Like a rock that slowly wears away beneath the pressure of a waterfall, planet earth?s climate is almost imperceptibly changing. Glaciers are getting smaller, droughts are lasting longer, and extreme weather events like fires, floods, and tornadoes are occurring with greater frequency. Why? Part of the answer is clouds and the amount of solar radiation they reflect or absorb. These two factors clouds and radiative transfer represent the greatest source of error and uncertainty in the current generation of general circulation models used for climate research and simulation. The U.S. Global Change Research Act of 1990 established an interagency program within the Executive Office of the President to coordinate U.S. agency-sponsored scientific...
Monthly newsletter discussing news and activities related to the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement P...
This document contains the summaries of papers presented understand the quality of the climate model...
Clouds profoundly affect our weather and climate due, in large part, to their interactions with radi...
The Importance of Clouds and Radiation for Climate Change: The Earth’s surface temperature is determ...
The Earth’s surface temperature is determined by the balance between incoming solar radiation and th...
Our Changing Climate--Is our climate really changing? How do we measure climate change? How can we p...
Monthly newsletter discussing news and activities related to the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement P...
Through the ARM Program, the DOE funded the development of several highly instrumented ground statio...
The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program is an important part of the U.S. Department of E...
This issue of the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program (ARM Program) monthly newsletter is abou...
ARM in Australia--The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program of the U.S. Department of Ener...
Research by the US Department of Energy (DOE) has shown that cloud radiative feedback is the single ...
The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program is a multi-laboratory, interagency program that ...
The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program is a multi- laboratory, interagency program that...
ARM is a highly focused program designed to improve the understanding of the transport of infrared a...
Monthly newsletter discussing news and activities related to the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement P...
This document contains the summaries of papers presented understand the quality of the climate model...
Clouds profoundly affect our weather and climate due, in large part, to their interactions with radi...
The Importance of Clouds and Radiation for Climate Change: The Earth’s surface temperature is determ...
The Earth’s surface temperature is determined by the balance between incoming solar radiation and th...
Our Changing Climate--Is our climate really changing? How do we measure climate change? How can we p...
Monthly newsletter discussing news and activities related to the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement P...
Through the ARM Program, the DOE funded the development of several highly instrumented ground statio...
The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program is an important part of the U.S. Department of E...
This issue of the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program (ARM Program) monthly newsletter is abou...
ARM in Australia--The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program of the U.S. Department of Ener...
Research by the US Department of Energy (DOE) has shown that cloud radiative feedback is the single ...
The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program is a multi-laboratory, interagency program that ...
The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program is a multi- laboratory, interagency program that...
ARM is a highly focused program designed to improve the understanding of the transport of infrared a...
Monthly newsletter discussing news and activities related to the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement P...
This document contains the summaries of papers presented understand the quality of the climate model...
Clouds profoundly affect our weather and climate due, in large part, to their interactions with radi...