Kennedy College of Sciences Faculty, Students and Alumni Take 100th AMS Meeting by Storm
01/23/2020
By Ed Brennen
Given the chances of a snowstorm in New England in mid-January, it was risky for the American Meteorological Society (AMS) to hold its 100th annual meeting in Boston.
Turns out the thousands of meteorologists, climate scientists, hydrologists and academics 鈥 including many faculty, students and alumni from the Kennedy College of Sciences 鈥 who descended on the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center for the weeklong event were better off packing shorts and T-shirts than winter coats and snow boots.
On the conference鈥檚 opening weekend (Jan. 11-12), temperatures soared to 70 degrees in Boston on consecutive January days for the first time since record-keeping began in 1872. That Sunday, Boston hit a record high of 74 degrees 鈥 more than 40 degrees above average.
鈥淚t鈥檚 totally bizarre. It felt like summer,鈥 says Frank Colby, a professor in the Department of Environmental, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences (EEAS) who presented his research on why weather models had trouble forecasting the track of 2018鈥檚 Hurricane Florence at the annual meeting.
鈥淚 like warm weather, but something about 74 degrees in January feels so strange that I can鈥檛 enjoy it,鈥 adds EEAS Prof. Mathew Barlow, who had several students presenting research throughout the week.
The unusually warm weather provided a fitting backdrop to what UML participants say was the overriding theme of the convention: climate change.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 what we should be seeing, because climate change is a real thing, and it鈥檚 a serious problem,鈥 Colby says. 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 do something soon, we鈥檙e going to see flooding in Boston. The Seaport鈥檚 going to be underwater.鈥
As part of the annual meeting鈥檚 conference on climate variability and change, Assoc. Prof. of Environmental Sciences Juliette Rooney-Varga led a panel discussion that examined how integrated assessment models 鈥 namely the climate solutions simulator that she鈥檚 helped develop through her work with 鈥 can influence the technological, political and economic approaches to the issue.
鈥淲e want to give people the tools they need to learn for themselves, because we know from social science research that showing people climate research doesn鈥檛 work,鈥 says Rooney-Varga, who is director of UML鈥檚 . 鈥淥nce we鈥檝e got those tools in place, (En-ROADS presents) them in a format that you don鈥檛 need a Ph.D. or supercomputers to run.鈥
Laurie Agel, who earned her Ph.D. in marine sciences and technology from UML in 2018 (as part of the systemwide joint degree program) and now works with Barlow as a post-doctoral research associate, made two presentations: one on how computer models simulate extreme precipitation in the Northeast and another that examined how conditions such as rain, snow and soil moisture impact flooding in the Charles and Mystic river basins.
鈥淭he flooding topic was an offshoot of working with extreme precipitation, but now I find it very interesting, and I want to keep going with it,鈥 says Agel, who plans to continue her research with the Merrimack River.
At the poster presentations, David Coe, a third-year Ph.D. candidate in marine sciences and technology, shared his research on summerlike weather extending into the fall season in New England, resulting in shorter winters and a shift in the growing season.
For the past three years, Coe has used the Python programming language to analyze atmospheric data clusters dating back to 1970. At the conference, he learned how to integrate Python with machine learning to analyze even larger data sets.
鈥淧ython鈥檚 one of the most widely used programming languages for meteorology, so learning more about how to fit it to what we鈥檙e using for this cluster has been really helpful,鈥 says Coe, a Leominster native and Double River Hawk who earned his bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees in atmospheric science and meteorology.
This was the third AMS conference for graduate student Michael Follensbee, but first as a poster presenter. Follensbee, who expects to complete a master鈥檚 degree in atmospheric science in May, has worked for the past year and a half with Barlow on his National Science Foundation-funded research on changes in the Siberian hydroclimate. Follensbee is specifically looking at the 鈥減recursors to the precursors of a polar vortex鈥 to better predict when cold snaps may occur.
鈥淭he research I鈥檝e done has been outside my comfort zone in terms of meteorology,鈥 says Follensbee, a Vermont native who earned their bachelor鈥檚 degree in atmospheric science from Cornell University. 鈥淧rofessor Barlow helped me figure this out and feel comfortable enough about where I could continue the research. I鈥檓 happy to have brought it to the next step.鈥
Follensbee, who brought r茅sum茅 copies and made business cards for the conference, enjoyed learning how colleagues at other institutions are answering climate-related questions.
鈥淚鈥檓 hearing so many different sides beyond just the bubble of research that I鈥檓 doing, even though it鈥檚 all about the same values and measurements,鈥 Follensbee says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 opened myself up to a whole new world of meteorology, science and research.鈥
The balmy opening weekend included a student conference, where environmental science major Eric Roy presented on his work with Prof. Daniel Obrist on mercury pollution in forests, Lena Dziechowski participated on a graduate student panel and undergraduate students Danny Couto, Alex Przybylowicz, Stephen Sullivan and Roy also conducted student-led weather discussions. Students also took part in a career fair, and Assoc. Teaching Prof. Lori Weeden organized family-friendly weather games at the EEAS table at WeatherFest.
For Colby, having the AMS annual meeting in Boston this year meant running into many former students. Among them was Robert Hallowell 鈥85, a member of UML鈥檚 first graduating class in meteorology and a longtime research scientist at the MIT Lincoln Laboratory.
鈥淎 lot of our alumni still live in the area, so it鈥檚 been really great,鈥 says Colby, whose department is reinstating the bachelor of science in meteorology this fall.
During the poster session, Colby caught up with another former student, Beth Krajewski 鈥01, 鈥09, an Amesbury native who earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree in meteorology and master鈥檚 in atmospheric science.
Krajewski now works as director of aviation operations for IBM鈥檚 The Weather Company in Andover, providing airlines and airports with weather forecasting services and technology such as cockpit applications for pilots.
鈥淎 lot of 51视频 alumni work on our team. It鈥檚 great,鈥 says Krajewski, an occasional guest lecturer in Colby鈥檚 atmospheric science classes and a big proponent of the EEAS department.
鈥淚鈥檝e always said to people when they鈥檙e looking at different schools that 51视频 is nice because it鈥檚 a small enough program where you get one-on-one support from your professors,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a tough major, but everyone bands together and works hard to get through all the math and physics.鈥