Born 100 years ago, MIT professors Jule Charney and Ed Lorenz profoundly shaped the field of meteorology during their lifetimes. Charney laid the groundwork for numerical weather prediction and saw it transform nearly every aspect of the field, while Lorenz changed our conception of weather from deterministic phenomena to chaos.
On February 1st and 2nd, 2018 the Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, the Lorenz Centerand the Houghton Fund hosted a scientific symposium featuring presentations by colleagues from across MIT and the scientific community as part of the Centenary Celebration of Jule Charney and Ed Lorenz.
A Symposium Celebrating the Lives and Scientific Legacies of Jule Charney and Ed Lorenz
Opening Keynote — Basic Research: the Lifeblood of a Successful Society
Ernest Moniz | Cecil and Ida Green Professor Emeritus of Physics and Engineering Systems and Special Advisor to the President, MIT
Co-chairman of the Board of Directors and CEO of the Nuclear Threat Initiative
LIFE AND SCIENCE OF CHARNEY & LORENZ
Jule Charney as Role Model
Joseph Pedlosky | Emeritus Senior Scientist, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Edward N. Lorenz and the End of the Cartesian Universe
Kerry Emanuel | Cecil & Ida Green Professor of Atmospheric Science and Co-Director of the Lorenz Center, MIT
WEATHER & CLIMATE
From Determinism to Probability in Numerical Weather Prediction
Tim Palmer | Royal Society Research Professor, University of Oxford
Atmospheric Dynamics
Richard Lindzen | Professor Emeritus, MIT
Convective Aggregation, Clouds, and Climate
Allison Wing | Assistant Professor, Florida State University
From Charney’s Hypothesis to Multiple Climate Equilibria in the Sahel
Elfatih Eltahir | Breene M. Kerr Professor of Hydrology and Climate, MIT
Jule Charney and his Influence on Physical Oceanography
Carl Wunsch | Professor Emeritus of Physical Oceanography, MIT
Carbon and Climate
Inez Fung | Professor of Atmospheric Science, University of California, Berkeley
BEYOND EARTH SCIENCE
Experimental Fluid Dynamics
Harry Swinney | Sid W. Richardson Foundation Regents Chair and Professor of Physics, University of Texas at Austin
Non-linear Dynamics and Turbulence
Michael Brenner | Michael F. Cronin Professor of Applied Mathematics and Applied Physics and Professor of Physics, Harvard University
Chaos and the Solar System
Jack Wisdom | Professor of Planetary Science, MIT
Hydrodynamic Quantum Analogs
John Bush | Associate Department Head and Professor of Applied Mathematics, MIT
Fluid Dynamics and Health
Lydia Bourouiba | Esther and Harold E. Edgerton Career Development Assistant Professor, MIT
<SPEAKER HAS REQUESTED THE RECORDING OF HER TALK NOT BE MADE PUBLICLY AVAILABLE>
Biological Population Dynamics
Jeff Gore | Associate Professor of Physics, MIT
PERSPECTIVES
The Legacy of Jule Charney and Ed Lorenz
Sir Brian Hoskins | Professor of Meteorology, University of Reading Chair, Grantham Institute, Imperial College, London
Predictably Unpredictable: Charney, Lorenz and the High Value of Basic Research
Panel discussion moderated by Rob van der Hilst | Department Head and Schlumberger Professor, EAPS
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