MAL11-AS | Vilhelm Bjerknes Medal Lecture by Lucy Carpenter and Arne Richter Award for Outstanding ECS Lecture by Nadia Bloemendaal
Vilhelm Bjerknes Medal Lecture by Lucy Carpenter and Arne Richter Award for Outstanding ECS Lecture by Nadia Bloemendaal
Convener: Philip Stier
Orals
| Tue, 16 Apr, 19:00–19:55 (CEST)
 
Room K2
Tue, 19:00

Session assets

Orals: Tue, 16 Apr | Room K2

Chairpersons: Philip Stier, Athanasios Nenes
19:00–19:05
19:05–19:25
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EGU24-21254
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ECS
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solicited
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Arne Richter Award for Outstanding ECS Lecture
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On-site presentation
Nadia Bloemendaal

Tropical cyclones (TCs), also referred to as hurricanes or typhoons, are amongst the deadliest and costliest natural hazards, affecting people, economies, and the environment in coastal areas around the globe when they make landfall. TCs are projected to become more intense in a warming climate, enhancing the risks associated with their wind speeds, precipitation and storm surges. It is therefore crucial to minimize future loss of life and by performing accurate TC risk assessments for coastal areas. Calculating TC risk at a global scale, however, has proven to be difficult, given the limited temporal and spatial information on landfalling TCs around much of the global coastline, and how this is going to change under climate change.

To overcome these limitations, we developed a novel approach to calculate TC risk under present and future climate conditions using the Synthetic Tropical cyclOne geneRation Model (STORM). STORM is a fully statistical model that can take any input dataset and statistically resamples this to an equivalent of 10,000 years of TC activity under the same climate condition. The resulting publicly available STORM dataset contains of enough TC activity in any coastal region of interest to adequately calculate TC probabilities and risk from. Furthermore, the STORM algorithm has been expanded with a future-climate module, enabling globally consistent local-scale assessments of (changes in) TC risk. This presentation will discuss the challenges and opportunities in using such synthetic datasets, particularly in the light of improving our understanding of TC risk. 

How to cite: Bloemendaal, N.: Weathering the STORM: Challenges and opportunities in tropical cyclone risk research , EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-21254, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-21254, 2024.

19:25–19:55
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EGU24-11717
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solicited
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Vilhelm Bjerknes Medal Lecture
|
On-site presentation
Lucy Carpenter, Anna Callaghan, Rosie Chance, Mat Evans, James Lee, Katie Read, Matthew Rowlinson, Marvin Shaw, Tomas Sherwen, Simone Andersen, Liselotte Tinel, and John Plane

Measurements in the remote unpolluted atmosphere have tremendous power to reveal processes that are happening on a global scale.   In the marine atmosphere where nitrogen oxide (NOx) levels are very low,  the photochemical loss rate of tropospheric ozone dominates over production, allowing loss processes to be sensitively explored.   We showed that bromine and iodine emitted from open-ocean marine sources initiate important global-scale catalytic ozone-destroying cycles and found that the deposition of ozone and subsequent reactions at the sea surface are a substantial pathway for production of volatile iodine.   Production of ozone in the remote atmosphere is predominantly regulated by the abundance of NOx, which also exerts substantial control over the hydroxyl radical (OH), the most important oxidant in the atmosphere.  It is now emerging that NOx regeneration pathways, namely the photolysis of particulate nitrate, could provide the dominant source of NOx to the marine atmosphere.  This has significant implications for our understanding of the chemistry of the remote troposphere.  This presentation discusses advances made in understanding these important, predominantly natural, cycles and their impacts on the atmosphere.

How to cite: Carpenter, L., Callaghan, A., Chance, R., Evans, M., Lee, J., Read, K., Rowlinson, M., Shaw, M., Sherwen, T., Andersen, S., Tinel, L., and Plane, J.: Discovering global-scale processes in the marine atmosphere, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-11717, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-11717, 2024.

Speakers

  • Nadia Bloemendaal, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • Lucy Carpenter, University of York, United Kingdom