Category: Uncategorized

George (Trey) Alvey

Research Interests Tropical cyclone intensity change. Vortex scale dynamics. Cooperative interactions between tropical cyclone environments and inner core region. Diagnosing causes of tropical cyclone model errors, particularly within HAFS. Satellite and radar based observations of tropical cyclones.  George (Trey) Alvey, Ph.D. Assistant Scientist (University of Miami/CIMAS), Hurricane Research Division  786.465.3011  george.alvey@noaa.gov 4301 Rickenbacker Causeway Miami, [...]
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Recap of 2022 Hurricane Field Program

Hurricane Field Program leadership held two sessions made up of a series of short science talks to wrap up the 2022 hurricane season. Talks included preliminary science results, challenges and successes in sampling and analysis strategies, modeling results, etc. The 2022 season saw 68 missions flown by NOAA aircraft into eight different tropical system. NOAA […]

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AOML accomplishments for 2022

Read about our accomplishments, including improvements to tropical cyclone forecasts, first-even NOAA aircraft missions from Cabo Verde, deployment of the Altius-600 uncrewed aircraft into the eye of Hurricane Ian, Saildrones and ocean gliders, the opening of the Hurricane and Ocean Testbed, and more. Click here. For more information, contact AOML.communications@noaa.gov.

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A comprehensive analysis on the impacts of adjusting momentum roughness length on strong and weak hurricanes forecasts published in Monthly Weather Review

This study looks at the accuracy of estimates of how rough the ocean surface is below tropical cyclones (TC) compared to observations, and at the impact of changing the roughness on TC computer forecasts. A mismatch between observations of the roughness and what the model showed was found, and correcting this improved forecasts of the […]

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Experts Learn from Coral Disease Outbreak

When white lesions began appearing at the famously intact Flower Garden Banks coral reef system, scientists knew a rapid, multi-agency, collaborative response was vital. Scientists from NOAA’s Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory (AOML) and University of Miami’s Cooperative Institute of Marine and Atmospheric Studies (CIMAS) recently co-authored a publication about rapid tissue loss on the three dominant coral species at Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary, observed during National Coral Reef Monitoring Program cruises in the fall of 2022.

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Jun Zhang part of team that wins Department of Commerce Gold Medal

A 2023 Department of Commerce Gold Medal was awarded to AOML’s Greg Foltz, Gustavo Goni, and Francis Bringas, alongside their partners at NOAA’s Pacific Marine and Environmental Laboratory (PMEL), for pioneering the application of uncrewed surface vehicles (saildrones) to observe tropical cyclones. Also recognized were AOML’s Cooperative Institute employees Jun Zhang and Joaquin Trinanes who […]

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Jasmin John

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