Over the past thirty years, the scientific community has made considerable progress in
understanding and predicting tropical convection and air-sea interactions, thanks to sustained investments in extensive in-situ and remote sensing observations, targeted field experiments, advances in numerical modeling, and vastly improved computational resources and observing technologies. Those investments would not have been fruitful as isolated advancements without the collaborative effort of the atmospheric convection and air-sea interaction research communities. In this spirit, a U.S. and International CLIVAR-sponsored workshop on “Atmospheric convection and air-sea interactions over the tropical oceans” was held May 7-9, 2019 in Boulder, CO. The 90 participants were observational and modeling experts from the atmospheric convection and air-sea interactions communities with varying degrees of experience, from early-career researchers and students to senior scientists.
Revised: May 13, 2020 |
Published: March 2, 2020
Citation
Hagos S.M., G. Foltz, C. Zhang, E. Thompson, H. Seo, S. Chen, and A. Capotondi, et al. 2020.Atmospheric Convection and Air-Sea Interactions over the Tropical Oceans: Scientific Progress, Challenges and Opportunities.Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 101, no. 3:E253–E258.PNNL-SA-149307.doi:10.1175/BAMS-D-19-0261.1