Brian E.J. Rose
PhD Climate Physics and Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2010
MSc Atmospheric Science, McGill University, 2002
BSc Atmospheric Science, McGill University, 1999
About
Introduction
My research is oriented toward fundamental questions about the climate system at the global scale, such as: What factors control the global mean temperature and its equator-to-pole gradient? Why has Earth's climate been more variable during some periods of the deep geological past than others? Is the climate unique, or does the Earth system possess multiple equilibria? By studying the fundamental underlying "rules" governing the climate system, we build a deeper understanding of the past and future evolution of climate on Earth, and other planets as well.
I have broad training in both atmospheric science and oceanography, and I am particularly interested in coupled atmosphere-ocean climate dynamics over long time scales. I also have a special interest in polar climate and ocean-sea ice interaction.
My work typically takes a "building blocks" approach, trying to build an understanding of the complex climate system through judicious simplification. I explore ideas using hierarchies of idealized atmosphere-ocean models, ranging from simple mathematical descriptions to complex coupled numerical calculations.
Research Interests
Global-scale climate dynamics, heat transport in the atmosphere and ocean and their interaction, climate sensitivity and feedbacks, the role of sea ice in the global climate system, paleoclimate and idealized climate modeling.
Personal Page: https://www.atmos.albany.edu/facstaff/brose/