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Meteorologists are predicting an exceptionally active 2024 Atlantic hurricane season, and experts from the University of Miami i are utilizing advanced technology to better understand and predict hurricane behavior and intensity.
University Research | University of MiamiA team of University of Miami scientists spent weeks in the Arctic region studying marine cold-air outbreaks and how the clouds they produce may be interacting with the rapidly warming Arctic.
University Research | University of MiamiResearchers at the University of Miami and NOAA have developed the Hurricane Analysis and Forecast System (HAFS), a new model improving the accuracy of hurricane predictions.
University Research | University of MiamiUniversity of Miami President Julio Frenk explains how academic medical centers, which operate “at the intersection of research, education and care,” can help lead transformative changes in healthcare and fight the “crisis of chronic disease.”
University of Miami | Articles & Op-EdsHeat domes will only become more frequent and intense with climate change, warns an atmospheric scientist.
University Research | University of MiamiCombining experiments in the laboratory with drifters deployed in matts of thick seaweed, scientist Maria Josefina Olascoaga and others hope to learn more about the oceanic conditions that transport the brown macroalgae.
University Research | University of MiamiData scientist Timothy Norris highlights the cultural discourse and indigeneity tensions that mapmaking has generated, especially over the past three centuries.
University Research | University of MiamiNOAA has predicted a “near-normal” 2023 Atlantic hurricane season, which starts June 1. But unusually warm Atlantic Ocean temperatures could cancel the effects of the El Niño weather pattern, resulting in a busy storm season.
University Research | University of MiamiA team of University of Miami marine archaeologists and others discovered the remains of a quarantine hospital and cemetery in the waters off Dry Tortugas National Park in Key West.
University Research | University of MiamiEngineering senior Joy Jackson has developed a device to help improve EEG readings for people with textured hair.
University Research | University of Miami