose, a Master’s degree student in MSRC, has won a 2002 Sigma Xi (The Scientific Research Society) Travel Award. She was the only applicant from MSRC, and was one of 13 students campus-wide to be selected for this award. Congratulations, Paula!!

16th Cariaco Research Cruise in Venezuela, May 5-14, 2002

Prof. Scranton and Taylor will be accompanied by F. Mirasol (MSRC grad student) and A. Carter (SBU Bio undergrad) to Isla de Margarita, Venezuela to stage their 16th research cruise in the anoxic Cariaco Basin. Research group will be continuing their biogeochemical and microbiological measurements of this system, as part of the International CARIACO Timeseries Program.

Vax to Flax Race May 4, 2002

Get ready for this year’s annual Vax to Flax race on Saturday, May 4! For newcomers, this race is a 4.6 mile (7.5 km) jaunt from Endeavor (Vax) to Flax Pond. Participants can run, walk, or bike. People traveling to Flax on foot are considered part of a team (students or faculty/staff), but the biking is separate. The run/walk team MUST have members of both genders to be legitimate, and all participants are rewarded with a rousing BBQ at Flax Pond at the end of the event. If you’re not interested in traveling the 4.6 miles but still want to participate, we will need timers and perhaps a water station. Sign up on the poster by the mailroom.

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

April 29-May 3, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Satellite Measurements of the Earth’s Radiation Budget: What Have We Learned About the Climate System?, Speaker: Robert D. Cess, ITPA/MSRC, SBU EN120
Thursday 11:45 am-12:45pm Informal Seminar Cleaner wrasse and anemone fish: two case studies in symbiosis, Speaker: Alistair Dove, MSRC, SBU EN120
Friday 12:30pm MSRC Colloquium Understanding Ocean-Atmosphere CO2 Flux in the Coastal Oceans and its Role in Global Climate Change: Evidence from the Santa Monica Basin, Offshore California, Speaker: David J. HollanderCollege of Marine Science, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg., Host: Mary Scranton EN120
2:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

Top 10 Finalists of the National Forecast Contest 2001-2002

RANK School #Forecasters Periods Average Score
1 MIT 10 10 80.37
2 UOK 38 12 82.45
3 MIA 20 13 83.55
4 UWM 7 8 83.80
5 UMI 7 8 83.89
6 MSS 35 11 84.05
7 ALB 22 13 84.18
8 NYO 10 10 84.47
9 SBU 12 8 84.48
10 SJS 10 10 84.64

MIT-Massachusetts Institute of Technology, UOK-University of Oklahoma, MIA-University of Miami, UWM-University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, UMI-University of Michigan, MSS-Mississippi State University, ALB- State University of New York at Albany, NYO-State University of New York at Oneonta, SBU-Stony Brook University, SJS-San Jose State University


March 2002 Projects


Positions 

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year.http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, May 6, 2002


Vol. 2 No 18 May 6-10, 2002


Hello MSRC,

it’s the last week of classes. This means there won’t be regular seminars for a long time and we will have to rely on thesis defenses for entertainment. I’m sure you have plans to attend conferences, cruises or field trips this summer.So please if you plan to go somewhere let Soundings know the details.

Jingbo Wu receives the Wu Xiading Memorial Award for the Academic Year 2001-2002

The ITPA faculty has selected graduate student Ms. Jingbo Wu to receive the Wu Xianding Memorial Award for the academic year 2001-02. This award was established as a means to provide a tribute to Professor Wu who died in May 1996 while on a six-month visit to ITPA. Professor Wu was an eminent scholar from the Chinese Academy of Sciences. The winner of the Wu Award is selected based on his/her academic achievements while enrolled in the ITPA graduate program. Congratulations, Jingbo. MZ

Alumni News

One of our alumni in atmospheric sciences, Prof. V. Ramanathan of the University of California at San Diego (advisor: Bob Cess), was elected to be a member of the National Academy of Sciences. He was at MSRC earlier this month to attend an ITPA Symposium on Radiative Transfer and Global Climate Change in honor Bob Cess’s forty year service to the university. MZ

Results of the Vax to Flax race

Thanks for coming out on this past Saturday, it was absolutely gorgeous weather, and we had an excellent turnout of 50 people, including walkers, runners, bikers, and helpers! The winning team, squeaking by with an average time of 37:13 was FACULTY/STAFF. The students were not far behind with an average time of 37:35, so it was close. No records were broken this year, but….The winners were:

Overall, JOHN ROBINSON, a faculty member from the Psychology Dept., who put all of us to shame with a time of 30:48.

Within MSRC, the overall winner(s) were a TIE of CHRIS CLAPP (s/m) and ANTONIO TOVAR (f/m) at 32:41. LAURA COTTRELL (s/f) came in at 32:43, KIM MCKOWN (f/f) came in at 40:47.

And thanks for all of those who stayed for the BBQ that Laura and Michelle put together. DG

MSRC Convocation May 17

The MSRC convocation will be held at 8:30am in Endeavour Hall Room 120. I will list the graduating students in next week’s newsletter.

Summer Internship for Undergraduates at the EPA Long Island Sound Office

Click here to see the full text for the announcement.

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen

This week’s contributors: MZ-Minghua Zhang, DG-Dianne Greenfield

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

May 6-10, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR No seminar until Fall 2002 EN120
Thursday 11:45 am-12:45pm Informal Seminar No seminar until Fall 2002 EN120
Friday 12:30pm MSRC Colloquium No colloquium until Fall 2002 EN120
2:30 pm Weather Discussion No regular weather discussions until fall. There may be exceptions in case of severe weather. EN139


March 2002 Projects


Positions

Opportunities for Undergraduates

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year.http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, May 13, 2002


Vol. 2 No 19 May 13-17, 2002


Hello MSRC,

welcome to gaduation week. Even though regular seminars are over, we have a special seminar on Monday at 2:30 pm. Dr. E. Michael Thurman will be giving a seminar entitled “Reflections on a decade of monitoring of herbicides in surface and groundwater of the midwestern United States”. Dr. Thurman is the project director of the USGS’s Organic Geochemistry Research Group in Lawrence, Kansas. He will be here on May13-14 accompanied by another geochemist from his group, Imma Ferrer. Bruce Brownawell is hosting their visit. If you would like to schedule a meeting with Dr. Thurman while he is here, please let Eileen Doyle or Bruce know and we will do our best to make the arrangements.

Tomoko Matsuo received the outstanding student paper award at the AGU Fall 2001 Meeting

ITPA graduate student Tomoko Matsuo received the AGU student paper award for her poster ” Modes of high-latitude electric variability derived from DE-2 measurements: Empirical Orthogonal Function (EOF) analysis.” She is working on her Ph.D. thesis project at NCAR in Boulder with ITPA faculty Marvin Geller as one of her advisors. Congratulations.

Where do Atmospheric Sciences undergraduates find jobs once they graduate?

Our recent ATM graduates are Kevin Kreeger, Chris Balliro, Brian Pedersen, Kyle Gregory, Spiro Avantinos, Ken Wildelski, and Lee Solomon. Many of the students have already found some interesting jobs: Ken Wildelski: National Weather Service: San Antonio, TX, Kevin Kreeger: Earth Science Teacher in Queens, NY, Brian Pedersen: Weathernews Inc (WNI) ocean route forecasting, Sunnydale, CA, Lee Solomon: WNI ocean route forecasting, Sunnydale, CA

Brian Colle receives COMET Award

ITPA faculty member Brian Colle was awarded a collaborative COMET (Cooperative Program in Operational Meteorology Education and Teaching) award for 3 years to build a regional ensemble modeling forecast system and a real-time model verification system. This effort involves forecasters and hydrologists from the New York City, Philadelphia, and Boston regions and the Eastern Region Headquarters of the National Weather Service in Bohemia, NY. The modeling system will be constructed later this summer and will consist of a series of 5-7 moderate resolution (10-15 km grid spacing) forecasts for around the Northeast.

MSRC Convocation May 17, 8:30 am, Endeavour Hall 120

The MSRC convocation takes place at 8:30 am in Endeavour Hall 120. Please make an effort to attend and congratulate all graduating students, Masters, and Ph.Ds. The following students will attend the convocation: America Canas (MS, DeZafra), Maureen Dunn (MS, Wang), Lee Ferguson (PhD, Brownawell), Dianne Greenfield (PhD, Lonsdale), Sarah Griscom (PhD, Fisher), Anitra Ingalls(PhD, Lee), Melissa Jump (MS, Lwiza), Alberto Marinato (MS, Brownawell), Rutatenekwa Rugabandana (MS, Wilson), Charlene Sullivan (MS, Bokuniewicz), Kimberly Williams (MS, Lopez),Laurie Zaleski (MS, Flood), Ann Zulkosky (MS, McElroy), and Undergrads: Philyppe Carre and Kevin Kreeger (Colle) and Visna Harris (Bowman). Congratulations to all of you!

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen

This week’s contributors: Brian Colle, Nancy Glover, Eileen Doyle, Marvin Geller

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

May 13-17, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 2:30 pm Special Seminar Reflections on a decade of monitoring of herbicides in surface and groundwater of the midwestern United States, Speaker: E. Michael Thurman, Host: Bruce Brownawell EN120
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR No seminar until Fall 2002 EN120
Thursday 11:45 am-12:45pm Informal Seminar No seminar until Fall 2002 EN120
Friday 8:30am Convocation MSRC Convocation Ceremony EN120
12:30pm MSRC Colloquium No colloquium until Fall 2002 EN120
2:30 pm Weather Discussion No regular weather discussions until fall. There may be exceptions in case of severe weather. EN139


March 2002 Projects


Positions

Opportunities for Undergraduates

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year.http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, May 13, 2002


Vol. 2 No 20 May 13-17, 2002


Hello MSRC,

welcome to gaduation week. Even though regular seminars are over, we have a special seminar on Monday at 2:30 pm. Dr. E. Michael Thurman will be giving a seminar entitled “Reflections on a decade of monitoring of herbicides in surface and groundwater of the midwestern United States”. Dr. Thurman is the project director of the USGS’s Organic Geochemistry Research Group in Lawrence, Kansas. He will be here on May13-14 accompanied by another geochemist from his group, Imma Ferrer. Bruce Brownawell is hosting their visit. If you would like to schedule a meeting with Dr. Thurman while he is here, please let Eileen Doyle or Bruce know and we will do our best to make the arrangements.

Tomoko Matsuo received the outstanding student paper award at the AGU Fall 2001 Meeting

ITPA graduate student Tomoko Matsuo received the AGU student paper award for her poster ” Modes of high-latitude electric variability derived from DE-2 measurements: Empirical Orthogonal Function (EOF) analysis.” She is working on her Ph.D. thesis project at NCAR in Boulder with ITPA faculty Marvin Geller as one of her advisors. Congratulations.

Where do Atmospheric Sciences undergraduates find jobs once they graduate?

Our recent ATM graduates are Kevin Kreeger, Chris Balliro, Brian Pedersen, Kyle Gregory, Spiro Avantinos, Ken Wildelski, and Lee Solomon. Many of the students have already found some interesting jobs: Ken Wildelski: National Weather Service: San Antonio, TX, Kevin Kreeger: Earth Science Teacher in Queens, NY, Brian Pedersen: Weathernews Inc (WNI) ocean route forecasting, Sunnydale, CA, Lee Solomon: WNI ocean route forecasting, Sunnydale, CA

Brian Colle receives COMET Award

ITPA faculty member Brian Colle was awarded a collaborative COMET (Cooperative Program in Operational Meteorology Education and Teaching) award for 3 years to build a regional ensemble modeling forecast system and a real-time model verification system. This effort involves forecasters and hydrologists from the New York City, Philadelphia, and Boston regions and the Eastern Region Headquarters of the National Weather Service in Bohemia, NY. The modeling system will be constructed later this summer and will consist of a series of 5-7 moderate resolution (10-15 km grid spacing) forecasts for around the Northeast.

MSRC Convocation May 17, 8:30 am, Endeavour Hall 120

The MSRC convocation takes place at 8:30 am in Endeavour Hall 120. Please make an effort to attend and congratulate all graduating students, Masters, and Ph.Ds. The following students will attend the convocation: America Canas (MS, DeZafra), Maureen Dunn (MS, Wang), Lee Ferguson (PhD, Brownawell), Dianne Greenfield (PhD, Lonsdale), Sarah Griscom (PhD, Fisher), Anitra Ingalls(PhD, Lee), Melissa Jump (MS, Lwiza), Alberto Marinato (MS, Brownawell), Rutatenekwa Rugabandana (MS, Wilson), Charlene Sullivan (MS, Bokuniewicz), Kimberly Williams (MS, Lopez),Laurie Zaleski (MS, Flood), Ann Zulkosky (MS, McElroy), and Undergrads: Philyppe Carre and Kevin Kreeger (Colle) and Visna Harris (Bowman). Congratulations to all of you!

Enjoy your week,

Petra Udelhofen

This week’s contributors: Brian Colle, Nancy Glover, Eileen Doyle, Marvin Geller

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

May 13-17, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 2:30 pm Special Seminar Reflections on a decade of monitoring of herbicides in surface and groundwater of the midwestern United States, Speaker: E. Michael Thurman, Host: Bruce Brownawell EN120
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR No seminar until Fall 2002 EN120
Thursday 11:45 am-12:45pm Informal Seminar No seminar until Fall 2002 EN120
Friday 8:30am Convocation MSRC Convocation Ceremony EN120
12:30pm MSRC Colloquium No colloquium until Fall 2002 EN120
2:30 pm Weather Discussion No regular weather discussions until fall. There may be exceptions in case of severe weather. EN139


March 2002 Projects


Positions

Opportunities for Undergraduates

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year.http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

UpdatedMon, May 13, 2002


Vol. 2 No 21 April 29-May 3, 2002


Hello MSRC,
welcome to Soundings.  This page is currently under construction.  Come to Friday Beers!
Enjoy the Weekend.

 

Alex Kolker

 


 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

April 29-May 3, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Returning this Fall. EN120
Thursday 11:45 am-12:45pm Informal Seminar Returing this Fall. EN120
Friday 12:30pm MSRC Colloquium Returning this Fall. EN120
2:30 pm Weather Discussion Returning this Fall.  Special sessions may occur in the case of extreme weather. EN139

 


March 2002 Projects


Positions 

Postdoctoral Research Positions

Postdoctoral scientist at the Swiss Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology

Postdoctoral Research Position, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Climate Research Division

Postdoctoral Research Position Nearshore/Environmental Oceanography Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Postdoctoral Research Opportunity in Snow Hydrology/Cryospheric Science, and Postdoctoral Research Opportunities in Microwave Remote Sensing of Snow and Ice located at the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center, National Weather Service, in Chanhassen, Minnesota. http://www.nohrsc.nws.gov

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Tropical Western Pacific Office located at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA. http://www.arm.gov http://www.pnl.gov

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas. Scientists who have recently received their Ph.D. have an exciting opportunity to work alongside experienced scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Meteorology Division which is located in Monterey, California. For more information: http://www.vsp.ucar.edu

Faculty Positions

Dean, Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Stony Brook

The School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma invites applications for a faculty position – Assistant or Associate Professor, tenure-track or possibly tenured, to begin service in academic year 2002-2003. Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2002. E-mail William H. Beasley, Search Committee Chairperson wbeasley@ou.edu

Applications are invited for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. http://weather.ou.edu

The Dept. of Meteorology at the University of Maryland announces an opening for a tenure-track faculty position to begin on or before the 2002-2003 academic year.http://www.atmos.umd.edu

AGU Atmospheric Science Sections Job Links


RECENT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS


 

Produced by Petra Udelhofen

Updated Mon, May 6, 2002

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No 1, September 2 – September 7, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


Welcome back for a new school year!  We especially extend our warm welcomes to new students in atmospheric sciences. We wish everybody had a wonderful and productive summer.

We ask those of you who plan to participate in OCN694 to inform Gina ASAP so that you will receive a copy of the articles to be discussed on next Monday.
 

In the following weeks, we will post some latest research results and publication by ITPA faculty and students.

Note that Prof. Sultan Hameed is hosting the MSRC Friday Colloquium this week.  If you want to talk to the speaker, please let Prof. Hameed know.

 

 


THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

September 2-September 7, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Tuesday Class begins Note that MAR544 (Atmospheric Radiation) is scheduled on M/W/F at 14:15pm in Dutchess 150
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Comparison of a 2D Photochemical Model to Stratospheric
Ozone Data Using Statistical Trend Analysis. Speaker: Dr. Richard Stolarski
NASA Goddard Space  Flight Center
EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium FORCINGS AND FEEDBACKS BETWEEN THE MARINE NITROGEN CYCLE AND GLOBAL CLIMATE.  Speaker: Dr. Mark Altabet, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth.  Host: Sultan Hameed. Refreshments will be served starting at 12:15 PM. EN120
3:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No 2, September 8 – September 14, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


This week, Duane Waliser will attend the Coordinated Enhanced Observing Period (CEOP) monsoon systems studies
working group meeting, at IRI, Palisades, New York , USA .  Minghua Zhang will attend the ARM Science Team Executive Committee (STEC) meeting in Washington DC.

You may be interested to know the status of the PJ Ferry project.  Here is an update: All instruments have been mounted on board the vessel.  Data is expected to begin being recorded in the next couple weeks and a web page is currently under deveopment to describe the project and provide access to archive and real-time data.  For more information, please ask Duane Waliser, who is the PI of the project.

Publications by ITPA personnel:

The recent issue of the J. Climate includes an article by Edmund Chang and collaborators:  Storm Track Dynamics, Edmund Chang, Sukyoung Lee, and Kyle Swanson, J. Climate, 15, 2163-2183.  It will be posted on the AMS website shortly.

Duane Waliser recently has the following papers in press.  Some of them can be downloaded.

Waliser, D. E., K. M. Lau, W. Stern, C. Jones, 2002: <http://terra.msrc.sunysb.edu/mjolop/mjopred.win.all.doc.pdf> Potential Predictability of the Madden-Julian Oscillation, Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., In Press.

Waliser, D. E., J. Ridout, S. Xie, and M. Zhang, 2002: <http://terra.msrc.sunysb.edu/onr/waliser.etal.pdf> Variational Objective Analysis for Atmospheric Field Programs: A Model Assessment, J. Atmos. Sci., In Press.

Wu, M. L. C., S. Schubert, I. S. Kang, and D. E. Waliser, 2001: Forced and Free Intra-Seasonal Variability Over the South Asian Monsoon Region Simulated by 10 AGCMs, J. Climate, In Press.

Kang I.S., Jin K, Lau K.M., Shukla J., Krishnamurthy V., Schubert S.D., Waliser D.E., Stern W.F., Satyan V., Kitoh A., Meeh G.A., Kanamitsu M., Galin V.Y., Kim J.K., Sumi A., Wu G., Liu Y., 2002: Intercomparion of GCM simulated anomalies associated with the 1997-98 El Niño. J. Climate. In Press.

Kang IS, Jin K, Wang, B., Lau KM, Shukla J, Schubert SD, Waliser DE , Krishnamurthy V, Stern WF, Satyan V, Kitoh A, Meeh GA, Kanamitsu M, Galin VY, Kim JK, Sumi A, Wu G, Liu Y, 2001: Intercomparison of the climatological variations of Asian summer monsoon precipitation simulated by 10 GCMs. Clim. Dyn. In Press.

 

 


THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

September 8-September 14, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 12:40-13:35 Atmos. Seminar Pizza will be served for lunch END113
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Climate Change and Climate-Ecosystem Interactions, Ron Prinn, MIT EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Opioid Signaling in a Marine Bivalve, George Stefano,SUNY Old Westbury EN120
3:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No 3, September 15 – September 21, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


We have had big turn-outs at the Friday weather discussions led by Brian Colle.  We extend our welcomes to students from the ATM205 class participating in the discussion.  Last Friday, three numerical models, the MM5, the Eta and the Aviation models, all predicted heavy rain over our area from Sunday evening to Monday morning, as a result of the interaction between a cold front and hurricane Hanna.  It looks like the forecasts are on track.

The Center is establishing a Petra Udelhofen memorial scholarship fund.  The fund will be used to award outstanding undergraduate students in Atmospheric Sciences and Environmental Sciences.  A fund-raising commitee has been formed and will have its first meeting this week to plan fund raising activities.  Several of our faculty members have already made contributions to the fund.  We have an initial target of raising $10,000 for this scholarship fund.  If you would like to support this worthy effort, please contact Gina for more information.

The NCAR Community Climate Model (CCM) is now called the Community Atmospheric Model (CAM) as part of the Comminuty Climate System Model (CCSM).  A new version of the CAM (CAM2) was released to the community this summer.  CAM2 uses a new cloud macrophysics scheme developed by Minghua Zhang and collaborators.  A paper describing this new scheme can be downloaded here, which will appear in the Journal of the Geophysical Research (Zhang, M. H., W. Y. Lin, C. S. Bretherton, J. J. Hack, and P. J. Rasch, 2002: A modified formulation of fractional stratiform condensation rate in the Community Atmospheric Model CAM2), 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

September 15-September 21, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Tuesday 12:40-13:35 Atmos. Seminar Pizza will be served for lunch END113
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Title: “General Circulation Model Simulations of the Annual Cycle of Mars Climate”
Speaker: John Wilson
Affiliation: Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GDFL), NOAA
EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Title: REU in New York and Venice
Speaker: MSRC Faculty
EN120
3:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 

 

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No 4, September 22 – September 28, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


Last week, Bob Cess attended the NASA CERES Science Team Meeting in GDFL and gave a presentation there.  Marv Geller visited  NASA GISS to discuss collaborative research.

This week, the MIT Integrated Global System Model will be discussed in OCN694.  The following people have volunteered to lead discussions of the five component models:  Matthew Jone and Joe Olson for the economic and anthropogenic model, Justin Wolfe and Xiaosong Yang for the terrestrial ecosystem model, Yilin Li and Yangxing Zheng for the climate model, Jun Zheng and Travis Baggett for the atmospheric chemistry model, and Joonsuk Lee for the natural emission model.

The Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorology Society has just gone online (http://www.royal-met-soc.org.uk/).  A paper entitled  “Intercomparison and evaluation of cumulus parametrizations under summertime midlatitude continental conditions” by Xie et al. was recently published in this journal.  Minghua Zhang is a co-author of  the paper.  The paper can be downloaded from http://masetto.catchword.com/vl=1124906/cl=63/nw=1/rpsv/cw/rms/00359009/v128n582/s4/p1095.  Dr. Xie graduated from our program, and he will be visiting us on October 11.

The 2002-2003 National Forecast Contest begins this week (http://www.ems.psu.edu/NFC/). The first city is Fargo, ND. The following 17 students and faculty are participating this year.

Division 1 (faculty and staff):
Brian Colle

Division 2 (graduate students):
Travis Baggett
Matt Jones
Stephanie Grimes
David Myers
Joe Olson
Justin Wolfe
Song Yong

Division 3 (junior/senior):
John Albright
Mike Charles
Joe Giannotti
Paul Giordano
Adrienne Leptich
Don McGrath
Melissa Ou
Anne Szorc
Brian White

Employment Opportunities:

The Department of Atmospheric Science at the University of Alabama in Huntsville invites applications for a tenure track faculty member at the assistant or associate professor level.   Details can be found on the ITPA bulletin board.

The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) announces the continuation of the NOAA Postdoctoral Program in Climate and Global Change.  UCAR manages this NOAA-sponsored program which pairs recently graduated postdoctorates with host scientists at US institutions to work in an area of mutual interest.  Details can be found at www.ogp.noaa.gov and on the ITPA bulletin board.

In cooperation with the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL), the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research is seeking postdoctoral level scientists interested in furthering their research interests and developing expertise in new areas.  Details can be found at www.nrlmry.navy.mil or on the ITPA bulletin board.

 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

September 22-September 28, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 12:40-13:35 Atmos. Seminar Pizza will be ordered for lunch END113
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Title: “Chlorofluorocarbon Constraints on North Atlantic Ventilation”
Speaker: Thomas W.N. Haine
Affiliation: Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Johns Hopkins University
EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Title: The law, Politics and Science of Fishery Management Plan-A Tale of Tilefish
Speaker: Michael White
Affiliation: Environmental Law
Host: Marv Geller
EN120
3:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 

 

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No 5, September 29 – October 5, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


This week, Brian Colle will attend the Mid-Atlantic Winter Storms Conference in Washington D.C. on 3-5 October.  Brian will present verification results from the SBU MM5 modeling system as well as lead a panel discussion on “Improving Winter Weather Forecasting – Where Do We Go From Here?”.  Marv Geller will be in Rio de Janeiro attending the ICSU meeting (International Council of Scientific Unions) in his capacity as SCOSTEP (Scientific Committee for Solar-Terrestrial Physics) President.

On Tuesday, October 1st, there will be a National Weather Service SKYWARN Spotter Training program in 120 Endeavour Hall MSRC from 5:30-8:00 pm. The program is open to the general public. No experience is needed, just an interest in weather and storms. This is your chance to become NWS
certified, thereby allowing you to call in your reports of severe weather to the NWS when needed. To register for this *free* class, please send an email to Joe Giannotti (joe.giannotti@noaa.gov) before Tuesday.

The MIT Integrated Global System Model will  be discussed in OCN694 for one more week.  The following people will lead this week’s discussion:  Justin Wolfe and Xiaosong Yang for the terrestrial ecosystem model, Yilin Li and Yangxing Zheng for the climate model, Jun Zheng and Travis Baggett for the atmospheric chemistry model.

Duane Waliser will be giving the following talk and participating in the following: “Predictability and Forecast Issues Associated with the MJO”, Risk Prediction Initiative (RPI) sponsored workshop on Weather Extremes and Atmospheric Oscillations, Bermuda Biological Station for Research, September 30 – October 2, 2002. 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

September 29-October 5, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 12:40-13:35 Atmos. Seminar Pizza will be ordered for lunch. END113
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR “Weather Monitoring and Prediction for the 2002 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games”
Speaker: James Steenburgh
Affiliation: Department of Meteorology, University of Utah
EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Title: Life in the post-Redfield ocean: Relationships among element specific exportrates associated with plankton production
Speaker: Raymond Sambrotto,Columbia University
Host: Gordon Taylor
EN120
3:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 

 

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No 6, October 6 – October 12, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


Dr. Pablo Zurita has arrived at ITPA to work with Edmund Chang as a postdoc.  Pablo recently graduated from MIT.  His office is in Endeavor 195.  Please stop by and say hello when you get a chance.

This week, we will have several people visiting ITPA.  On Monday, Dr. Jim Hack at NCAR will be at ITPA to discuss collaborative research with Minghua Zhang.  On Wednesday, Dr. Isidoro Orlanski at GFDL will visit us and give a seminar.  On Friday, Dr. Shaocheng Xie from the Lawrence Livermore National Lab will visit Minghua Zhang and give a special seminar.

Marv Geller is away this week to attend meetings of the American Meteorological Society’s Council and Executive Committee in Newport, Rhode Island.

This week, ITPA’s 17-member team in the National Forecast Contest begins forecasting for Burlington, VT for two weeks.

The American Meteorological Society has developed special programs to encourage students to join AMS memberships. Invitation letter and application form can be downloaded from:: http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS/memb/generalrecruit2.pdf  (letter) and http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS/memb/smiley_app.pdf  (application) .

 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

October 6 – October 12, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 12:40-13:35 Atmos. Seminar Pizza will be ordered for lunch. END113
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Title: “Bifurcation in Eddy Life-Cycles:Implication for Storm Track Variability”
Speaker: Isidoro Orlanski
Affiliation: Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL), NOAA
EN120
Friday 10:30-11:30am Special Seminar “Intercomparison and Evaluation of Cumulus Parameterizations Under
Summertime Midlatitude Continental Conditions”
Speaker: Shaocheng Xie
Affiliation: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Title: Local and deep-water forcing contributions to anomalous water properties on the west Florida shelf
Speaker: Robert Weisberg
Affiliation: University of South Florida
Host: Bob Wilson
EN120
3:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 

 

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No 7, October 13 – October 19, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


Bob Cess will be in Houston this week to attend the 34th COSPAR (Committee on Space Research) Scientific Assembly.  He is invited by the Assembly to present the following talk: “Changes in the Atmospheric Greenhouse Effect during 1985 to 1999”.

We will add profiles of ITPA postdocs and research associates on our web.  Please contact George for details if you are in this category.

For those of you who followed the “iris” hypothesis by Prof. Richard Lindzen at MIT regarding the change of cloud cover with temperature, there is a new round of discussion in the latest issue of the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society between Lindzen et al. and Hartmann and Michelson, which can be downloaded here and here .  Prof. Lindzen will visit us this week to give the Friday seminar  on a different topic.  We have two seminars in atmospheric sciences this week.

 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

October 13 – October 19, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 12:40-13:35 OCN694 Graduate Atmos. Seminar (Lunch Captain Of The Week: .  Si-won Song) END113
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Title: “On the Downward Propagating and Non-Propagating Polar Stratospheric Warming”
Speaker: Shuntai Zhou
Affiliation: Climate Prediction Center, NOAA
EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Title: The Interaction of waves and convection in the tropics
Speaker: Richard Lindzen
Affiliation: MIT
EN120
3:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 

 

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No 8, October 20 – October 26, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


This week, ITPA’s team in the National Forecast Contest begins forecasting for Cheyenne, WY for two weeks.

Duane Waliser will be at George Mason University at the Climate Diagnostics Workshop presenting two talks, one on AGCM representations of intraseasonal variatiability in N.H. summer and another on intraseasonal predictability.

There will be an AMS meeting for the Long Island / NYC Chapter on Thursday, 24 October 2002, 5:30 to 9:00 pm at the New York Academy of Sciences, 2 East 63rd St., NYC. There will be speakers and a buffet reception dinner. Please see Prof. Colle for additional details.

This Friday, we will have the FIRST EVER MSRC Oktoberfest, full of German beer, pretzels, bratwurst, soda, cider, and funnel cake. The event is scheduled on Friday, October 25, from 3:30 pm in the boathouse. It is a fundraising event for the Petra M. Udelhofen Scholarship Fund. All are invitated to join the fun. Volunteers are needed to help with set-up. If you can help, please contact one of the Oktoberfest Committee members (Sandy, Julia, Gina, Duane, Sue, Dianne).

The American Meteorological Society has just announcened its undergraduate and graduate scholarships/fellowships for the year 2003.  All applications need to be submitted before Feburary, 2003.  Eligibility and selection information can be found at http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS/amsedu/scholfeldocs/.  If you are interested to explore the opportuinities, please see one of the ITPA faculty members.

 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

October 20 – October 26, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 12:40-13:35 OCN694 Graduate Atmos. Seminar (Lunch will be ordered) END113
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Title: “Stratospheric Water Vapor and the Tropical Tropopause”
Speaker: Marvin Geller and Xuelong Zhou
Affiliation: Institute for Terrestrial and Planetary Atmospheres, MSRC
EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Title: Domestication of uncultivated microorganisms
Speaker: Slava Epstein
Affiliation: Northeastern University
Host: Gordon Taylor
EN120
3:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 

 

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No 9, October 27 – November 2, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 


Th Oktoberfest last Friday was a big success.  Thanks to members of the organizing committee (Sandy, Julia, Gina, Duane, Sue, Dianne).  Everybody enjoyed  the great selection of food, drinks, good talking and music.

Duane Waliser will be giving a seminar at University of Rhode Island on Friday: “Indo-Pacific Ocean Response to the Madden-Julian Oscillation”.

The National Science Foundation has graduate research fellowships available for competition every year.  More information can be found at https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/jsp/homepage/grad_research_fel.jsp.  The deadline for this year’s application is November 7, 2002.   If you are interested to explore the opportuinities, please see one of the ITPA faculty members.

 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

October 27 – November 2, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 12:40-13:35 OCN694 Graduate Atmos. Seminar (Lunch Captain: Stephanie Grimes) END113
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Title: “Interannual to Multi-Decadal Response of the Ocean to NAO Wind Forcing”
Speaker: Martin Visbeck
Affiliation: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University
EN120
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Title: X-rays: the first 105 years
Speaker: Peter Stephens
Affiliation: SBU Physics
Host: Larry Swanson
EN120
3:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 

 

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No 10, November 3 – November 9, 2002

ITPA NEWS

 

Congradulations to Pablo Zurita who successfully defended his thesis at MIT on October 28th. Pablo will be our TAOS speaker this Wednesday.

This week, two ITPA faculty members will attend the DOE ARM Cloud Parameterization and Modeling Working Group Meeting in Washington DC. Minghua Zhang is a co-organizer of the meeting, and Bob Cess will give an invited presentation entitled “Cloud feedback: What have we learned over the past 27 years?”. The meeting agenda can be found here. After this workshop, Minghua Zhang will attend the steering committee meeting of the PCMDI Climate Prediction-ARM Parameterization Testbed (CAPT) project.

Brian Colle will attend the Northeast Operational Weather Workshop in Albany, NY this week (5-6 Nov). He will present a paper entitled: “High Resolution Simulations of Floyd (1999): Structural Evolution and Responsible Mechanisms for the Heavy Rainfall over the Northeast U.S.”

On Wednesday and Thursday, Edmund Chang is off to Lamont attending a meeting on abrupt climate change. He was invited to present a talk on the influence of Hadley circulation changes on mid-latitude climate.

Graduate student Matt Jones has developed a web page for the new MM5 5-member ensemble forecasts over the Northeast for the 0000 UTC cycle (see http://cheget.msrc.sunysb.edu/html/suny_ensemble.html). More members will be added as computer power is increased this winter.

The ITPA National Forecast team begins forecasting for Seattle, WA this week. 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

November 3 – November 9, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 11:30-12:30 Faculty informal discussion of observational programs EN113
Monday 12:40-13:35 OCN694 Graduate Atmos. Seminar EN113
Wednesday 11:30 am – 12:30 pm TAOS SEMINAR Title: Baroclinic Adjustment and PV mixing in the Extratropical Tropopause
Speaker: Pablo Zurita
Affiliation: ITPA/MSRC SUNY Stony Brook
EN120
Friday 9:30-10:30 am Faculty informal discussion of inter-disciplinary modelling programs EN113
Friday 12:30 pm MSRC Colloquium Title: Predictability in the midst of chaos: scientific basis for prediction of seasonal and interannual climate variations
Speaker: Jagadish Shukla
Affiliation: Institute of Global Environment and Society
Host: Marv Geller
EN120
3:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

 


 

 

 

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No. 11, November 10 – 16,

ITPA NEWS

This week, Marv Geller will be attending the International Symposium on Stratospheric Variations and Climate at Kyushu University in Fukuoka, Japan.

The Oktoberfest 2002 photo gallery is now online. You can find it on http://atmos.msrc.sunysb.edu/npages/of.html

This week, ITPA second year Ph.D graduate students will take their oral qualifying exam.

 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

November 10 – 16,
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 12:30 – 1:30PM OCN694 Graduate Atmos. Seminar EN113
Wednesday 11:30 – 12:30 PM TAOS
Title: Tropical Atlantic Climate Variability
Speaker: Yochanan Kushnir
Affil: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
EN120
Friday 12:30 – 1:30 PM MSRC Colloqium
Title: Biotic effects of large CO2 emissions during early Cenozoic Greenhouse world
Speaker: Ellen Thomas
Affil: Wesleyan
Host: Alex Kolker
EN120
Friday 3:30 pm Weather Discussion Discussion of current weather events. Details to be announced Friday mornings. EN139

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No. 13, November 24 – November 30, 2002

ITPA NEWS

This week, Minghua Zhang will be at NCAR in Boulder Colorado to attend a joint meeting between NCAR and GFDL discussing the NCAR Community Climate Model and the GFDL GCM.

A ribbon cutting ceremony was held last Friday to dedicate Petra’s Corner in the MASIC Library. All books donated by Petra’s family have been catalogued by the university library with Petra’s name permanently marked. We want to thank the fund raising committee for the outstanding work and the library to make this happen.

Stony Brook is again in the National Forecast Contest this year, with 39 schools competing. This year we have 17 forecasters, as opposed to 11 last year. We are almost half way into the contest and we are in 11th place (2 ahead of ALB!).

Special congratulations goes to David Myers, who just finished in a 3-way tie for *first* place forecasting for Seattle, WA. He beat out over 700 other forecasters across the country. Dave will receive a certificate, the first ever awarded to Stony Brook for a city competition.

Yong Song finished in 11th place for SEA. Great job!

 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

November 24 – November 30, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 12:30-1:30PM OCN694 Graduate Atmos. Seminar (group lunch will be ordered. the following people will lead the discussions: Matthew Jones, Si-Won Song, Tiehan Zhou, and Stephanie Grimes.) EN113
Monday 2:30-4:00PM Dean Candidate Linda Duguay: Dean Candidate’s presentation. EN120
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No. 14, December 1 – December 7, 2002

ITPA NEWS

This week will conclude the interviews of all Dean candidates of MSRC. On Thursday afternoon, the Search Committee will separately meet the students, staff, and faculty to solicit input for all candidates. On Friday morning, the Committee will meet to deliberate on the search and make recommendations to the Provost. Please attend these meetings and have your opinions heard. You may also provide written comments to members of the committee.

Based on recommendations from the NASA sponsored workshop on Prospects For Improved Forecasts Of Weather And Short-Term Climate Variability On Sub-Seasonal Time Scales that was held last April and a number of program discussions since that meeting, letters went out from ITPA/SUNY this week to ten international forecasting/modeling centers and six empirical modelers inviting their participation in a new experimental MJO/ISO prediction program. The program will be hosted by CDC/NOAA and involve having extended-range forecasts operationally sent to CDC where they will process the data to emphasize the MJO/ISO components, compute skill scores, and serve this information to the community via the web. Progress on this activity will be reported in the future.

This week, U.S. policy makers and the climate science community as well as stakeholders will gather in Washington to discuss the Planning of the U. S. Climate Change Science Program. Speakers include former Stony Brook University president and current Science Advisor to President Bush Dr. John Marburger, Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham, NSF Director Dr. Rita Colwell, NASA Administrator Sean O’Keefe, EPA Administrator Christine Todd-Whitman, Deputy Secretary of Commerce Dr. Samuel Bodman, US Climate Change Science Program Director Dr. James Mahoney, President of National Academy of Sciences Dr. Bruce Alberts, and many more. The workshop is open to public and comments are solicited before January 13, 2003 (http://www.climatescience.gov/sitemap.htm).

 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

December 1 – December 7, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Monday 12:30 – 1:30 PM OCN694 Graduate Atmos. Seminar (group lunch will be ordered) EN113
Tuesday 11:30AM – 12:45 PM Dean Candidate Dean Candidate’s Presentation EN120
Wednesday 11:30-12:30PM TAOS
Title: Cyclone Life Cycles and Wave Packets
Speaker: Edmund Chang
Affil: ITPA/MSRC SUNY @ Stony Brook
EN120
Friday 12:30 – 1:30 PM MSRC Colloqium
Title: Documenting biogeochemical change in the coastal oceans and the evolving role of ocean observatories
Speaker: Oscar Schofield
Affil: Rutgers ICMS
Host: Rob Armstrong
EN120

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No. 15, December 8 – December 14, 2002

ITPA NEWS

The MSRC Holiday party is on Friday this week at 3:00 pm! Please come and bring your family with you. We look forward to the fun of food, drinks, raffle, music, ….

This week is the last week of class. All students are busy preparing the finals.

This week, Minghua Zhang will be in San Francisco attending the ARM STEC meeting.

 

THIS WEEK’S EVENTS

December 8 – December 14, 2002
Day Time Event Topic Room
Friday 12:30 – 1:30 PM MSRC Colloqium
Title: Interactions Between Dissolved Organic Matter, Microbial Processes and Community Structure at the Bermuda Atlantic Time-Series Station
Speaker: Craig Carlson
Affil: UCSB
Host: Nick Fisher
EN120

ITPA Newsletter Vol. 3 No. 16, December 15 – December 21, 2002

ITPA NEWS

This is the final exam week. Good luck to all atmospheric sciences graduate and undergraduate students.

Last Friday’s MSRC holiday party was a huge success. The raffles organized by the Udelhofen scholarship committee added a lot of fun to the party. Most of the people got prizes. Among the hot items contested are the baskets of bottles of the Rosemount Estate wines. More details including photos will be posted soon.

On Monday, from 12:30 pm to 3:00 pm, there is an ITPA faculty meeting.

Roger Kelly’s retirement party starts from 3:00 pm on Monday in Endeavor 120.

PJ Ferry Project Update: Nearly all the instruments have been mounted onto the ship and wiring is underway. It is expected that the ADCP and wind sensors will be the first to become operational – hopefully in the next couple weeks. In the meantime you can check out the project web site at: www.stonybrook.edu/soundscience. Any comments and suggestions in regards to the latter are welcome.