UH telescope to help collect essential climate change data
The intake tube less than an inch in diameter and 25 feet long will provide vital data to track climate change through CO2 measurements.
The intake tube less than an inch in diameter and 25 feet long will provide vital data to track climate change through CO2 measurements.
This work offers new knowledge on how El Niño may respond to climate change.
UH¡¯s flagship campus is ranked No. 394 worldwide and No. 106 in the U.S.
Support for groundbreaking studies on torrential rainfall, lightning and severe thunderstorms is the focus of a long-term partnership at UH.
The Tonga volcanic eruption in 2022 triggered a special atmospheric wave that has eluded detection for the past 85 years.
Thirteen UH ²Ñ¨¡²Ô´Ç²¹ subjects were ranked by the Shanghai Ranking Consultancy.
A team of experts including UH Mānoa atmospheric scientists are understanding how and why the most violent rainstorms in the world occur.
Atmospheric scientist Bin Wang and oceanographer David Karl, were named in the top 25 researchers internationally, according to the recent Research.com ranking.
A new book titled “Climate Variability and Tropical Cyclone Activity” written by SOEST professor Pao-Shin Chu is now available.
Ocean memory decline was found as a collective response across the climate models to human-induced warming.