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Dr James While

surface temperature data is assimilated into shelf models and James' current work is focused on implementing assimilation of temperature and salinity profiles. This project is made challenging by the shelf seas environment. In particular, complex bathymetry and the s-coordinate vertical levels used

PowerPoint Presentation

Deeper discovery Session 2 – Climate change and 2050’s forecast https://showyourstripes.info/ Professor Ed Hawkins Global temperature change www.metoffice.gov.uk/schools 2 © Crown Copyright 2024, Met Office Global Projections www.metoffice.gov.uk/schools 3 © Crown Copyright 2024, Met Office Met

wiser0008_seasonalmonthlyweeklyforecasts_farmers.pdf

: ……………………………………climatic zone(s) Morning Afternoon Night Rainfall distribution Maximum temperature Minimum temperature Hazards Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Key to rainfall distribution symbols: rain likely to fall in few places (less than 33%), rain likely to fall in many places (33% -67

seasonalmonthlyweeklyforecasts_farmers.pdf

: ……………………………………climatic zone(s) Morning Afternoon Night Rainfall distribution Maximum temperature Minimum temperature Hazards Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Key to rainfall distribution symbols: rain likely to fall in few places (less than 33%), rain likely to fall in many places (33% -67

Dr Simon Good

Areas of expertise Ocean temperature and salinity observations. Quality control. Observational biases and uncertainties. Objective analysis. My Publications - Good, S Current activities Simon is the manager of the Marine Observations Processing and Analysis team within the Ocean Forecasting

Katie Norman

Weather and Climate Research Programme (JWCRP). Katie is currently the Nowcasting Science Manager, working to exploit our observations capability to improve our nowcasts. Publications Lewis, H., Mittermaier, M., Mylne, K., Norman, K., Scaife, A., Neal, R., Pierce, C., Harrison, D., Jewell, S., Kendon

Who we are

From our beginnings in the middle 1800’s we have led the way in the science of meteorology and its application. We’ve been continually innovating and evolving, and we’ve grown and changed enormously. Find out more about our history, innovation and what motivates us. Our history Since our foundation

How do we Proceed?

-potential modeling showing the frequency of CMEs • More progress will be made in the next 5 years – Combining IPS & FR Next Steps - Technical • Define Detailed Instrument Requirements: FOVs, Cadence, Resolution, Range etc • Justifications for each of the instruments • Refine S/C Accommodation (Carrington

Dr Matt Palmer

research cruise at 32°S in the Indian Ocean, where he gained 'hands on' experience of collecting ocean observations and deploying Argo floats. Since joining the Met Office in 2005, Matt's work has focused on understanding ocean heat content change using both observational analyses and climate model

wiser0132_coproduction_poster.pdf

in this publication. Copyright © 2019, Weather and Climate Information Services for Africa and Future Climate for Africa. All rights reserved. Cover photos: J. Araujo (2017); A. Barnaud (2018); S. Mutuma (2013); D. Decremer (2019); E.Aduma (2014) Co-production in African weather and climate services Fund

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