Table of Contents *Disclaimer
 

 

GEOPHYSICAL FLUID DYNAMICS LABORATORY

ACTIVITIES - FY98

PLANS - FY99

 

OCTOBER 1998

 

GEOPHYSICAL FLUID DYNAMICS LABORATORY

PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY

 

 

 

 

UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

WILLIAM M. DALEY
SECRETARY OF COMMERCE

NATIONAL OCEANIC AND
ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION

D. JAMES BAKER
UNDERSECRETARY FOR OCEANS
AND ATMOSPHERE
ENVIRONMENTAL
RESEARCH
LABORATORIES

JAMES L. RASMUSSEN
DIRECTOR

 

 

NOTICE

Mention of a commercial company or product does not constitute an endorsement by NOAA Environmental Research Laboratories. Use for publicity or advertising purposes of information from this publication concerning proprietary products or the tests of such products is not authorized.

 

 

PREFACE

This document summarizes recent research activities at the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) and presents a glimpse of the planned direction of this research for the near future. The distribution of this report is intended primarily for GFDL members, Princeton University affiliates, and offices of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), but it is also freely available to other relevant government agencies, national organizations, and interested individuals.

The organization of this document encompasses an overview, project activities and plans for the current and next fiscal year, and appendices. The overview covers highlights of the three major research areas that correspond to Strategic Plan Elements in NOAA's Environmental Assessment and Prediction Portfolio: Advance Short-Term Forecasts and Warnings; Seasonal to Interannual Climate Forecasts; and Predict and Assess Decadal to Centennial Changes, plus a category of topics which cuts across all three time scales: Basic Geophysical Processes. The body of the text describes goals, specific recent achievements, and future plans for the following major research categories:  Climate Dynamics; Atmospheric Process; Experimental Prediction; Oceanic Circulation; Planetary Circulations; Climate Diagnostics; Hurricane Dynamics; and Mesoscale Dynamics. These categories, which correspond to the GFDL organization of research groups, are different from the NOAA categories and are far from being mutually exclusive. Interaction occurs among the various groups and is strongly encouraged. The last section of the body is a description of the Laboratory's technical and computational support and its plans for the coming fiscal year.

The appendices contain the following: a list of GFDL staff members and affiliates during Fiscal Year 1998; a bibliography of recent research papers published by staff members and affiliates during their tenure with GFDL (these are referred to in the main body according to the appropriate reference number or letter); a listing of seminars presented at GFDL during Fiscal Year 1998; a list of seminars and talks presented during Fiscal Year 1998 by GFDL staff members and affiliates at other locations; and a list of acronyms.

The editors wish to acknowledge the substantial effort put forth by the GFDL staff and their Princeton University collaborators in preparing this report. Special thanks are extended to all who contributed to this work.

John P. Sheldon, Scientific Editor
Wendy H. Marshall, Technical Editor

September 1998

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory/NOAA
P.O. Box 308, Princeton, New Jersey 08542
(609) 452-6500
http://www.gfdl.gov


*Portions of this document contain material that has not yet been formally published and may not be quoted or referenced without explicit permission of the author(s).