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EGU Session on Tropical Meteorology and Tropical Cyclones

  • 1.  EGU Session on Tropical Meteorology and Tropical Cyclones

    Posted 11-22-2024 09:56

    Dear colleagues, 

    We invite you to submit abstracts to the Session AS1.23 on Tropical Meteorology and Tropical Cyclones at the upcoming EGU General Assembly in Vienna, Austria (27 April - 2 May, 2025). 
    The session description is below and at https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU25/session/53482, where the link for abstract submission can also be found. The abstract submission deadline is 15 January 2025, 13:00 CET (7:00 AM EST). 
    Those who wish to apply for a Roland Schlich travel support must submit an abstract by 2 December 2024, 13:00 CET (7:00 AM EST).
    Cheers, 
    Allison Wing, on behalf of of the conveners
    Session Conveners: Leone Cavicchia, Allison Wing, Alyssa Stansfield, Eric Maloney, Enrico Scoccimarro
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    The understanding of tropical phenomena and their representation in numerical models still raise important scientific and technical questions, particularly in the coupling between the dynamics and diabatic processes. Among these phenomena, tropical cyclones (TC) are of critical interest because of their societal impacts and because of uncertainties in how their characteristics (cyclogenesis processes, occurrence, intensity, latitudinal extension, translation speed) will change in the framework of global climate change. The monitoring of TCs, their forecasts at short to medium ranges, and the prediction of TC activity at extended range (15-30 days) and seasonal range are also of great societal interest.
    The aim of the session is to promote discussions between scientists focusing on the physics and dynamics of tropical phenomena. This session is thus open to contributions on all aspects of tropical meteorology between the convective and planetary scale, such as:
    - Tropical cyclones
    - Convective organisation
    - Diurnal variations
    - Local circulations (i.e. island, see-breeze, etc.)
    - Monsoon depressions
    - Equatorial waves and other synoptic waves (African easterly waves, etc.
    - The Madden-Julian oscillation
    We especially encourage contributions of observational analyses and modelling studies of tropical cyclones and other synoptic-scale tropical disturbances including the physics and dynamics of their formation, structure, and intensity, and mechanisms of variability of these disturbances on intraseasonal to interannual and climate time scales.
    Findings from recent field campaigns are also encouraged.


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    Allison Wing
    Florida State University
    Tallahassee FL
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