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Forecast: climate conversations with Michael White

48 Episodes

72 minutes | Sep 5, 2018
Peter Bauer on numerical weather prediction
Numerical weather prediction (NWP) is like excellent coffee in the Bay Area: so common that it is now taken for granted, obscuring the decades of expertise, knowledge, and technique underlying the whole operation. In episode 77 of Forecast, Peter Bauer from the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts tells Mike about the massive and decades-long...The post Peter Bauer on numerical weather prediction appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
70 minutes | Jul 25, 2018
From porometers to the planet with Steve Running
Steve Running from the University of Montana helped to invent the field of large-area, quantitative ecology. Steve was also my MS and PhD advisor – a role that doubtless was the most fulfilling of his career. This August, Steve celebrates his retirement with a reunion of lab members and close colleagues — a reunion that...The post From porometers to the planet with Steve Running appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
65 minutes | Jul 11, 2018
Yao Tandong on research in the Third Pole
Yao Tandong tells Mike about realizing his long-held dream: working of the Tibetan Plateau, now as director of the Institute for Tibetan Plateau (ITP) Research (and much else besides!). For Tandong, it all began in 1978 when he was initially exposed to Tibetan glaciology. It cannot have been an easy path. Tandong’s parents were minimally...The post Yao Tandong on research in the Third Pole appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
67 minutes | Jun 26, 2018
Belinda Medlyn on climate-carbon-vegetation interactions
The land biosphere takes up a big chunk of atmospheric CO2 emissions. But how, where, and for how long remains an area of, ahem, active research. Or put another way, there’s a lot we STILL don’t know about how increased CO2 will manifest, or not, as an ongoing increase in the terrestrial uptake of carbon....The post Belinda Medlyn on climate-carbon-vegetation interactions appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
66 minutes | Jun 13, 2018
Sergey Gulev’s oceanographic odyssey
Sergey Gulev from Moscow State University grew up in the Soviet Union, forged a career as an oceanographer, and then witnessed the dissolution of much of what he and his colleagues had built. Gone were their four ocean-going ships, and the then-Russian science community was not able to capitalize on the modeling and remote sensing...The post Sergey Gulev’s oceanographic odyssey appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
110 minutes | May 30, 2018
Carl Wunsch and the rise of modern oceanography
Carl Wunsch is at the heart of many of the major advances in modern physical oceanography. The World Ocean Circulation Experiment, satellite altimetry, acoustic tomography, and Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean: all are hard to imagine without Carl’s involvement. In this extended interview, Carl tells Mike about these and many other aspects...The post Carl Wunsch and the rise of modern oceanography appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
63 minutes | May 16, 2018
Carolina Vera on the South American monsoon
Carolina Vera from the University of Buenos Aires tells Mike about her work on the South American monsoon. Relative to the Indian and Asian Monsoon, the South American Monsoon is understudied — but equally fascinating. The bulk of the land mass is centered near the equator, amplifying the role of tropical ocean-atmosphere interactions. The Andes...The post Carolina Vera on the South American monsoon appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
56 minutes | May 2, 2018
Into the tropics with Sarah Kang
Sarah Kang from the Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology tells Mike about her work to understand the atmospheric and oceanic dynamics that link the extratropics to the tropics. Paleoclimate research has long shown that climate perturbations with strong Northern Hemisphere imprints — like Dansgaard-Oeschger events — are associated with movements of the Intertropical...The post Into the tropics with Sarah Kang appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
67 minutes | Apr 18, 2018
Jay Famiglietti on GRACE and global hydrology
Jay Famiglietti from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory tells Mike about taking the plunge into using the GRACE gravity-measuring satellites for hydrology research. Keep in mind, this was at a time when hydrology was viewed as noise in the gravity signal, and that Jay was just starting off as an academic with his first graduate student,...The post Jay Famiglietti on GRACE and global hydrology appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
63 minutes | Apr 4, 2018
Around the world with Maisa Rojas
Maisa Rojas from the University of Chile tells Mike about her work on regional climate modeling, paleoclimate, and the Southern Hemisphere westerlies. The story begins with Maisa’s birth in Chile, but quickly moves on to the family’s dramatic escape from Pinochet’s rebellion and immigration to Germany. Maisa returned to Chile at age 12, and then...The post Around the world with Maisa Rojas appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
77 minutes | Mar 21, 2018
Michael Greenstone on environmental economics … and basketball
World-famous economist Michael Greenstone tells Mike about his main professional mission: to apply the tools of economics to reduce human suffering. But that wasn’t always the case. No indeed. For many years, including all of college, Michael’s main goal in life was to have a career in the NBA. Happily for economics, Division III basketball...The post Michael Greenstone on environmental economics … and basketball appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
66 minutes | Mar 7, 2018
Burning questions with Max Moritz
Max Moritz regales Mike with some of the many intricacies of modern fire science. The dominant narrative in the Western US might be “long-term fire suppression is leading to severe fire seasons”. While there is some truth here, the individual fire stories are, inevitably, local. Local land use practices, building codes, vegetation stress, and climate...The post Burning questions with Max Moritz appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
65 minutes | Feb 21, 2018
Kaitlin Naughten on ice-ocean interactions
Kaitlin Naughten from the University of New South Wales works on one of the most pressing issues facing modern climate science: interactions between the ocean and the vast ice shelves fringing Antarctica. Existentially, this interaction has the potential to largely determine the rate and amount of sea level rise disgorging from the continent. Will it...The post Kaitlin Naughten on ice-ocean interactions appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
65 minutes | Feb 7, 2018
Sonia Seneviratne on droughts, extremes, the IPCC … and laundry in Switzerland
I met Sonia Seneviratne from ETH Zürich at a climate conference way back in 2013. This was not long after she served as a coordinating lead author of the now-famous IPCC SREX report, which lit a spark under the field of climate extremes. Sonia tells me the back story of becoming a CLA, the ongoing...The post Sonia Seneviratne on droughts, extremes, the IPCC … and laundry in Switzerland appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
60 minutes | Jan 24, 2018
Jessica Oster on speleothem geochemistry
Speleothems — stalagmites, stalactites, flowstones — are a central tool for reconstructing past hydroclimate variability. But what, really, are they recording? Jessica Oster from Vanderbilt University walks Mike through the long, incredibly long, process of permitting, extracting, transporting, sampling, analyzing, and understanding the isotopic signals encoded in these bedeviling but transporting recorders. Succeeding in the...The post Jessica Oster on speleothem geochemistry appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
61 minutes | Jan 10, 2018
Climate dynamics with Libby Barnes
Libby Barnes, like essentially no one else on Forecast, wanted to be a professor from age 12. Specifically, a physics professor. And indeed, climate science almost lost Libby to neutrinos. But an instrumentation disaster, and the associated personal mayhem in the research group, made Libby realize that she was geared more for solving a great...The post Climate dynamics with Libby Barnes appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
66 minutes | Dec 27, 2017
The climate of Westeros with Dan Lunt
There’s incessant talk about impostor syndrome among scientists. But paleoclimate modeler Dan Lunt from the University of Bristol actually DOES pretend to be someone he is not. Specifically, Radagast the Brown from Tolkien’s Middle Earth and Samwell Tarly from Martin’s Westeros. Madness? Only if it is mad to spend what must have been a ridiculous amount...The post The climate of Westeros with Dan Lunt appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
78 minutes | Dec 13, 2017
Reconstructing past sea level with Andrea Dutton
Andrea Dutton from the University of Florida tells Mike about the many nuances of using corals to reconstruct past sea level. Sounds simple enough: find corals at depth z, date them to year t, and Bob’s your uncle. Yeah … no. Turns out there’s a lot more at play: 3D topography, plasticity in coral’s depth...The post Reconstructing past sea level with Andrea Dutton appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
71 minutes | Nov 29, 2017
Abby Swann on plants in the climate system
Abby Swann tells Mike how plants both respond to and affect climate change. Some of this seems obvious: more CO2, more photosynthesis, bigger plants. Maybe, but there’s a lot more to it: nutrient limitations (or lack thereof!), changes in respiration, stomatal conductance downregulation, drought responses, sea ice interactions, atmospheric feedbacks, changes in land cover …...The post Abby Swann on plants in the climate system appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
63 minutes | Nov 15, 2017
11th Graduate Climate Conference
In episode 58 of Forecast, Mike talks with Henri Drake, Jennifer Carman, and Molly Keogh, three of the attendees at the 11th Graduate Climate Conference. The meeting itself is a great chance for grad students working on climate change — broadly defined — to get together with their immediate peers, away from, ahem, pesky senior scientists....The post 11th Graduate Climate Conference appeared first on Forecast: a podcast about climate science and climate scientists.
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