KIT Climate Lecture Rabener StraE Rabener

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

KIT Climate Lecture �Rabener Stra�E �Rabener 100m 100m Mltkestrae d KIT-Campus Nord Einfahrt NoNordr Standort 1600 Lieferanschrift: Hermann-von-Helmholtz-Platz 1 Ostendorfhaus 76344 Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen Lieferanschrift: MommsenstraßeWeberstrae www.kit.edu Weberstraße 5 KIT-Standorte Association Helmholtz the in University Research The – KIT 76133 Karlsruhe Mzartstrae Maimilianstrae eethenstrae Willy-Brandt-Allee Graben-Neudorf Haydnplatz KIT-Campus Ost Standort Dresden Weißbachstraße L559 Westhochschule Hallwachsstraße Dülferstraße Anmeldung WAK Lieferanschrift: Nrdliche ildaprmenade L558 Projektträger Karlsruhe – Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen A den Außenstelle Dresden au Rintheimer e Helmholtzstraße rr Querallee Hallwachsstraße 3 in Theodor-Heuss-Allee 36 KIT-Campus Nord g 01069 Dresden Karlsruhe Zeuner Str. Hirten- weg Dresden Hagsfelder 100m Nöthnitzer Str. Moltkestraße Allee Richtung Garmisch-Partenkirchen und B23 KIT-STANDORTE IM ERLICK Hertzstraße Standort Garmisch Westhochschule KIT-Campus Ost Haid-und-Neu-Straße 3101 Kaiserallee Kaiserstraße Karlsruhe Durlacher Allee Lieferanschrift: Institut für Meteorologie und nauerrin de g Kriegsstraße Klimaforschung (IMK-IFU) Ulm A Kapellen- Frankfurt straße Kreuzeckbahnstraße 19 Kreuzeckbahnstraße Moltkestr. Frankfurt Ostendorfhaus 82467 Garmisch-Partenkirchen 100m A5 Reinhold-Frank-Straße KITCampus Sd Garmisch Durlacher Allee Karlsruhe A5 Ausfahrt Karlsruhe Durlach Ausfahrt Karlsruhe Durlach Richtung Kreuzeck-/Alpspitzbach KITCampus Sd Basel/Stuttgart Basel/Stuttgart Black Forest Observatory Ostendorfhaus Südtangente Deutschland Region Karlsruhe Stadt Karlsruhe Karlsruhe: Campus Sd Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen: Campus Nord Sankt-Barbara-Weg 906 906 100m 5 Standort 100m KIT-Campus Ost KITCampus Sd 908 70.12 Lieferanschrift: CENTER ENVIRONMENT AND 06.60 CLIMATE KIT (ehemaliger Standort Mackensen) Kaiserstraße 12 Westhochschule Lieferanschrift: 76131 Karlsruhe e e l Rintheimer Querallee 2 70.22 Lieferanschrift: l A 76131 Karlsruhe Hertzstraße 16 r 70.14 e 76187 Karlsruhe n e f 70.28 a h s 70.26 d 70.11 l 70.21 o p Anmeldung ITU o e chier Allee 70.93 3 Liedlsheimer Strae 725 L 746 733 737 40.41 70.13 Festsaal at Studentisches Kulturzentrum Karlsruhe Kulturzentrum Studentisches at Festsaal 721 724 70.90 06.31 Lrchenallee 729 70.99 Lagercontainer 730 70.13A 70.27 723 September 19, 2018 · 6pm · 2018 06.32 19, September 70.25 70.14A 747 70.04 726 727 06.38 e 732 9670 ß 06.35 a r t rabener Strae rabener Strae KIT Climate Lecture Climate KIT 736 S 720 Sportanlagen 707 06.33 06.40 r 706 687 ertzstrae 718 e m 686 70.03 i e 70.16 e 688 ß h a n r 704 705 Rintheimer Querallee t e S Einfahrt k r 710 3 n i 717 e L t 712 684 693 689 Waldparkplatz t 708 40.43 e 713 719 684/1 691 t s 684/2 h 701 70.18 c o 06.41 H 06.36 06.34 Studentenwohnheim Hagsfelder Allee SPORT Karlsruher Weg 40.44 714 70.02 70.30 575 681 690 H Einfahrt 574 70.01 H 13 50.41 682 06.37 06.42 KIT-Shuttle 544 15 692 9900 Richtung Campus Sd 40.18 06.46 573 695 40.17 40.40 11c nterrmbacher Strae 50.40 696 670 11a 40.16 06.45 Hirtenweg 06.47 11b 40.28 663 8 Nordeinfahrt 549 9a Einfahrt 50.36 660 40.04 mit Codekarte S1/ S11 11a lankenlcher Strae 23 40.15 50.38 von/nach Karlsruhe 542 541 9b 5523 Hagsfelder Allee 614 650 40.33 615 40.29 Engler-Bunte-Ring 40.13 8 7 Richtung Campus Nord 4 527 611 523 522 40.14 40.32 5 7 07.01 Anmeldung WAK 40.25 22 5 618 9 13 514 12 40.12 2 50.35 10 9615 40.26 Fraunherstrae 513 521 3 21 50.33 629 tthardFranzStrae 640 620 40.19 516 2 Krnblumenstrae 07.31 50.32 lankenlcher Strae 3 Mltkestrae 40.02 40.27 40.24 e e 07.30 ß 515 ß 607 5621 3 40.31 512 a a 605 606 612 r r 14 50.31 t t 50.34 07.08 S S 608 1 517 Adenauerring r 500 r 40.21 40.23 e 40.22 e VincenzrienitzStrae KIT-Shuttle l 40.51 518 a 1a 5 m i 633 t s e H 630 510 631 h h 02.16 c 603 02.17 i 40.50 n r e d k e n i i r L 601 602 604 02.12 Richardillsttter-Allee 511 F 462 Spcker Strae 441/1 Spcker Strae Forstliches Bildungs- 5 30.90 30.79 Am Fasanengarten 356 9642 349 zentrum Karlsruhe 1 8 Edelsheimstrae Gastdozentenhaus 30.24 30.91 02.15 460 30.49 Karlsruher Schloss 461 351 Bauamt Einfahrt 3 7 30.42 457 30.12 07.07 341 arkstrae 30.11 464 02.14 352 453 1 5a 5b 02.13 2 343 441 30.96 8 458 01.51 3 1 11 30.28 7 6 6 456 3 1a 441 442 348 449 30.41 445 451 9652 452 20.11 Simon-Moser-Weg e 454 5 30.23 30.48 e 2a 30.25 02.18 l 01.52 5 Audimax 345 l 30.70 353 4509653 A 9651 459 07.21 434 426 448 30.93 50.12 Weinartener Strae r 443 Weinartener Strae 50.10 9 327 e 12 30.10 n 9627 e 1 Strahlenpassstelle KIT 20.50 428 f 2-6 447 20.12 01.53 Leonhard-Sohncke-Weg 30.43 30.60 330 329 a Schneldstrae 323 30.31 30.61 h 436 2 20.51 s 30.32 4 4 429 438 425 d 446 7 30.95 324 l Schlossbezirk Neuer Zirkel 6 332 322 4 423 o 2 20.52 433 30.36 7 p 13 1 Werkfeuerwehr 9675 6 o 30.22 01.12 e 333 315 L 20.20 326 20.13 9 FIZ 20.53 02.02 421 424 Steinbuch Centre for 422 432 30.33 444 435 02.03 30.21 Fritz-Haber-Weg 30.44 321 9683 439 Computing (SCC) 20.54 3 MENSA Karlsruher Allee 409 14 02.11 2 Karlsruher Allee 02.04 30.46 402 411 418 419 420 2 01.13 305 20.14 1 30.29 11b 4 310 36 303 5404 20.21 02.10 Enesserstrae 30.35 311 302 306 308 Bibliothek 403 5402 301 401 WlanaedeStrae 11a aidundNeuStrae 304 30.45 FORUM Studierendenwerk 408 410 30.34 415 440 316 312 401A 414 416 . 300 r 307 404 t S 20.40 13 407 15 r KIT-BIBLIOTHEK Karl-Wilhelm-Platz Richtung Campus Ost 309 430 406 e 413 412 400 Einfahrt 405 h 151 317 c 7 4, 5 FIZ Eensteiner Strae 272 (ehemaliger Standort Mackensen) Eensteiner Strae o Westeinfahrt 20.30 Lehmannstrae FIZ l n mit Codekarte g 11.20 152 e 2 e KIT-Shuttle Studentenzentrum Strae am Frum 30.50 H 235 Administration 239 k Enlerstrae W 17 Karlsruhe Institute of Technology n - 01.12 238 2 FIZ a 237 278 l 5a 273 n 240 276 274 H 244 B a Schlossplatz 14 11.11 30.81 247 248 Neureuter Strae d 30.82 261 260/1 255 7 r 11.21 Enesserstrae KIT Climate and Environment144 Center 19 o J 18 50.21 .- 4 50.22 Sicher auf dem Campus 260 20 10.84 30.51 249 245 258 W 10.83 10.85 6 257 CASINO 251 IreneRsenberStrae Haupteinfahrt Waldhrnstrae 22 FIZ Paulcke-Platz 10.63 02.95 5 142 230 259 Adolf-Wrthebude 11.23 7 Neubaumaßnahmen H 10.62 2 264 266 2 10.82 9602 11.22 145 243 11.10 EnelbertArnldStrae 1 1a Dr. Kirsten Hennrich 241 242 256 252 141 254 10.92 10.93 10.89 2 Zirkel 2 10.94 127 250 4 Fremdinstitutionen 220 6 8 5252 253 10 12 50.20 KarlilhelmStrae Krnenstrae Büchenauer Straße 11 Büchenauer Straße 10.88 11.40 PRÄSIDIUM Ernst-Gaber-Str. 223/1 225 227 1 124 234 4 3 10.61 5 6 KinderUniversum Zaunanlage/ 126 Studierendenservice 50.26 Lieferzufahrt 123 231 Campus North 223 11.30 10.95 10.81 1 Arealbegrenzung 221 7 10.86 10.87 Anmeldung 50.25 8 Fremdinstitution Eltern- 10.50 Richtung Ostendorfhaus und Otto-Ammann- 10.64 Kindro 232 13 Hermann-von-Helmholtz-Platz131 122 1121 H 222 224 226 229 10.70 1 Platz a Studienberatung RudllankStrae 14 u Standort Westhochschule 10.91 210 p 01.80 paper with the quality label „Der Blaue Engel“ % recycled 3 10.96 t 10.30 e Ehrenhof 101 i Wilhelm-Nusselt-Weg 9 n f 10.12 76344 Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen, Germany 14 R.-Baumeister- 103 a KITA h 2 r L559 Kronenplatz Administration 10.31 Platz 5131 H t 212 01.90 12 10.33 FTU 4 10 100 z 213 1, 2, 4, 5, S2, S4, S41, S5 4a KIT-Shuttle t a Berliner Platz l 211 Marktplatz P 10.40 - 8a z t 1, 2, 4, 5, S2, S4, S41, S5 10.32 l 10.34 o 2 h 1-3 10.11 10.21 8 2a meteorologischer 2b m 4 Phone: +49 721 608-28592 l 05.01 Waldhrnstrae 11 10.23 Messmast e H Marktplatz Kaiserstrae - n 05.20 01.96 o Fritz-ErlerStrae 53 v 2, 3, 5, S1, S11, S4, S41, S5 01.85 - n 27 Durlacher Tor Fax: +49 721 608-24960 n /KIT Campus-Süd a m r hrinerstrae 1, 2, 4, 5, S2, S4, S41, S5 Durlacher Allee e H 65 Kreuzstrae 01.95 Email: [email protected] Richtung Stutensee/Blankenloch 01.70 30 01.92 Kapellenstrae N 32 L559 01.93 100 m 34 01.94 Richtung 6,www.kit.edu Leopoldshafen und Campus Sd N 100 m Herausgeber Kontakt Stand: Juli 2016 Karlsruher Institut für Technologie Technische Infrastruktur und Dienste (TID) KIT – Die Forschungsuniversität in der Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft Kaiserstraße 12, 76131 Karlsruhe Liegenschaftsmanagement KIT (TID-SLM), [email protected] www.kit.edu 36 KIT Climate and Environment Center st KIT Climate Lecture In the 21 century, living conditions on Earth are changing as pro-foundly as never before.
Recommended publications
  • PART I the Challenge
    PART I The Challenge 2 Implications of climate science for negotiators Thomas F. Stocker Physics Institute, University of Bern The scientific assessments carried out by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change have delivered robust and rigorous scientific information for the complex negotiations that should produce a binding agreement to limit climate change and its impacts and risks. Understanding climate change as a threat to key resources for the livelihood of humans and the functioning of ecosystems provides a more appropriate perspective on the scale of the problem. Model simulations suggest that many options exist today to limit climate change. However, these options are rapidly vanishing under continued carbon emissions: Temperature targets must be revised upwards by about 0.4°C per decade for constant mitigation ambitions. Mitigating climate change has the important benefit of creating favourable conditions to reach many of the Sustainable Development Goals; business-as-usual and consequent unchecked climate change will make these important universal goals unreachable. 1 Introduction “Climate change is one of the greatest challenges of our time” – this is the assertion of the parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC 2009). The Fifth Assessment Report of the IPCC (AR5), which was completed in November 2014 with the publication of the Synthesis Report (IPCC 2014c), gives a comprehensive snapshot of the knowledge science has to offer to quantify, understand, and confront this problem. The four key messages from the “Summary for Policymakers” of the Synthesis Report are: 31 Towards a Workable and Effective Climate Regime 1. Human influence on the climate system is clear, and recent anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases are the highest in history.
    [Show full text]
  • Bio of Thomas Stoc Thomas Stocker
    Bio of Thomas Stocker, University of Bern, Switzerland Thomas Stocker was born in Zürich and obtained a PhD in Natural Sciences of ETH Zürich in 1987. He held research positions at University College London, McGill University (Montreal), Columbia University (New York) and University of Hawai'i (Honolulu). Since 1993 he is Professor of Climate and Environmental Physics at the University of Bern. His research encompasses the development of climate models of intermediate complexity, modelling past and future climate change, in particular abrupt climate change and its effects on the ocean, and the reconstruction of greenhouse gas concentrations based on ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica. This has resulted in the definitive CO2 and CH4 records of the past 800,000 years, still a world record. Thomas Stocker has authored or co-authored more than 220 peer-reviewed papers in the area of climate dynamics and paleoclimate modeling and reconstruction. After more than 10 years of service in the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) he was elected Co-Chair of Working Group I of the IPCC for the period 2008 to 2015. The comprehensive assessment report Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis was approved by the governments on September 27, 2013. This report provides the scientific foundation of the Paris Agreement. Thomas Stocker was awarded a Dr. Honoris Causa of the University of Versailles in 2006 and of ETH Zürich in 2016. He received the Hans Oeschger Medal of the European Geosciences Union in 2009. Thomas Stocker is a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union, a Foreign Member of the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Association of Arts and Sciences and a Member of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina.
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae Prof. Dr. Thomas Stocker
    Curriculum Vitae Prof. Dr. Thomas Stocker Name: Thomas Stocker Geboren: 01. Juli 1959 Forschungsschwerpunkte: Klimadynamik, Paläoklima, Klimamodellierung, Eiskernforschung, Klimaprojektion Thomas Stocker ist Geowissenschaftler. Er entwickelt Klimamodelle zur Simulation von Klimaänderungen über die letzten 2 Millionen Jahre sowie zur Projektion künftiger Klimaveränderungen. Außerdem befasst er sich mit der Rekonstruktion vergangener Klimaänderungen mithilfe von Eisbohrkernen und der Dynamik des Erdsystems. Akademischer und beruflicher Werdegang seit 1993 Professor, Physikalisches Institut und Abteilungsleiter, Klima- und Umweltphysik, Universität Bern, Schweiz 1991 - 1993 Associate Research Scientist, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, Palisades, New York, USA 1989 - 1991 Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Meteorology, McGill University, Montreal, Kanada 1988 - 1989 SERC Gastforscher, Department of Mathematics, University College London, UK 1988 Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter, Versuchsanstalt für Wasserbau, Hydrologie und Glaziologie, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zürich, Schweiz 1987 Promotion zum Dr. sc. nat., Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zürich, Schweiz 1984 Diplom, Naturwissenschaften (Umweltphysik), Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zürich, Schweiz Nationale Akademie der Wissenschaften Leopoldina www.leopoldina.org 1 1978 - 1984 Studium der Umweltphysik, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zürich, Schweiz Funktionen in wissenschaftlichen Gesellschaften und Gremien 2018
    [Show full text]
  • Brochures (.Pdf) of the Workshops and the Illustrated Presentations Given at the GIFT Workshops for the Last 8 Years
    European Geosciences Union e st. 2002 GIFT – Geosciences Information For Teachers GIFT WORKSHOP 2014 OUR CHANGING PLANET Vienna, Austria, 27-30 April 2014 ROOM 29 - GREEN LEVEL Dear Teachers, Welcome to the 12th GIFT workshop of the European Geosciences Union! This year the workshop will reunite 86 teachers from 19 different countries around the general theme “Our Changing Planet”. Numerous geological, geophysical, geochemical and geobiological data acquired over many years have documented that on geological time-­‐scales, the Earth has continuously undergone significant changes. We know that plate tectonics have widely moved continents, that the chemistry of the atmosphere has changed, that the climate of the Earth has undergone hot and cold periods (the Earth has been so cold at some points that the term “Snowball Earth” has been used). The term “natural variability” is used to refer to this continuous evolution of our planet. A new trend in variability has been progressively documented for the last 100-­‐150 years of the Earth’s history, since the industrial revolution started. Many studies have demonstrated that new factors of anthropogenic origin are becoming important in controlling the environment of the Earth’s outer shells. These outer shells, containing air, water, ice, soil, plants and animals are precisely where we live. An impressive characteristic is that changes in the environment are occurring at a high rate and reaching values unprecedented in the Earth’s history, to the point that the term “Anthropocene” has been proposed for this new era of the Earth’s history. Awareness that human activities may be responsible for irreversible changes in the Earth’s environment, has led to the establishment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), that was created in 1988 by two United Nations Organizations: the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and the United Nation Environmental Program (UNEP).
    [Show full text]
  • Short CV of Thomas Stocker
    Kurzbiographie Thomas Stocker, Universität Bern Thomas Stocker hat an der ETH Zürich Umweltphysik studiert und 1987 mit dem Doktorat mit Auszeichnung abgeschlossen. Nach Forschungsaufenthalten am University College (London), an der McGill University (Montreal), an der Columbia University (New York) wurde er 1993 als Professor an das Physikalische Institut der Universität Bern berufen, wo er seither die Abteilung für Klima- und Umweltphysik leitet. Seine Forschung umfasst die Entwicklung von vereinfachten Klimamodellen zur Simulation vergangener und künftiger Klimaänderungen, sowie die Bestimmung der Treibhausgaskonzentrationen der Atmosphäre anhand von Eisbohrkernen aus der Antarktis. Diese Rekonstruktionen erstrecken sich über die letzten 800'000 Jahre ─ ein Weltrekord. Thomas Stocker ist Autor oder Mitautor von über 240 wissenschaftlichen Artikeln. Nach 10 Jahren Engagement im Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) der UNO wurde er im September 2008 zum Vorsitzenden der Arbeitsgruppe I des IPCC für die Periode 2008-2015 gewählt. IPCC hat den Sachstandsbericht Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis am 27. September 2013 verabschiedet. Der Bericht, der unter seinem Vorsitz im September 2013 von allen Ländern verabschiedet wurde, bildet die wissenschaftliche Grundlage für das Klimaabkommen von Paris. Für seine Arbeiten erhielt Thomas Stocker den Nationalen Latsis Preis, Ehrendoktorate der Universität Versailles und der ETH Zürich, sowie die Hans Oeschger Medaille der European Geosciences Union. Er ist der Deutschen Akademie Leopoldina, Fellow der American Geophysical Union, Auswärtiges Mitglied der Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei und der American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 2017 erhielt er den Schweizer Wissenschaftspreis Marcel Benoist. [email protected] www.climate.unibe.ch/stocker .
    [Show full text]
  • Universitas 21 Presidential Symposium 2020 Keynote Speech and Expert Talk
    International Relations Office Universitas 21 Presidential Symposium 2020 Keynote Speech and Expert Talk Professor Thomas Stocker Professor of Climate and Environmental Physics, Physics Institute, University of Bern, Switzerland President of the Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research Thomas Stocker was Born in Zurich and oBtained a PhD in Natural Sciences of ETH Zurich in 1987. He held research positions at University College London, McGill University (Montreal), Columbia University (New York) and University of Hawai'i (Honolulu). Since 1993 he has been Professor of Climate and Environmental Physics at the University of Bern. His research encompasses the development of climate models of intermediate complexity, modelling past and future climate change, in particular abrupt climate change and its effects on the ocean, and the reconstruction of greenhouse gas concentrations based on ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica. This has resulted in the definitive carbon dioxide and methane records of the past 800,000 years. From 2008 to 2015, he served as Co-Chair of Working Group I of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that provided the scientific foundation of the Paris Agreement. Thomas Stocker holds honorary doctorates from ETH Zurich and the University of Versailles and has received numerous awards for his work. He is a Foreign Honorary MemBer of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the Academy of Sciences Leopoldina, Germany, and received the Swiss Science Prize Marcel Benoist in 2017. Professor Michael Schaepman Vice President Research, University of Zurich (UZH) Professor of Remote Sensing, Department of Geography, UZH, Switzerland Michael Schaepman studied geography, experimental physics, and informatics at the University of Zurich and earned his doctoral degree at the UZH Department of Geography in 1998.
    [Show full text]
  • Implications of Climate Science for Negotiators
    2 Implications of climate science for negotiators Thomas F. Stocker Physics Institute, University of Bern The scientific assessments carried out by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change have delivered robust and rigorous scientific information for the complex negotiations that should produce a binding agreement to limit climate change and its impacts and risks. Understanding climate change as a threat to key resources for the livelihood of humans and the functioning of ecosystems provides a more appropriate perspective on the scale of the problem. Model simulations suggest that many options exist today to limit climate change. However, these options are rapidly vanishing under continued carbon emissions: Temperature targets must be revised upwards by about 0.4°C per decade for constant mitigation ambitions. Mitigating climate change has the important benefit of creating favourable conditions to reach many of the Sustainable Development Goals; business-as-usual and consequent unchecked climate change will make these important universal goals unreachable. 1 Introduction “Climate change is one of the greatest challenges of our time” – this is the assertion of the parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC 2009). The Fifth Assessment Report of the IPCC (AR5), which was completed in November 2014 with the publication of the Synthesis Report (IPCC 2014c), gives a comprehensive snapshot of the knowledge science has to offer to quantify, understand, and confront this problem. The four key messages from the “Summary for Policymakers” of the Synthesis Report are: 31 Towards a Workable and Effective Climate Regime 1. Human influence on the climate system is clear, and recent anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases are the highest in history.
    [Show full text]
  • Short Bio of Prof. Thomas Stocker & Dr John Church
    Short Bio of Prof. Thomas Stocker & Dr John Church Prof. Thomas Stocker, University of Bern, Switzerland Thomas Stocker was born in Zürich and obtained a PhD in Natural Sciences of ETH Zürich in 1987. He held research positions at the University College London, McGill University (Montreal), Columbia University (New York) and at the University of Hawai'i (Honolulu). Since 1993 he is Professor of Climate and Environmental Physics at the University of Bern. His research encompasses the development of climate models of intermediate complexity, modelling past and future climate change and the reconstruction of the chemical composition of precipitation and greenhouse gas concentrations based on ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica. Thomas Stocker has published over 150 peer-reviewed papers in the area of climate dynamics and paleoclimate modeling and reconstruction. He was awarded a Dr. Honoris Causa of the University of Versailles (France) in 2006 and the Hans Oeschger Medal of the European Geosciences Union in 2009. After more than 10 years of service in the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) he has been elected Co-Chair of Working Group I "The Physical Science Basis" of the IPCC in 2008. Dr John Church, CSIRO, Australia John Church is an oceanographer with the Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research and the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre with expertise is the role of the ocean in climate, particularly anthropogenic climate change. He was co-convening lead author for the Chapter on Sea Level in the IPCC Third Assessment Report, Co-Chaired the international Scientific Steering Group for the World Ocean Circulation Experiment from 1994 to 1998, and Chaired the Joint Scientific Committee of the World Climate Research Programme from 2006 to 2008.
    [Show full text]
  • Short CV of Thomas Stocker
    Bio of Thomas Stocker, University of Bern, Switzerland Thomas Stocker was born in Zürich and obtained a PhD in Natural Sciences of ETH Zürich in 1987. He held research positions at University College London, McGill University (Montreal), Columbia University (New York) and University of Hawai'i (Honolulu). Since 1993 he is Professor of Climate and Environmental Physics at the University of Bern. His research encompasses the development of climate models of intermediate complexity, modelling past and future climate change, in particular abrupt climate change and its effects on the ocean, and the reconstruction of greenhouse gas concentrations based on ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica. This has resulted in the definitive CO2 and CH4 records of the past 800,000 years, still a world record. Thomas Stocker has authored or co-authored more than 240 peer-reviewed papers in the area of climate dynamics and paleoclimate modeling and reconstruction. After more than 10 years of service in the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) he was elected Co-Chair of Working Group I of the IPCC for the period 2008 to 2015. The comprehensive assessment report Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis was approved by the governments on September 27, 2013. This report provides the scientific foundation of the Paris Agreement. Thomas Stocker was awarded a Dr. Honoris Causa of the University of Versailles in 2006 and of ETH Zürich in 2016. He received the Hans Oeschger Medal of the European Geosciences Union in 2009. Thomas Stocker is a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union, a Foreign Member of the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Association of Arts and Sciences and a Member of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina.
    [Show full text]
  • Pressemitteilung
    Pressemitteilung 69/2017 Exzellenz-Preis für Schweizer Klimaforscher Thomas Stocker Professor-Werner-Petersen-Stiftung feiert mit der Verleihung ihren 20. Geburtstag 29.10.2017/Kiel. Ohne Treibhausgase in der Atmosphäre gäbe es auf der Erde kein Leben. Andererseits führt der vom Menschen verursachte schnelle Anstieg der Treibhausgaskonzentrationen zu unabsehbaren Veränderungen unserer Umwelt. Wie genau reagiert das Klimasystem auf derartige Schwankungen? An dieser Frage forscht der renommierte Schweizer Klimawissenschaftler Prof. Dr. Thomas Stocker von der Universität Bern. Für seine Forschungsleistungen erhält er jetzt eine mit 20.000 Euro dotierte Exzellenz- Professur der Prof. Dr. Werner-Petersen-Stiftung. Mit dem damit verbundenen öffentlichen Abendvortrag von Professor Stocker begeht die Stiftung gleichzeitig ihren 20. Geburtstag. Kohlendioxid (CO2) ist neben Wasserdampf das wichtigste Treibhausgas in der Atmosphäre. Ohne Treibhausgase gibt es kein Leben auf der Erde, denn die mittlere Temperatur an der Oberfläche läge bei minus 18 Grad Celsius statt aktuell etwa plus 15 Grad Celsius. Doch in den vergangenen 150 Jahren ist die CO2-Konzentration in der Atmosphäre durch die Verbrennung von Kohle, Öl und Gas rasant auf Werte angestiegen, die diejenigen der vergangenen 800.000 Jahre um 30 Prozent übertreffen. Klar ist, dass dieser Anstieg zu Veränderungen im Klimasystem führt, die Auswirkungen auf die Umwelt und letztendlich auch auf uns Menschen haben werden. Doch im Detail sind noch viele Fragen zu den Reaktionen des Klimas auf so schnelle, massive Eingriffe offen. Zu den weltweit anerkanntesten Experten für die Dynamik des Klimasystems gehört der an der Universität Bern (Schweiz) forschende und lehrende Prof. Dr. Thomas Stocker. Anhand von natürlichen Klimaarchiven wie Sediment- und Eisbohrkernen versucht er und sein Team Schwankungen des Klimas und ihre Auslöser in der Vergangenheit zu verstehen.
    [Show full text]