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This page describes courses taught at UCLA by Prof. Alex
Hall. Here you can also find links to syllabi and course web sites.
AS 281 Special Topics in
Dynamic Meteorology: Climate Sensitivity
Lecture, 3 units. Fall Quarter 2001.
How much will the earth warm for a given increase in greenhouse gases?
What is the climate's sensitivity to other kinds of external forcings,
such as volcanic eruptions or changes in the distribution of sunshine due
to changes of the earth's orbit? These timely issues are the topic of this
course. We will examine the main mechanisms thought to control climate
sensitivity and the geographical distribution of climate response, including
temperature, lapse rate, water vapor, cloud, and ice/snow albedo feedbacks.
In addition, we will examine processes modulating the transient response
of the climate to an external forcing, such as the ocean circulation. Finally,
we will study how the hydrologic cycle, an element of climate of comparable
importance to temperature, might change in response to an external forcing.
Letter grading.
Tu/Th 10-11:30
syllabus
AS 6 Climate Change: from
Puzzles to Policy
link
to official course web site
Lecture, three units, discussion/laboratory, two units.
Winter Quarter 2002. Overview of the fundamentals of earth's climate,
including the greenhouse effect, water and chemical cycles, outstanding
features of the atmospheric and ocean circulation, and feedbacks between
different system components. Exciting and contentious scientific puzzles
of the climate system, including the causes of the ice ages, greenhouse
warming, and El Nino/La Nina. The importance of climate science and prediction
to society, with emphasis on science's role in identifying, quantifying,
and solving environmental problems such as the ozone hole and greenhouse
warming.
Tues/Thurs 9:30-10:45AM
syllabus
AS 244 Radiation and Climate
Lecture/Discussion, 4 units. Spring Quarter 2002.
This quarter, AS244 is being offered as a special research seminar on the role of the diurnal cycle in determining the mean state of the climate system. Letter grading.
Tu/Th 3-4:30PM
schedule
reading list
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