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The University of Southampton
Mathematical Sciences

Predicting Uncertainty in Weather and Climate Forecasts Event

Time:
18:00
Date:
6 December 2011
Venue:
Mathematics (Building 54) Lecture Theatre 4A Highfield Campus University of Southampton SO17 1BJ

For more information regarding this event, please email The event is free but places should be reserved by emailing at confirm@soton.ac.uk .

Event details

Prof. Palmer will be presenting how to predict the weather and what the climate will be like in the next century.

In this public lecture, pitched at a non-specialist audience, Prof. Palmer will review some of the difficulties, theoretical and practical, in predicting next week's weather and next century's climate. He will outline some new approaches to predicting climate by taking explicitly into account the random aspects of the weather. He will then discuss the implications of this for the way climate modelling might be organised internationally in the future.

You are cordially invited to the reception which will be beforehand at 5:30pm outside the venue

Free parking will be available on the Highfield Campus from 5pm in any undesignated parking bay

(please note that any changes tot he above arrangements will be on our website at https://www.southampton.ac.uk/maths/index.page? )

Speaker information

Tim Palmer ,Oxford University,Tim Palmer is a Royal Society Research Professor at Oxford University and Principal Scientist at the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts. Professor Palmer researches the predictability and dynamics of weather and climate. He has developed new models for climate prediction and has also worked on the application of weather and climate forecasts for malaria prediction, flood forecasting, and crop yield estimation. Professor Palmer has been a lead author of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change third assessment report, has coordinated two European Union climate projects, and was co-chair of the international scientific steering group of a World Climate Research Programme project on climate variability and predictability. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2003, and served on the Royal Society Council in 2008-9. He is currently President of the Royal Meteorological Society, and a member of the government's Adaptation Sub-Committee of the Climate Change Committee.

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