| YSOPP Award Winners AS |
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 | Ana Aguiar (aguiar@atm.ox.ac.uk) for the poster entitled: Instabilities of a barotropic rotating shear layer in a rotating fluid by Aguiar A.; Read, P. Click here to download the poster as pdf-file. |
| Ana Aguiar is currently a 2nd year DPhil student at the Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics in the University of Oxford, under the supervision of Professor Peter Read. The present work aims to study the response of a detached shear layer to boundary conditions of different topography, combined with either prograde or retrograde mechanical forcings, in a barotropic rotating fluid. Her particular interests are in laboratory experiments and numerical simulation of hydrodynamic instabilities and their applications in geophysical and planetary fluid dynamics. |
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 | Andrew Vlasenko (neyasit@list.ru) for the poster entitled: The role of surface active agents in the processes of heat (mass) transfer in a system ocean-atmosphere by Vlasenko, A.V.; Lapchin, V.B. Click here to download the poster as pdf-file. |
| Andrew Vlasenko received his BSc degree in Physical Oceanography at Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (State University) in 2004. His MSc thesis concerns the problem of ocean-atmosphere interaction with the focus on theoretical and numerical modelling of gravity/capillary convection. |
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 | Charlotte Stenby (stenby@mpch-mainz.mpg.de) for the poster entitled: Ozonolysis of monoterpenes: Temperature dependence of SOA yields by Stenby, C.; Winterhalter, R.; Nielsen, O. J.; Moortgat, G. K. Click here to download the poster as pdf-file. |
| Charlotte Stenby is a Ph.D.-student at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Department of Atmospheric Chemistry. He is working with secondary organic aerosols produced by ozonolysis of volatile organic compounds of biogenic origin. The main interest is the influence of the temperature on the formation and growth of the secondary particles. |
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| YSOPP Award Winners HS |
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 | Matthias Retter (retter@giub.unibe.ch) for the poster entitled: Investigating the vectors of subsurface storm flow in a hillslope by Retter, M.; Hincapié , I.; Germann , P.F. Click here to download the poster as pdf-file. |
| Matthias works on his Ph.D. in the Soil Science Section of the Institute of Geography at the University of Bern, Switzerland. His research interests focus on runoff generation processes and he is convinced of nowadays need for SLICE. |
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 | Jon Olav Skøien (skoien@hydro.tuwien.ac.at) for the poster entitled: Geostatistical interpolation of runoff by Skøien, J.O.; Blöschl, G. Click here to download the poster as pdf-file. |
| Jon Olav works at the Institute for Hydraulic and Water Resources Engineering at Vienna University of Technology (Austria). The main issue of his Ph.D. reserach is how to incorporate scale and network structure in geostatistical hydrologic analyses. |
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 | Giuliano Di Baldassarre (giuliano.dibaldassarre@mail.ing.unibo.it) for the poster entitled: A regional model for estimating the design storm in Northern-Central Italy by Di Baldassarre, G. Click here to download the poster as pdf-file. |
| Giuliano works on his Ph.D. at the Department DISTART of the University of Bologna (Italy) under the supervision of Prof. Armando Brath. His research is mainly directed to hydraulic modelling of flood inundations. In particular he has studied the effects of the topographic data resolution on a two-dimensional model accuracy. |
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 | Anne Fleig (a.k.fleig@geo.uio.no) for the poster entitled: A global evaluation of streamflow drought characteristics by Fleig, A. K.; Tallaksen, L. M.; Hisdal, H.; Demuth, S. Click here to download the poster as pdf-file. |
| Anne recently started as a Ph.D. student at the Department of Geosciences of the University of Oslo (Norway). Her research is focused on hydrological droughts and their links to regional-scale weather patterns, larger scale atmospheric circulation patterns and low-frequency climate variables in order to develop a statistical forecasting tool for summer droughts in North-Western Europe. |
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| YSOPP Award Winners OS |
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 | Luis Quaresma (luis.quaresma@hidrografico.pt) for the poster entitled: Non-linear internal waves generated at Nazaré canyon: observations over the W Portuguese inner shelf by Quaresma, L.S.; Vitorino, J.; da Silva, J.C.B. Click here to download the poster as pdf-file. |
| Luis Quaresma works at the Portuguese Navy Hydrographic Institute, Department of Physical Oceanography. He graduated in Environmental Sciences from University of Évora and the present work is the result of his MSc thesis in Physical Oceanography (Sciences Faculty - University of Lisbon). His main area of interest is related with the internal tide and high frequency non-linear internal wave dynamics, as well as their role in bottom sediment movements and turbulent mixing, with special focus to submarine canyon systems. |
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 | Luc Rainville (lrainville@whoi.edu) for the poster entitled: Propagation of the low-modes internal waves through the ocean by Rainville, L. Click here to download the poster as pdf-file. |
| Luc Rainville received his Ph.D from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego in June 2004. In collaboration with his advisor Robert Pinkel, he worked primarily on the propagation of the internal tide from the Hawaiian Ridge, estimating the energy flux of the internal wave spectrum from direct measurements and investigating the factors affecting the propagation of the internal tide. He is now at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, with interests ranging from western boundaries currents and mesoscale circulation to measurements of mixing in the Arctic. |