Dr Doug McNeall (@dougmcneall) 's Twitter Profile
Dr Doug McNeall

@dougmcneall

Climate scientist and statistician, Met Office Hadley Centre and University of Exeter Global Systems Institute. ML in climate science. Married to @lynsmccoll.

ID: 114573522

linkhttp://dougmcneall.com calendar_today15-02-2010 21:49:16

29,29K Tweet

16,16K Followers

1,1K Following

Zack Labe (@zlabe) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Both poles are now observing unusually low sea ice conditions, and therefore global sea ice extent is yet again near record low levels for the current date... More sea ice graphics available at zacklabe.com/global-sea-ice…

Both poles are now observing unusually low sea ice conditions, and therefore global sea ice extent is yet again near record low levels for the current date... 

More sea ice graphics available at zacklabe.com/global-sea-ice…
Climate Informatics (@climformatics) 's Twitter Profile Photo

📽️ Recordings from #ClimateInformatics 2024 are live on the The Alan Turing Institute YouTube! 🌎 Revisit the keynotes, debates, talks, and lightning talks from this year's conference. 👉 Playlist: youtube.com/playlist?list=… 👉 Agenda to cross-reference: eventsforce.net/turingevents/f…

Dr Simon Lee (@simonleewx) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Two years ago today. A shockingly extreme event which fundamentally reshaped how I think and feel about climate change and extremes.

Dr Doug McNeall (@dougmcneall) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Good concept, but does it include passenger weight? I suspect that would narrow the gap a bit. Current figures feel unlikely.

Dr Doug McNeall (@dougmcneall) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Quite excited, looks like a heat pump might be achievable for my single-skin Victorian semi. Anybody got any tips/things to look out for/disasters?

Stephan Hoyer (@shoyer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I'm incredibly proud to share NeuralGCM, our new AI and physics based approach to weather and climate modeling with state-of-the-art accuracy, published today in nature: nature.com/articles/s4158…

Ed Hawkins (@ed_hawkins) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Increasing temperatures cause the humidity of the air to also increase. As the air contains more water, when it rains, it rains more. This 'causal chain' is clearly observed in changes to UK climate, leading to more intense rainfall, increasing the risk of local flooding.

Increasing temperatures cause the humidity of the air to also increase. As the air contains more water, when it rains, it rains more.

This 'causal chain' is clearly observed in changes to UK climate, leading to more intense rainfall, increasing the risk of local flooding.