Articles from Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (January 1, 2018)
1-62 out of 62 article(s)
Title  |
Author |
Type |
Words |
[PM.sub.2.5] POLLUTION IN CHINA AND HOW IT HAS BEEN EXACERBATED BY TERRAIN AND METEOROLOGICAL CONDITIONS: Frequent air stagnation events due to the interaction of meteorological conditions and terrain in China exacerbate its severe air pollution. |
Wang, Xiaoyan; Dickinson, Robert E.; Su, Liangyuan; Zhou, Chunlue; Wang, Kaicun |
Report |
9409 |
10 QUESTIONS WITH ... A new series of profiles celebrating AMS Certified Broadcast Meteorologists and Sealholders. |
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Interview |
473 |
10. EXTREME CALIFORNIA RAINS DURING WINTER 2015/16: A CHANGE IN EL NINO TELECONNECTION?: Failure of heavy rain in Southern California during the 2016 strong El Nino compared to flooding rains during the 1983 strong El Nino does not constitute a climate change effect. |
Quan, Xiao-Wei; Hoerling, Martin; Smith, Lesley; Perlwitz, Judith; Zhang, Tao; Hoell, Andrew; Wolter |
Report |
2262 |
11. WAS THE JANUARY 2016 MID-ATLANTIC SNOWSTORM "JONAS" SYMPTOMATIC OF CLIMATE CHANGE? |
Wolter, Klaus; Hoerling, Martin; Eischeid, Jon K.; Allured, Dave |
Report |
2971 |
12. ANTHROPOGENIC FORCINGS AND ASSOCIATED CHANGES IN FIRE RISK IN WESTERN NORTH AMERICA AND AUSTRALIA DURING 2015/16. |
Tett, Simon F.B.; Falk, Alexander; Rogers, Megan; Spuler, Fiona; Turner, Calum; Wainwright, Joshua; |
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2544 |
13. A MULTIMETHOD ATTRIBUTION ANALYSIS OF THE PROLONGED NORTHEAST BRAZIL HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL DROUGHT (2012-16). |
Martins, Eduardo S.P.R.; Coelho, Caio A.S.; Haarsma, Rein; Otto, Friederike E.L.; King, Andrew D.; V |
Report |
2644 |
14. ATTRIBUTION OF WINTERTIME ANTICYCLONIC STAGNATION CONTRIBUTING TO AIR POLLUTION IN WESTERN EUROPE: Climate simulations suggest a potential increase in frequency of stagnant wintertime conditions that prevailed over northwestern Europe in December 2016: it is significant in one multimodel ensemble but not in two single-model ensembles. |
Vautard, Robert; Colette, Augustin; Van Meijgaard, Erik; Meleux, Frederik; Van Oldenborgh, Geert Jan |
Report |
3050 |
15. ANALYSIS OF THE EXCEPTIONALLY WARM DECEMBER 2015 IN FRANCE USING FLOW ANALOGUES. |
Jezequel, Aglae; Yiou, Pascal; Radanovics, Sabine; Vautard, Robert |
Report |
2188 |
16. WARM WINTER, WET SPRING, AND AN EXTREME RESPONSE IN ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING ON THE IBERIAN PENINSULA. |
Sippel, Sebastian; El-Madany, Tarek S.; Migliavacca, Mirco; Mahecha, Miguel D.; Carrara, Arnaud; Fla |
Report |
3088 |
17. ANTHROPOGENIC INTENSIFICATION OF SOUTHERN AFRICAN FLASH DROUGHTS AS EXEMPLIFIED BY THE 2015/16 SEASON: Flash drought over southern Africa was tripled during the last 60 years mainly due to anthropogenic climate change, and it was intensified during 2015116 in the midst of heat waves. |
Yuan, Xing; Wang, Linying; Wood, Eric F. |
Report |
2734 |
18. ANTHROPOGENIC ENHANCEMENT OF MODERATE-TO-STRONG EL NINO EVENTS LIKELYCONTRIBUTED TO DROUGHT AND POOR HARVESTS IN SOUTHERN AFRICA DURING 2016: A 40-member CESM LE ensemble indicates that climate change likely increased the intensity of the 2015/16 El Nino, contributing to further decreases in SA precipitation, crop production and food availability. |
Funk, Chris; Davenport, Frank; Harrison, Laura; Magadzire, Tamuka; Galu, Gideon; Artan, Guleid A.; S |
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3366 |
19. CLIMATE CHANGE INCREASED THE LIKELIHOOD OF THE 2016 HEAT EXTREMES IN ASIA. |
Imada, Yukiko; Shiogama, Hideo; Takahashi, Chiharu; Watanabe, Masahiro; Mori, Masato; Kamae, Youichi |
Report |
2439 |
2. EXPLAINING EXTREME OCEAN CONDITIONS IMPACTING LIVING MARINE RESOURCES. |
Webb, Robert S.; Werner, Francisco E. |
Essay |
2089 |
20. EXTREME RAINFALL (R20MM, RX5DAY) IN YANGTZEHUAI, CHINA, IN JUNE-JULY 2016: THE ROLE OF ENSO AND ANTHROPOGENIC CLIMATE CHANGE. |
Sun, Qiaohong; Miao, Chiyuan |
Report |
2385 |
21. ATTRIBUTION OF THE JULY 2016 EXTREME PRECIPITATION EVENT OVER CHINAS WUHAN: Human-induced warming and El Nino may have substantially increased the probability of the occurrence of such events as the July 2016 extreme precipitation over China's Wuhan. |
Zhou, Chunlue; Wang, Kaicun; Qi, Dan |
Report |
3684 |
22. DO CLIMATE CHANGE AND EL NINO INCREASE LIKELIHOOD OF YANGTZE RIVER EXTREME RAINFALL? Anthropogenic climate change has increased the risk of 2016 Yangtze River extreme summer rainfall by 17%-59%, and the increase could reach 37%-9l% in El Nino years. |
Yuan, Xing; Wang, Shanshan; Hu, Zeng-Zhen |
Report |
2435 |
23. HUMAN INFLUENCE ON THE RECORD-BREAKING COLD EVENT IN JANUARY OF 2016 IN EASTERN CHINA: Anthropogenic influences are estimated to have reduced the likelihood of an extreme cold event in midwinter with the intensity equal to or stronger than the record of 2016 in eastern China by about two-thirds. |
Qian, Cheng; Wang, Jun; Dong, Siyan; Yin, Hong; Burke, Claire; Ciavarella, Andrew; Dong, Buwen; Frey |
Report |
2647 |
24. ANTHROPOGENIC INFLUENCE ON THE EASTERN CHINA 2016 SUPER COLD SURGE: Human influence decreased the probability of a cold surge occurrence in China. |
Sun, Ying; Hu, Ting; Zhang, Xuebin; Wan, Hui; Stott, Peter; Lu, Chunhui |
Report |
2896 |
25. THE HOT AND DRY APRIL OF 2016 IN THAILAND: The record temperature of April 2016 in Thailand would not have occurred without the influence of both anthropogenic forcings and El Nino, which also increased the likelihood of low rainfall. |
Christidis, Nikolaos; Manomaiphiboon, Kasemsan; Ciavarella, Andrew; Stott, Peter A. |
|
2348 |
26. THE EFFECT OF INCREASING C[O.sub.2] ON THE EXTREME SEPTEMBER 2016 RAINFALL ACROSS SOUTHEASTERN AUSTRALIA: The effect of increasing atmospheric C[O.sub.2] on the extreme September 2016 rainfall across southeastern Australia was minimal, with changes in circulation and static stability driving a tendency towards drier conditions. |
Hope, Pandora; Lim, Eun-Pa; Hendon, Harry; Wang, Guomin |
Report |
3504 |
27. NATURAL VARIABILITY NOT CLIMATE CHANGE DROVE THE RECORD WET WINTER IN SOUTHEAST AUSTRALIA. |
King, Andrew D. |
Report |
2275 |
28. A MULTIFACTOR RISK ANALYSIS OF THE RECORD 2016 GREAT BARRIER REEF BLEACHING: Anthropogenic greenhouse gases likely increased the risk of the extreme Great Barrier Reef bleaching event through anomalously high sea surface temperature and the accumulation of thermal stress. |
Lewis, Sophie C.; Mallela, Jennie |
Report |
2862 |
29. SEVERE FROSTS IN WESTERN AUSTRALIA IN SEPTEMBER 2016: Human influence may have enhanced the circulation pattern that drives cold outbreaks and frost risk over southwest Western Australia in September 2016, but larger thermodynamic changes may have still made these events less likely. |
Grose, Michael R.; Black, Mitchell; Risbey, James S.; Uhe, Peter; Hope, Pandora K.; Haustein, Karste |
Report |
2911 |
3. CMIP5 MODEL-BASED ASSESSMENT OF ANTHROPOGENIC INFLUENCE ON RECORD GLOBAL WARMTH DURING 2016. |
Knutson, Thomas R.; Kam, Jonghun; Zeng, Fanrong; Wittenberg, Andrew T. |
Report |
2459 |
30. FUTURE CHALLENGES IN EVENT ATTRIBUTION METHODOLOGIES. |
Stott, Peter A.; Christidis, Nikos; Herring, Stephanie C.; Hoell, Andrew; Kossin, James P.; Schreck, |
Report |
1491 |
4. THE EXTREME 2015/16 EL NINO, IN THE CONTEXT OF HISTORICAL CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND CHANGE. |
Newman, Matthew; Wittenberg, Andrew T.; Cheng, Linyin; Compo, Gilbert P.; Smith, Catherine A. |
Report |
2496 |
5. ECOLOGICAL IMPACTS OF THE 2015/16 EL NINO IN THE CENTRAL EQUATORIAL PACIFIC: Coral reef and seabird communities in the central equatorial Pacific were disrupted by record-setting sea surface temperatures, linked to an anthropogenically forced trend, during the 2015/16 El Nino. |
Brainard, Russell E.; Oliver, Thomas; McPhaden, Michael J.; Cohen, Anne; Venegas, Roberto; Heenan, A |
Report |
3373 |
6. FORCING OF MULTIYEAR EXTREME OCEAN TEMPERATURES THAT IMPACTED CALIFORNIA CURRENT LIVING MARINE RESOURCES IN 2016: Significant impacts on California Current living marine resources in 2016 resulted from sustained extremely high ocean temperatures forced by a confluence of natural drivers and likely exacerbated by anthropogenic warming. |
Jacox, Michael G.; Alexander, Michael A.; Mantua, Nathan J.; Scott, James D.; Hervieux, Gaelle; Webb |
Report |
3326 |
7. CMIP5 MODEL-BASED ASSESSMENT OF ANTHROPOGENIC INFLUENCE ON HIGHLY ANOMALOUS ARCTIC WARMTH DURING NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2016: According to CMIP5 simulations, the highly anomalous Arctic warmth during November-December 2016, as estimated in five observed datasets, most likely would not have been possible without anthropogenic forcing. |
Kam, Jonghun; Knutson, Thomas R.; Zeng, Fanrong; Wittenberg, Andrew T. |
Report |
2450 |
8. THE HIGH LATITUDE MARINE HEAT WAVE OF 2016 AND ITS IMPACTS ON ALASKA: The 2016 Alaska marine heat wave was unprecedented in terms of sea surface temperatures and ocean heat content, and CMIP5 data suggest human-induced climate change has greatly increased the risk of such anomalies. |
Walsh, John E.; Thoman, Richard L.; Bhatt, Uma S.; Bieniek, Peter A.; Brettschneider, Brian; Brubake |
|
2486 |
9. ANTHROPOGENIC AND NATURAL INFLUENCES ON RECORD 2016 MARINE HEAT WAVES: Two of the longest and most intense marine heat waves in 2016 were up to fifty times more likely due to anthropogenic climate change. |
Oliver, Eric C.J.; Perkins-Kirkpatrick, Sarah E.; Holbrook, Neil J.; Bindoff, Nathaniel L. |
Report |
2495 |
A NEW LIDAR INSTRUMENT FOR REMOTELY MEASURING WIND SPEED. |
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|
438 |
A SUCCESSFUL PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE WITH DEDICATED GEOSTATIONARY OPERATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL SATELLITES GOES- 10 AND -12 SUPPORTING BRAZIL: The GOES-10 and -12 experience improved the environmental monitoring of South America and demonstrated the importance of international scientific communication for advancing satellite meteorology. |
Costa, Simone M.S.; Negri, Renato G.; Ferreira, Nelson J.; Schmit, Timothy J.; Arai, Nelson; Flauber |
Essay |
7832 |
ABSTRACT. |
Herring, Stephanie C.; Christidi, Nikolaos; Hoell, Andrew; Kossin, James P.; Schreck, Carl J., III; |
|
547 |
AMS Community Snapshots. |
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|
153 |
BUILDING THE SUN4CAST SYSTEM: Improvements in Solar Power Forecasting: The Sun4Cast System results from a research-to-operations project built on a value chain approach, benefiting electric utilities' customers, society, and the environment by improving state-of-the-science solar power forecasting capabilities. |
Haupt, Sue Ellen; Kosovic, Branko; Jensen, Tara; Lazo, Jeffrey K.; Lee, Jared A.; Jimenez, Pedro A.; |
Report |
8536 |
CALENDAR OF MEETINGS. |
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2527 |
CORPORATION AND INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS. |
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List |
639 |
DAYTON G.VINCENT 1936-2017. |
Smith, Phillip; Agee, Ernest |
Obituary |
619 |
ECHOES. |
Sealls, Alan |
Brief article |
179 |
FELLOWSHIP AND SCHOLARSHIP SPONSORS. |
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Brief article |
202 |
FORECASTING EXTREME EVENTS BEFORE THEIR FORMATION. |
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472 |
GLOBAL FINGERPRINTING OF RISING SEA LEVELS. |
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535 |
HURRICANE WITH A HISTORY: Hawaiian Newspapers Illuminate an 1871 Storm: How 114 years of Hawaiian-language newspapers starting in 1834 extend our knowledge of natural disasters into the nineteenth century and to precontact times. |
Businger, Steven; Nogelmeier, M. Puakea; Chinn, Pauline W.U.; Schroeder, Thomas |
Report |
5631 |
I. INTRODUCTION TO EXPLAINING EXTREME EVENTS OF 2016 FROM A CLIMATE PERSPECTIVE. |
Herring, Stephanie C.; Christidis, Nikolaos; Hoell, Andrew; Kossin, James P.; Schreck, Carl J., III; |
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2764 |
LETTER FROM THE EDITOR: WHY WE CROSS THE ROAD. |
Rosenfeld, Jeff |
Editorial |
515 |
LIVING ON THE REAL WORLD. |
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1427 |
MAX KOHLER 1915-2017. |
Bruce, James; Schaake, John |
Obituary |
467 |
MEMBER ENGAGEMENT AND SUPPORT FOR VOLUNTEERS. |
Seitter, Keith L. |
Column |
586 |
MORE-PERSISTENT WEAK STRATOSPHERIC POLAR VORTEX STATES LINKED TO COLD EXTREMES: Over recent decades, the stratospheric polar vortex has shifted toward more frequent weak states, which can explain Eurasian cooling trends in boreal winter in the era of Arctic amplification. |
Kretschmer, Marlene; Coumou, Dim; Agel, Laurie; Barlow, Mathew; Tziperman, Eli; Cohen, Judah |
Report |
7392 |
NOMINATION SUBMISSIONS. |
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|
956 |
RESERVOIR EVAPORATION IN THE WESTERN UNITED STATES: Current Science, Challenges, and Future Needs. |
Friedrich, Katja; Grossman, Robert L.; Huntington, Justin; Blanken, Peter D.; Lenters, John; Holman, |
Report |
12747 |
ROGER WAKIMOTO: 2018 AMS President. |
Thomas-Medwid, Rachel S. |
Interview |
1801 |
Ruby Leung. |
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Brief biography |
218 |
STREAMFLOW STUDY REVEALS CHANGING FLOOD PATTERNS. |
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Report |
451 |
Study Connects Shipping Exhaust to Intense Thunderstorms. |
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414 |
The ARM Cloud Radar Simulator for Global Climate Models: Bridging Field Data and Climate Models. |
Zhang, Yuying; Xie, Shaocheng; Klein, Stephen A.; Marchand, Roger; Kollias, Pavlos; Clothiaux, Eugen |
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3200 |
THE DYNAMICS--AEROSOLCHEMISTRY--CLOUD INTERACTIONS IN WEST AFRICA FIELD CAMPAIGN: Overview and Research Highlights: Unprecedented ground-based and aircraft measurements in southern West Africa characterize atmospheric composition and dynamics, low-level cloud properties, the diurnal cycle, and air pollution impacts on health. |
Flamant, C.; Knippertz, P.; Fink, A.H.; Akpo, A.; Brooks, B.; Chiu, C.J.; Coe, H.; Danuor, S.; Evans |
Report |
11387 |
THE NEXUS BETWEEN SEA ICE AND POLAR EMISSIONS OF MARINE BIOGENIC AEROSOLS: We examine the relationship between sea ice dynamics, phytoplankton biomass, and emissions of marine biogenic aerosols in both the Arctic and Southern Oceans. |
Gabric, Albert; Matrai, Patricia; Jones, Graham; Middleton, Julia |
Report |
11346 |
UNLOCKING THE POTENTIAL OF NEXRAD DATA THROUGH NOAA'S BIG DATA PARTNERSHIP: NOAA's Big Data Partnership has facilitated unprecedented access to NEXRAD real-time and archive data, enabling cloud computing that is accessible, efficient, and innovative. |
Ansari, Steve; Del Greco, Stephen; Kearns, Edward; Brown, Otis; Wilkins, Scott; Ramamurthy, Mohan; W |
Report |
7462 |
Unusually Deep Wintertime Cirrus Clouds Observed over the Alaskan Subarctic. |
Campbell, James R.; Peterson, David A.; Marquis, Jared W.; Fochesatto, Gilberto J.; Vaughan, Mark A. |
Report |
2834 |
WHEN DURING THEIR LIFE CYCLE ARE EXTRATROPICAL CYCLONES ATTENDED BY FRONTS? |
Schemm, Sebastian; Sprenger, Michael; Wernli, Heini |
Report |
10285 |
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