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Murtugudde publishes article on algae effects on climate

ESSIC/AOSC professor Raghu Murtugudde has a new article published on the India Science Wire called “How microscopic marine algae impact global climate and Indian monsoon.” Murtugudde discusses how phytoplankton influence sea surface temperatures, especially because they can block sunlight. They are also a good way to predict changes in temperature and climate. The article was published in The Hindu Business Line and Firstpost….

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Wang receives NASA career award in the New (Early Career) Investigator Program

ESSIC Post-Doctoral Associate Dr. Chenxi Wang has received NASA’s New (Early Career) Investigator Program (NIP) in Earth Science Grant. His proposal was titled “Developing an advanced algorithm to retrieve ice water path and cloud-top height for ice cloud using combined passive infrared and microwave observations.” The proposal team also includes: ESSIC professor Zhanqing Li as well as Dong L. Wu and UMBC’s Zhibo Zhang. The proposal team will develop a novel …

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Cerpa earns NOAA Hollings Scholarship

Candela Cerpa, a student research assistant at the Environmental Decision Support Science Laboratory led by ESSIC associate research professor Melissa Kenney, has received the NOAA Ernest F. Hollings Undergraduate Scholarship. The Hollings Scholarship Program competitively awards 120 students a scholarship every year. In addition to monetary support for academics, scholarship recipients earn paid internship opportunities with NOAA. Cerpa studies environmental science and policy at the …

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Brunt’s Antarctica adventure featured on Live Science

An article on Live Science about NASA scientists features ESSIC assistant research scientist Kelly Brunt and her recent trip to Antarctica. Brunt’s two-month trip was in preparation for the ICESat-2 satellite launch coming in November. The article highlights scientists conducting research in extreme climates. Read the full story here….

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Miralles-Wilhelm Named Chair of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science

Fernando Miralles-Wilhelm was named chair of the University of Maryland’s Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science (AOSC) for a five-year term effective July 1, 2018.  He is currently a professor in the department and interim director of UMD’s Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center (ESSIC). He will continue leading ESSIC through 2021. Miralles-Wilhelm also serves as executive director of the Cooperative Institute for Climate and

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Rep. Sarbanes visits ESSIC

A delegation led by Congressman John Sarbanes (D-Md.) and University of Maryland President Wallace Loh toured the new Cooperative Institute for Climate and Satellites Proving Grounds Training Center (PGTC) Visualization Lab on March 13.  Sarbanes spoke with a small group of ESSIC scientists about the Center’s research and the ongoing threat of climate change.   ESSIC interim director Fernando Miralles-Wilhelm gave a brief presentation explaining the breadth and …

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Folmer tracks Guatemalan volcano

ESSIC faculty specialist Michael Folmer has been following a volcanic eruption in Guatemala with the new data from GOES-R/GOES-16 in the Satellite Liaison Blog. On Feb. 1, the first ash plume from Volcán de Fuego was captured by the satellite. Folmer used this opportunity to have the Washington Volcanic Ash Advisory Center (VAAC) rate the various satellite channels and products….

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Division of Information Technology moving to Discovery District

ESSIC is getting a new neighbor — the University of Maryland's Division of Information Technology (DIT).  The division will arrive at its newly constructed home at 5801 University Research Court this summer, according to an article in The Diamondback. ESSIC and DIT were formerly neighbors in the old Computer and Space Sciences building on the UMCP campus prior to the Center’s relocation to the Discovery District in 2008….

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Monsoons funnel aerosols high into the atmosphere, ESSIC scientist discovers

About three years ago, ESSIC research scientist William Lau sketched a diagram in his office for doctorate student Cheng Yuan. The whiteboard drawing depicted his hypothesis about how monsoon forces could pump aerosols — tiny particles in the air — higher into the atmosphere than where airplanes fly. With the diagram’s original arrows and squiggles still intact on the whiteboard, Lau and Yuan now have a published piece that both confirms the hypothesis and transforms knowledge …

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