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Dust Clouds the Future of the South Asian Monsoon (Op-Ed)

The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned for more than a decade that rising air pollution levels pose a serious threat to human health worldwide, especially in developing countries, and high levels of pollution in the urban centers of China and India are now responsible for the premature deaths of more than 2 million people every year. As if this news were not bad enough, my colleagues and I have found that pollution and dust particles blanketing that region are responsible for a …

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Busalacchi featured in Washington Business Journal

ESSIC Director Antonio Busalacchi was featured in the July issue of the Washington Business Journal (WBJ) in an article entitled, “How I…Spot best weather conditions for wine.”  The subscription-based article highlights Busalacchi’s pioneering expertise within the burgeoning climate services industry, with respect to the intersection of wine, weather, and climate guidance.  An accompanying video interview segment is provided below. …

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Adler, GFMS team highlighted in recent NASA article

Robert Adler (ESSIC / CICS) was featured in a recent NASA web publication on Satellite-Based Flood Monitoring.  Adler’s team is responsible for the development of the UMD flood monitoring and prediction tool, the Global Flood Monitoring System (GFMS).  The GFMS provides key data for Relief Agencies by indicating how an excess rainfall event will impact river flows.  The system also indicates whether there is a potential for flooding downstream away from heavy rain events. …

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Salawitch – Murtugudde ConE 2015 Seed Grant recipients

ESSIC / AOSC Professors Ross Salawitch and Raghu Murtugudde were members of two unrelated teams selected as recipients of the University of Maryland’s Council on the Environment (ConE) Seed Grant awards.  The seed grant program is envisioned as a means to stimulate new UMD interdisciplinary collaboration, and solidify and enhance existing collaborations among researchers from multiple Schools or Colleges.  The two competitive awards of $90,000 each, sponsor research for a …

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Murtugudde publishes Livescience Op-ed, quoted in WIRED

Raghu Murtugudde (ESSIC / AOSC) was featured in a July Livescience post entitled, “Dust Clouds the Future of the South Asian Monsoon.”  The post discusses a recent Murtugudde Nature Communications publication regarding how pollution and dust particles blanketing that region are responsible for a 20-percent decline in South Asian monsoon rainfall over the past century.  Murtugudde was also quoted in a recent article in WIRED regarding the history of inaccuracies in …

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Busalacchi represents UCAR in new JRC agreement

ESSIC Director and UCAR Trustee Professor Antonio Busalacchi–representing the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR)–met with Vladimir Šucha, Director-General of the European Commission (EC) Joint Research Centre (JRC) to sign a new research arrangement that aims to identify and develop new approaches in the field of atmospheric and climate change research and related sciences.  The new agreement between the JRC and UCAR will focus on climate prediction, …

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Li part of study connecting pollution to China flood

ESSIC / AOSC Professor Zhanqing Li was part of a recent study which ties air pollution to catastrophic floods in China during 2013.  The study concludes that aerosols trapped in the mountains northwest of the Sichuan Basin in China, warmed the air and suppressed convection, allowing excess moisture to build up and condense into rain as it rose up over the mountains.  By setting the modelled emissions at a level similar to that before China's economic boom, the team found that …

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Murtugudde part of Maryland-based study

Raghu Murtugudde (ESSIC/AOSC) was a co-author on the study "Climate Change, Extreme Events and Increased Risk of Salmonellosis: Evidence for Coastal Vulnerability,” published in the journal Environment International. The paper, co-authored with colleagues from UMD’s School of Public Health and the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, shows that extreme heat and precipitation events are associated with increased risk of salmonella infections. Because severe …

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Meyers produces new animation for Washington Post

Patrick Meyers (ESSIC/CICS) recently created a local post-storm animation of lightning flash density, as measured by the DC Lightning Array Mapper (DCLMA).  The animation was requested by the Washington Post's Capital Weather Gang—following severe weather on July 1–and was presented in both an online article and via the Post’s social media …

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