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PNNL Community Outreach

Vol. 6 No. 1

January 20, 2011

Editor's Note

Several Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) staff will be in Seattle this month at the American Meteorological Society’s (AMS’s) 91st Annual Meeting, where PNNL retiree Jerry Allwine will be receiving the Helmut E. Landsberg Award for his outstanding contributions in the fields of urban meteorology, climatology, or hydrology. Dr. Allwine led four multi-scale atmospheric dispersion studies in diverse urban areas at PNNL from 2000 to 2005 that resulted in his nomination and subsequent win.

Dr. Allwine is being recognized for work that is categorized under climate change science, one of PNNL’s ten core capabilities as identified by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). PNNL is a national leader in this field and is focused on understanding and quantifying the complex dynamics of earth system processes and energy systems at global and regional scales.

This issue of Pacific Northwest Technology Today focuses on recent research highlights surrounding the climate change science capability.

Please visit the Atmospheric Sciences & Global Change page for more information on this capability.

Electricity From the Sun

Cold Skies

Power Plant Pollution's Bedtime Story

Dick Smith Named R&D's 2010 Scientist of the Year

Outsmarting the Wind

Pacific Northwest Technology Today

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Megan Neer
Editor

(509) 375-6871

Karen Blasdel
Manager, Community and Regional Outreach

(509) 375-5901