La SCNAT et son réseau s'engagent pour une société et une science durables. Ils soutiennent la politique, l'administration et les entreprises avec des connaissances spécialisées et entretiennent un dialogue avec le public. Ils renforcent les échanges entre disciplines scientifiques et promeuvent les jeunes universitaires.

Image : Sebastian, stock.adobe.com

Colloquium in Climatology, Climate Impact and Remote Sensing

Lieu de l'événement

CDE,
Hallerstrasse 10,
3012 Bern

Spring Semester 2017 Wednesdays, 14:15, seminar room 310 (CDE), Hallerstrasse 10, 3012 Bern Institute of Geography Climatology Climate Impact Remote Sensing

Wetter und Klima (Symbolbild)
Image : NASA

March 8: Jan Rajczak (ETH Zurich)

  • Future projections of precipitation extremes in EURO-CORDEX regional climate simulations for Europe and Switzerland

March 15: Ulrich Hamann (MeteoSwiss)

  • Early detection of thunderstorms using MSG/SEVIRI

March 22: Anthony Davison (EPFL)

  • Some statistical tools for climate extremes

March 29: Stefanie Gubler (MeteoSwiss)

  • Climate services and capacity building in Peru – the project Climandes

April 5: Joaquim Pinto (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology KIT)

  • -

April 12: Christian Huggel (University of Zurich) 13:15-14:00! CDE 310

  • Climate Change and related impacts and risks in the Andes of Peru

May 3: Michael Graf (University of Bern)

  • Winds in Switzerland: climatological analysis, model evaluation and future scenarios

May 10: Nikolina Ban (ETH Zurich)

  • Scaling and Intensi cation of Extreme Precipitation in Convection-Resolving Climate Change Simulations

May 17: Sari Metsämäki (Finnish Environment Institute SYKE)

  • Optical remote sensing of snow particularly in boreal forests

May 24: Hendrik Huwald (EPFL)

  • Heat and Gas Transport in Alpine Snowpacks

May 31: Martine Rebetez (University of Neuchâtel/WSL)

  • Observed impacts of increasing temperatures on snowfall and snowpack in the Swiss Alps

Catégories

  • Effets du changement climatique
  • Modification
  • Télédétection