KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF, Gebäude 435, Raum 2.05
Amrutha Vasudevan, KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF
KIT, Campus Süd, Gebäude 30.22, Otto-Lehmann-Hörsaal
Dr. Günther Geier, Amt für Meteorologie und Lawinenwarnung, Bozen
Predicting atmospheric processes in complex terrain remains one of the greatest challenges in modern meteorology. The South Tyrolean Meteorological Service operates a dense observational network in a region defined by extreme orographic complexity. This presentation explores the synergy between our operational mandates and our participation in the international TEAMx program.
By integrating local observations into the TEAMx framework, we aim to improve the validation of kilometric-scale weather models and enhance the understanding convective events and sub-mesoscale flow dynamics in the Alps. This collaboration ensures that cutting-edge atmospheric research directly informs better forecasting tools for mountain regions.
KIT, Campus Nord, Gebäude 435, Semianrraum 2.05
(1) Ines Dillerup (2) Maurus Borne (3) Jasmin Haupt (4) Julia Thomas
(1) How atmospheric and surface conditions shape recurrent heatwaves in Europe: From local to continental scales (2) Partial Analysis Increments of the ‘Swabian MOSES 2023’ campaign in the ICON-D2 model (3) The representation of equatorial waves in data-driven weather prediction models (4) Assimilating Doppler wind lidar observations from ‘Swabian MOSES 2023’ reveals wind biases in the ICON-D2 model
KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF, Geb. 435, Raum 2.05
Julius Polz, KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF
KIT, Campus Süd, Gebäude 30.22, Otto-Lehmann-Hörsaal
Prof. Dr. Kira Rehfeld, Universität Tübingen
Earth system modeling has fundamentally contributed to our understanding of past, present and future climate. Regional-scale multidecadal to centennial variability has been identified as a model blind spot, as across general circulation model generations they showed much lower levels of temperature variance than reconstructions, and underpredict regional state-dependency. In this talk I will discuss recent work on closing this gap, what this implies for projections of temperature extremes, and how TERRA aims to improve capacities to project global change impacts.
KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF, Geb. 435, Raum 2.05
Namid Marxen, KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF
KIT Campus Nord, IMKAAF
Gebäude 326, Raum 150
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Lea Ebel, KIT, IMKAAF
KIT, Campus Süd, Gebäude 30.23, Seminarraum 13-02
Dr. Tom Beucler, University of Lausanne
Deep learning emulates atmospheric reanalyses with high fidelity, enabling increasingly well-calibrated ensemble weather forecasts at progressively longer lead times. To extend these gains to climate-relevant horizons, AI prediction systems must produce credible forced responses to drivers of interest (e.g., greenhouse gases, land-use change). We propose a minimal, testable framework for AI climate modeling: (i) represent external forcings explicitly and restrict them to physically appropriate state tendencies; and (ii) stress-test robustness in out-of-distribution regimes, including extremes and counterfactual trajectories. Using leading climate emulators and hybrid physics-AI models, we identify coupling and development challenges and compare scaling with resolution and effective complexity. AI models do not appear intrinsically more efficient than GPU-ported dynamical models once complexity is accounted for, yet they can directly predict target variables at the desired grid without integrating the full high-frequency, multivariate state. Diverse ML downscaling strategies can partially substitute for explicit fine-scale resolution when observations are available, paving the way towards inexpensive, local risk assessment across prediction horizons
KIT, Campus Nord, Gebäude 435, Seminarraum 2.05
(1) Duc Nguyen (2) Gabriella Wallentin (3) Tim Reimus (4) Loghman Fathollahi
(1) tbd (2) tbd (3) Renewable Energy Systems in a Changing Climate(4) tbd
KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF, Geb. 435, Raum 2.05
Deepanshu Malik, KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF
KIT Campus Nord, IMKAAF
Gebäude 326, Raum 150
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Johanna Seidel , KIT, IMKAAF
KIT, Campus Süd, Gebäude 30.22, Otto-Lehmann-Hörsaal
Dr. Daniel Rieger, Deutscher Wetterdienst, Offenbach
TBD
KIT, Campus Nord, Gebäude 435, Seminarraum 2.05
(1) tbd (2) Natalie Ratcliffe (3) Babak Ahmadi(4) Magdalena Kracheletz
(1) tbd (2) tbd (3) tbd (4) tbd
KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF, Geb. 435, Raum 2.05
Wilhelm Stork, KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF
KIT Campus Nord, IMKAAF
Gebäude 435, Raum 205
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Dr. Jessie M. Creamean, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, USA, Department of Atmospheric Science
Ice nucleating particles (INPs) strongly influence cloud phase, precipitation, and radiative properties, yet observations of their vertical distributions remain sparse. This presentation reviews recent advances in airborne INP measurements using drones, launched balloons, and tethered balloon systems, focusing on the development of the Profiling Upper altitudes For Ice Nucleation (PUFIN) sampler for routine altitude-resolved observations. Results from multiple deployments demonstrate that INP concentrations can vary substantially with height, season, aerosol source, and boundary layer structure, highlighting the limitations of relying solely on surface measurements. These vertically resolved observations provide critical constraints for understanding aerosol-cloud interactions and improving the representation of ice formation processes in atmospheric models.
KIT, Campus Nord, Gebäude 3435, Seminarraum 2.05
(1) Alejandro De la Torre (2) Tatiana Klimiuk (3) Laura Maria Pinilla Pinto (4) Simran Chopra
(1) Predictability of the 2014 Pentecost storm (2) tbd (3) Added-Value of the Coming Decade ICONXPP Decadal Climate Predictions Ensemble for User-relevant Variables in Europe (4) tbd
KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF, Geb. 435, Raum 2.05
Tom Tröltzsch / Namid Marxen, KIT Campus Nord, IMKASF
KIT Campus Nord, IMKAAF
Gebäude 435, Raum 205
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Prof. Dr. Stephanie Fiedler, Universitaet Heidelberg, Institut fuer Umweltphysik
Influences of aerosols on climate are qualitatively known, but the magnitude of their effects is uncertain with important implication for understanding past and future climate change. In this colloquium, I will explain some reasons for uncertainties in our understanding of aerosol effects on climate, and outline how we can make progress despite persistent multi-model spread in aerosol radiative forcing. We will see model-to-model differences for aerosol effects from global climate model simulations, and new CMIP aerosol data for use in climate simulations that inform the next IPCC assessment report of climate change. Looking ahead, I will introduce some of the plans for advancing the research field, e.g., through leading the new experiment protocol of the Aerosol and Chemistry Model Intercomparison Project, to which the most complex Earth system models currently available worldwide will contribute simulations.