Open faculty position at assistant professor level
The Department of Atmospheric Sciences at Texas A&M University is seeking applications for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in the field of weather analysis and forecasting. Candidates are sought with research expertise in one or more of the following areas: synoptic meteorology, mesoscale meteorology, and forecasting techniques. Candidates focusing on hurricanes or other forms of severe weather are of particular interest. A Ph. D. in atmospheric sciences or a related field is required at the time of appointment. Postdoctoral experience is desirable, but is not required. The successful candidate will be expected to maintain a prominent research program and to teach courses at the undergraduate and graduate levels.
For more information |
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Schumacher and students studying how Indian Ocean weather affects the world
Texas A&M atmospheric scientist Courtney Schumacher and five students are joining an international team of researchers in the Indian Ocean to study how weather in that region affects conditions around the world. The project, Dynamics of the Madden-Julian Oscillation, or DYNAMO, runs from Oct. 1 through Mar. 31. The Texas A&M group will be stationed at the main research site on Addu Atoll in the Maldives islands, where they will do radar research for the full six-month period.
To read more |
Aggie focuses on weather here and on Mars
The first line of a nursery rhyme may seem like an odd place to find a title for a blog discussing severe weather. However, for meteorologists like Keri Bean, author of “Whether the Weather,” the newest blog for The Eagle, nothing could be more appropriate for a profession that finds its members when they are in nurseries themselves.
To read more |
Drought Scorches Texas – And The Record Books, Says Texas A&M Professor
COLLEGE STATION, July 6, 2011 – The months-long Texas drought is sapping the record books bone dry and is racking up dire statistics that have never been reached since reliable record-keeping was started 116 years ago, according to figures from Texas A&M University researchers.
To read more |
ATMO student sails the seas
Peter Deng, graduate student for Sarah Brooks, is sailing on the ASPARAGUS Cruise -Air-Sea Phytoplankton Altered Rates the Atlantic Gas Underway Study.
He is blogging about his work and adventures, along with the other members of the science team. |
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