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Jen Landry, LCDR USN, graduates with SM from the MIT-WHOI Joint Program

Congratulations to Jen Landry, LCDR USN, on her recent graduation! Jen received a SM from the MIT-WHOI Joint Program for her research on “Coastal Ocean Variability off the Coast of Taiwan in Response to Typhoon Morakot: River Forcing, Atmospheric Forcing and Cold Dome Dynamics” with our MSEAS group at MIT.

Visiting undergrad. student Abhinav Gupta from IIT Kanpur completes S. N. Bose Scholars Program

Congratulations to Abhinav Gupta from IIT Kanpur for completing his S. N. Bose Scholars Program with us this summer 2014. Abhinav completed original research on “Deterministic and Stochastic Modeling of Coupled Ocean Biological-Physical Dynamics” with our MSEAS group at MIT.

High-school student Jordan Benjamin completes RSI Scholar Program

Congratulations to Jordan Benjamin for completing his RSI report and presentation on “Effects of Typhoon Morakot river discharges on the coastal Taiwan ocean system.” As a visiting high-school student from Atlanta, Jordan successfully completed his 2014 summer research with our MSEAS group at MIT.

Issues and Progress in the Prediction of Ocean Submesoscale Features and Internal Waves

Duda T.F., W.G. Zhang, K.R. Helfrich, A.E. Newhall, Y.-T. Lin, J.F. Lynch, P.F.J. Lermusiaux, P.J. Haley Jr., J. Wilkin, 2014. Issues and Progress in the Prediction of Ocean Submesoscale Features and Internal Waves. OCEANS'14 MTS/IEEE.

Data-constrained dynamical ocean modeling for the purpose of detailed forecasting and prediction continues to evolve and improve in quality. Modeling methods and computational capabilities have each improved. The result is that mesoscale phenomena can be modeled with skill, given sufficient data. However, many submesoscale features are less well modeled and remain largely unpredicted from a deterministic event standpoint, and possibly also from a statistical property standpoint. A multi-institution project is underway with goals of uncovering more of the details of a few submesoscale processes, working toward better predictions of their occurrence and their variability. A further component of our project is application of the new ocean models to ocean acoustic modeling and prediction. This paper focuses on one portion of the ongoing work: Efforts to link nonhydrostatic-physics models of continental-shelf nonlinear internal wave evolution to data-driven regional models. Ocean front-related effects are also touched on.

State Data Assimilation in Forest Ecology: Estimating Leaf-Phenology

Speaker: Toni Viskari [Announcement (PDF)]
Speaker Affiliation: Post Doctoral Associate
Department of Earth and Environment, Boston University
Date: Friday Aug 1 at 11 am in 5-314