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02.May
15:00
Seminar
TRO Seminar
KIT Campus North, Building 435 Room 2.05
(1) Judith Gerighausen (2) Jannik Fischer (3) Athul Rasheeda Satheesh (4) Felix Rein, Chair: Siyu Li
(1) Master defense: Investigating the internal variability of surface weather during weather regimes (2) Could swap with a different date in May or June if needed. Title: Large Hail Formation in idealized Simulations (3) Tentative title: Machine learning models for daily rainfall forecasting in Northern Tropical Africa using tropical wave-based predictors (4) tbd
06.May
11:00
KIT Campus Nord, IMK-AAF
Gebäude 326, Raum 150 …
Prof. Peer Nowack, KIT, Institut fuer Theoretische Informatik
 
 
07.May
15:45
KIT, Campus Süd, Otto-Lehmann-Hörsaal, Physik-Flachbau (Geb. 30.22) und online
Prof. Dr. Christian Lessig, Otto-von-Guericke Universität Magdeburg
In the past year, it has been demonstrated that machine learning models trained on the ERA5 reanalysis can
outperform even the best conventional medium-range forecasting systems. One of the next frontiers is the
development of machine learning-based Earth system models that cover not only the atmosphere but also
the other subsystems of the Earth and that are able to represent processes on much wider range of scales in
space and time. This poses many challenges in terms of Earth system modeling, machine learning, and highperformance
computing, e.g. how training on many different datasets with different resolutions and quality
characteristics is possible. In my talk, I will discuss these challenges and first steps towards addressing
these. I will also present results on training directly from observations, which is a tantalizing information
source for building models that can potentially outperform conventional ones.
08.May
15:45
Geb. 30.23, Raum 13/2 und online
(1) Alexander Siebelts
If you are interested in the zoom link, please contact alexander.siebelts@partner.kit.edu .
08.May
16:00
CN, Building 435, seminarroom 2.05
Chenhui Jin , Monash University
tbd
15.May
16:00
CN, Building 435, Seminarroom 2.05
Jason Furtado , University of Oklahioma
Even in a warming world, extreme winter weather events like cold air outbreaks still occur and have high socioeconomic costs, but they remain a challenge to forecast skillfully in the subseasonal-to-seasonal timeframe (i.e., 2-8 weeks). In this talk, I will discuss recent work by the Applied Climate Dynamics Group at the University of Oklahoma to improve our dynamical understanding of the evolution of cold air outbreaks in the central United States and then use this knowledge to improve skill in subseasonal predictions of those events. We use a combination of observations and numerical modeling experiments to show why we should care about intraseasonal variability in the stratosphere to improve our forecast skill, including considering different types of stratosphere-troposphere coupling outside of the “classical” paradigm. Additionally, we will highlight particular precursor flow patterns in the upper troposphere (so-called blocking patterns) which were key for skillful 3+ week forecasts of the February 2021 North American Cold Air Outbreak and could be exploited for long-lead predictions of future cold air outbreaks.
16.May
15:00
Seminar
TRO Seminar
KIT Campus North, Building 435 Room 2.05
(1) Jasmin Haupt (2) Hendrik Feldmann (3) Gabriella Wallentin (4) Depak Waman, Chair: Fabian Mockert
(1) Master thesis: Modelling of the sea surface temperature impact on the land-sea breeze over West Africa (2) Convection permitting scale climate ensembles (3) tbd (4) Organization of SIP processes in convective clouds
28.May
15:45
KIT, Campus Süd, Otto-Lehmann-Hörsaal, Physik-Flachbau (Geb. 30.22) und online
Dr. Felix Fundel, Deutscher Wetterdienst, Offenbach
tbd
04.Jun
15:15
KIT, Campus Nord, IMK, Geb. 435, Seminarraum 2.05 und online
Prof. Dr. Justus Notholt, Universität Bremen
tbd
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