- A43I: Decision-Relevant Understanding of Impactful Weather and Extremes I Oral
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NOLA CC
Primary Convener:Generic 'disconnected' Message
Abhishekh Srivastava, University of California Davis
Convener:
Paul Ullrich, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Richard Grotjahn, University of California Davis
Seung Hun Baek, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Early Career Convener:
Raymond Sukhdeo, University of California Los Angeles
Chair:
Abhishekh Srivastava, University of California Davis
Paul Ullrich, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Seung Hun Baek, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Raymond Sukhdeo, University of California Los Angeles
The frequency and intensity of many impactful weather and extreme phenomena have increased across various timescales. Changing characteristics for extremes lead to changing exposure, resilience, and impacts. Therefore, timely and accurate predictions of these events can potentially reduce exposure, enhance resilience, and mitigate impacts by providing decision support to national and local application sectors. In this session, we invite contributions focusing on high-impact weather extremes research of direct utility to practitioners and their communities. Extremes of interest include but are not limited to, extreme hot/cold temperatures, ice storms, extreme winds, heavy precipitation, droughts, floods, extreme storms, and compound events (e.g., hot-dry events, temporally or spatially compounding events). Research that includes collaborations with operational and application sector users is particularly welcome. Such impacts-relevant research may be operational and observational, involve regional and global datasets, examine prediction, predictability, detection, and attribution of the extreme, and explore changes in the statistics of extremes.
Index Terms
1803 Anthropogenic effects
1812 Drought
1821 Floods
4313 Extreme events
Neighborhoods:
3. Earth Covering
Scientific DisciplineNeighborhoodTypeWhere to Watch
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