All Stories

  1. The anti-cyclonic gyre around the Qingdao cold water mass in the China marginal sea
  2. Internal and forced ocean variability in the Mediterranean Sea
  3. Supplementary material to "Internal and forced ocean variability in the Mediterranean Sea"
  4. The BALTEX/Baltic Earth program: Excursions and returns
  5. The Stochastic Climate Model helps reveal the role of memory in internal variability in the Bohai and Yellow Sea
  6. Extreme separations of bottle posts in the southern Baltic Sea – tentative interpretation of an experiment-of-opportunity
  7. The role of history in and for climate science – Social context and oral accounts
  8. Brief communication: Climate science as a social process – history, climatic determinism, Mertonian norms and post-normality
  9. Climate Dynamics: The Dichotomy of Stochastic Concepts and Deterministic Modeling
  10. Determining Interannual Variability of the Annual Cycle
  11. Brief Communication: Climate science as a social process – history, climatic determinism, CUDOS und post-normality
  12. The Characteristics and Significance of Hydrodynamical Internal Variability in Modelling Dynamics in Marginal Seas
  13. Chinese lockdown as aerosol reduction experiment
  14. Revisiting Hansen & Sutera’s suggestion of bimodality in the Northern Hemisphere midlatitude circulation
  15. Perceptions among students and young scholars of drivers endangering the Baltic Sea.
  16. 2020-Lockdown in China: Ein Experiment zur klimatischen Wirkung der Reduktion der atmosphärischen Aerosollast
  17. Szenarien und Projektionen: Bestehen sie den Test der Zeit? Der Fall der Sturmfluten in Cuxhaven
  18. Limits of reproducibility and hydrodynamic noise in atmospheric regional modelling
  19. Die Klimaforschung in der Postnormalität: zum Verhältnis von Wissenschaft und Gesellschaft
  20. German Bight Storminess over the Last Century
  21. Atmospherically Forced Regional Ocean Simulations of the South China Sea: Scale Dependency of the Signal-to-Noise Ratio
  22. Testing the validity of regional detail in global analyses of sea surface temperature – the case of Chinese coastal waters
  23. Attitudes of young scholars in Qingdao and Hamburg about climate change and climate policy – The role of culture for the explanation of differences
  24. Temporal and spatial statistics of travelling eddy variability in the South China Sea
  25. The History of Ideas of Downscaling—From Synoptic Dynamics and Spatial Interpolation
  26. Testing the validity of regional detail in global analyses of Sea surface temperature – the case of Chinese coastal waters
  27. The Concept of Large‐Scale Conditioning of Climate Model Simulations of Atmospheric Coastal Dynamics: Current State and Perspectives
  28. State and Perspectives of the Concept of Large‐Scale Conditioning of Regional Climate Modelling
  29. Simultaneous Regional Detection of Land-Use Changes and Elevated GHG Levels: The Case of Spring Precipitation in Tropical South America
  30. Low-Level Jets Over the Bohai Sea and Yellow Sea: Climatology, Variability, and the Relationship With Regional Atmospheric Circulations
  31. Construction of a surface air temperature series for Qingdao in China for the period 1899 to 2014
  32. Regional decision-makers as potential users of Extreme Weather Event Attribution - Case studies from the German Baltic Sea coast and the Greater Paris area
  33. Observed warming over northern South America has an anthropogenic origin
  34. Construction of surface air temperature series of Qingdao in China for the period 1899 to 2014
  35. Does Spectral Nudging Have an Effect on Dynamical Downscaling Applied in Small Regional Model Domains?
  36. Developing criteria for a stakeholder-centred evaluation of climate services: the case of extreme event attribution for storm surges at the German Baltic Sea
  37. Regional reanalysis without local data: Exploiting the downscaling paradigm
  38. Toward downscaling oceanic hydrodynamics – suitability of a high-resolution OGCM for describing regional ocean variability in the South China Sea
  39. Optimal Spectral Nudging for Global Dynamic Downscaling
  40. Detectable Anthropogenic Shift toward Heavy Precipitation over Eastern China
  41. Models, manifestation and attribution of climate change
  42. Introduction
  43. The Challenge of Baltic Sea Level Change
  44. Signal Stations: Newly Digitized Historical Climate Data of the German Bight and the Southern Baltic Sea Coast
  45. An attempt to deconstruct recent climate change in the Baltic Sea basin
  46. Changes of storm surges in the Bohai Sea derived from a numerical model simulation, 1961–2006
  47. High-resolution wind hindcast over the Bohai Sea and the Yellow Sea in East Asia: Evaluation and wind climatology analysis
  48. Testing Reanalyses in Constraining Dynamical Downscaling
  49. Focus on climate projections for adaptation strategies
  50. Reconsidering the Quality and Utility of Downscaling
  51. A study of quasi-millennial extratropical winter cyclone activity over the Southern Hemisphere
  52. Attribution of extreme weather and climate-related events
  53. Assessing changes in extreme sea levels along the coast of C hina
  54. Hurricane Gonzalo and its Extratropical Transition to a Strong European Storm
  55. Drivers of the 2013/14 winter floods in the UK
  56. Visiting artist researchers as therapists for climate scientists
  57. Making coastal research useful – cases from practice
  58. Introduction and Summary
  59. The Normative Orientations of Climate Scientists
  60. Mediterranean Tropical-Like Cyclones in Present and Future Climate
  61. Polar Low genesis over the North Pacific under different global warming scenarios
  62. Observations: Ocean Pages
  63. Storm Surges: Phenomena, Forecasting and Scenarios of Change
  64. A long-term climatology of medicanes
  65. Comment on “Trends and low frequency variability of extra-tropical cyclone activity in the ensemble of twentieth century reanalysis” by Xiaolan L. Wang, Y. Feng, G. P. Compo, V. R. Swail, F. W. Zwiers, R. J. Allan, and P. D. Sardeshmukh, Climate Dynami...
  66. Is there memory in precipitation?
  67. Trends and Variability of North Pacific Polar Lows
  68. Quasi-stationarity of centennial Northern Hemisphere midlatitude winter storm tracks
  69. Anthropogenic forcing is a plausible explanation for the observed surface specific humidity trends over the Mediterranean area
  70. The expectation of future precipitation change over the Mediterranean region is different from what we observe
  71. Between hype and decline: recent trends in public perception of climate change
  72. The Informational Value of Pressure-Based Single-Station Proxies for Storm Activity
  73. A comparison of two identification and tracking methods for polar lows
  74. Storminess in northern Italy and the Adriatic Sea reaching back to 1760
  75. Toward a Multi-Decadal Climatology of North Pacific Polar Lows Employing Dynamical Downscaling
  76. BALTEX—an interdisciplinary research network for the Baltic Sea region
  77. Regional Climate Models Add Value to Global Model Data: A Review and Selected Examples
  78. Evaluation of an Air Pressure–Based Proxy for Storm Activity
  79. Consistency of observed near surface temperature trends with climate change projections over the Mediterranean region
  80. Exploring high-end scenarios for local sea level rise to develop flood protection strategies for a low-lying delta—the Netherlands as an example
  81. Decreased frequency of North Atlantic polar lows associated with future climate warming
  82. Under the skin of climate change
  83. Climate models and modeling: an editorial essay
  84. Climate e-mails: man's mark is clear in thermometer record
  85. Climate research and policy advice: scientific and cultural constructions of knowledge
  86. On adaptation – a secondary concern?
  87. Regional Meteorological–Marine Reanalyses and Climate Change Projections
  88. Climate Protection
  89. Assessment of three temperature reconstruction methods in the virtual reality of a climate simulation
  90. Downscaling of GCM scenarios to assess precipitation changes in the little rainy season (March-June) in Cameroon
  91. Anthropogenic climate change shown by local wave conditions in the North Sea