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Elise Schulz, a UAHuntsville atmospheric science graduate student, presented information about her research to a packed room at the
AMS conference this week in Texas. She is trying to develop a system using
dual polarization radar ro improve predictions of when a storm will stop
producing radar -- and when it is safe workers at Florida rocket launch
facilities to go back to work.
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A trio of atmospheric science graduate students from UAH (from
left) Heather Wood, Danielle Kozlowski and Sarah Stough, team up to hang a
poster at the 93rd annual meeting of the American Meteorological Society
in Austin, Tx. Kozlowski's research looks at the theorized links between
lightning and the formation of tornadoes. |
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| Atmospheric science graduate students Adam Shearer and Matt Saari man the student recruiting both at the career fair hosted by the American Meteorological Society's annual meeting this week in Austin,
Texas. |
Anthony Lamont Bain, a graduate student in UAHuntsville's Atmospheric
Science Department, talks to an interested colleague about his research
during last summer's DC3 campaign. Bain is in Austin, Tx, for the 93rd
annual meeting of the AMS. |
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| Lihua Wang, a graduate student in UAH's Atmospheric Science
Department, stands by her research poster during a poster session at the
93rd annual meeting of the American Meteorological Society in Austin, Tx.
Working with Dr. Mike Newchurch, Wang's research looks at how lightning
contributes to the creation of ozone in the upper troposphere. Ozone, a
pollutant at the surface, is useful in the upper atmosphere where it
protects the surface from potentially harmful ultraviolet radiation. |
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