The Rise of Ocean and Climate Science: A Personal Journey
1. TOPIC
The Rise of Ocean and Climate Science: A Personal Journey
2. TIME
November 20, 15:30
3. LOCATION
Room A407, Ocean Science and Technology Building, Laoshan Campus
4. ABSTRACT
The warming planet and rising seas. Climate change is recognized as one of the greatest challenges of our time, and the ocean sets the pace of the planet warming and shapes regional patterns of climate change. My journey in ocean and climate science started in Qingdao by the Yellow Sea. The mysterious oscillation of El Nino inspired me to study coupled ocean-atmosphere dynamics, leading to the discovery of a fascinating explanation to a 300-year old climate riddle. Over the short span of my career, climate science has enabled routine forecast of climate anomalies a few seasons in advance and climate projection decades deep into the future. My talk highlights the dazzling rise of climate science over the past 35 years as well as the foundation in mathematics, physics, and computational science.
5. SPEAKER
XIE Shangping
6. SPEAKER's INTRODUCTION
SHANG-PING XIE
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, La Jolla
PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION
B.Sc. 1984 Physical Oceanography, Ocean University of China, Qingdao, China
Ph.D. 1991 Geophysics, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan
APPOINTMENTS
2012 – Professor, University of California San Diego
1999-12 Professor (Associate Professor, 1999-02), University of Hawaii
1994-99 Associate Professor, Hokkaido University, Japan
1993-94 Research Associate, University of Washington 1991-93 Visiting Scientist, Princeton University
HONORS
Medal of the Meteorological Society of Japan (highest research honor of the Society), 2002
Roger Revelle Chair in Environmental Science, UCSD, 2012
National Science Foundation Special Creativity Award, 2013
Highly Cited Researcher 2014, 2016, Thomson Reuters; 2017, 2018, Clarivate Analytics Fellow, American Geophysical Union, 2016
Distinguished Lecture, Asia Oceania Geosciences Society, 2017
Sverdrup Gold Medal and Fellow, American Meteorological Society, 2017