Search Results - "Bai, Le‐Sheng"

  • Showing 1 - 13 results of 13
Refine Results
  1. 1

    A comparison of the regional Arctic System Reanalysis and the global ERA‐Interim Reanalysis for the Arctic by Bromwich, David H., Wilson, Aaron B., Bai, LeSheng, Moore, George W. K., Bauer, Peter

    “…The Arctic System Reanalysis version 1 (ASRv1), a high‐resolution regional assimilation of model output, observations and satellite data across the mid‐ and…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  2. 2

    Development and testing of Polar Weather Research and Forecasting model: 2. Arctic Ocean by Bromwich, David H., Hines, Keith M., Bai, Le-Sheng

    “…A version of the state‐of‐the‐art Weather Research and Forecasting model (WRF) has been developed for polar applications. The model known as “Polar WRF” is…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  3. 3

    Greenland Ice Sheet Surface Air Temperature Variability: 1840–2007 by Box, Jason E., Yang, Lei, Bromwich, David H., Bai, Le-Sheng

    Published in Journal of climate (01-07-2009)
    “…Meteorological station records and regional climate model output are combined to develop a continuous 168-yr (1840–2007) spatial reconstruction of monthly,…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  4. 4

    Effect of Atmospheric Forcing Resolution on Delivery of Ocean Heat to the Antarctic Floating Ice Shelves by Dinniman, Michael S., Klinck, John M., Bai, Le-Sheng, Bromwich, David H., Hines, Keith M., Holland, David M.

    Published in Journal of climate (01-08-2015)
    “…Oceanic melting at the base of the floating Antarctic ice shelves is now thought to be a more significant cause of mass loss for the Antarctic ice sheet than…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  5. 5

    Development and Testing of Polar WRF. Part III: Arctic Land by Hines, Keith M., Bromwich, David H., Bai, Le-Sheng, Barlage, Michael, Slater, Andrew G.

    Published in Journal of climate (01-01-2011)
    “…A version of the state-of-the-art Weather Research and Forecasting model (WRF) has been developed for use in polar climates. The model known as ‘‘Polar WRF’’…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  6. 6

    Northern Hemisphere Extratropical Turbulent Heat Fluxes in ASRv2 and Global Reanalyses by Justino, Flavio, Wilson, Aaron B., Bromwich, David H., Avila, Alvaro, Bai, Le-Sheng, Wang, Sheng-Hung

    Published in Journal of climate (01-04-2019)
    “…Large-scale objectively analyzed gridded products and satellite estimates of sensible (H) and latent (LE) heat fluxes over the extratropical Northern…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  7. 7

    Greenland Ice Sheet Surface Mass Balance Variability (1988–2004) from Calibrated Polar MM5 Output by Box, Jason E., Bromwich, David H., Veenhuis, Bruce A., Bai, Le-Sheng, Stroeve, Julienne C., Rogers, Jeffrey C., Steffen, Konrad, Haran, T., Wang, Sheng-Hung

    Published in Journal of climate (15-06-2006)
    “…Regional climate model runs using the fifth-generation Pennsylvania State University–National Center for Atmospheric Research Mesocale Model modified for use…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  8. 8
  9. 9

    Greenland ice sheet surface mass balance 1991–2000: Application of Polar MM5 mesoscale model and in situ data by Box, Jason E., Bromwich, David H., Bai, Le-Sheng

    “…The Polar Pennsylvania State University–National Center for Atmospheric Research Fifth‐Generation Mesoscale Model (Polar MM5) regional climate model was run…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  10. 10

    Modeled precipitation variability over the Greenland Ice Sheet by Bromwich, David H., Chen, Qui‐Shi, Bai, LeSheng, Cassano, Elizabeth N., Li, Yufang

    “…On the basis of the evaluation of recent Greenland precipitation studies, some of the deficiencies in the modeled precipitation are probably related to the…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  11. 11

    The Effect of Atmospheric Forcing Resolution on Delivery of Ocean Heat to the Antarctic Floating Ice Shelves super(,+) by Dinniman, Michael S, Klinck, John M, Bai, Le-Sheng, Bromwich, David H, Hines, Keith M, Holland, David M

    Published in Journal of climate (01-08-2015)
    “…Oceanic melting at the base of the floating Antarctic ice shelves is now thought to be a more significant cause of mass loss for the Antarctic ice sheet than…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  12. 12
  13. 13