36 min

Climate Modeling: Compelling Research Questions and Human Concerns Science in Parallel

    • Science

Season 4 of Science in Parallel centers around creativity and computing, starting with an interview about climate modeling.
At this nexus of physics, earth science, mathematics and computing, researchers are also racing against the clock to accurately predict how global climate is shifting before the changes happen. Pulling all the scientific pieces together and communicating those results so that others can use them are significant creative challenges—ones that both Tapio Schneider and Emily de Jong of California Institute of Technology have embraced.
In our conversation, Tapio and Emily describe how both the science and societal impact of climate modeling motivate them, how outdoor activities and music shape their perspectives, and how they view creativity both inside and outside the lab. Later in the episode, Tapio shares his experience as a science advisor to the ClimateMusic Project—an artists’ collaboration that’s producing music and video pieces that explore climate change and solutions to the climate crisis.
You’ll meet:
Tapio Schneider is a professor of environmental science and engineering at Caltech. He’s a member of the Climate Modeling Alliance (CLiMA) a team of scientists, engineers and applied mathematicians from Caltech, MIT and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory working on a new earth system model that uses computatational and data-science tools to harness Earth observations and make more accurate climate predictions. He spoke about that research at the 2023 Annual Program Review of the Department of Energy Computational Science Graduate Fellowship (DOE CSGF) program in July.
Emily de Jong is a Ph.D. student in mechanical engineering at Caltech working in Tapio’s research group. She is a DOE CSGF recipient, who completed her undergraduate degree at Princeton University in 2019.

Season 4 of Science in Parallel centers around creativity and computing, starting with an interview about climate modeling.
At this nexus of physics, earth science, mathematics and computing, researchers are also racing against the clock to accurately predict how global climate is shifting before the changes happen. Pulling all the scientific pieces together and communicating those results so that others can use them are significant creative challenges—ones that both Tapio Schneider and Emily de Jong of California Institute of Technology have embraced.
In our conversation, Tapio and Emily describe how both the science and societal impact of climate modeling motivate them, how outdoor activities and music shape their perspectives, and how they view creativity both inside and outside the lab. Later in the episode, Tapio shares his experience as a science advisor to the ClimateMusic Project—an artists’ collaboration that’s producing music and video pieces that explore climate change and solutions to the climate crisis.
You’ll meet:
Tapio Schneider is a professor of environmental science and engineering at Caltech. He’s a member of the Climate Modeling Alliance (CLiMA) a team of scientists, engineers and applied mathematicians from Caltech, MIT and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory working on a new earth system model that uses computatational and data-science tools to harness Earth observations and make more accurate climate predictions. He spoke about that research at the 2023 Annual Program Review of the Department of Energy Computational Science Graduate Fellowship (DOE CSGF) program in July.
Emily de Jong is a Ph.D. student in mechanical engineering at Caltech working in Tapio’s research group. She is a DOE CSGF recipient, who completed her undergraduate degree at Princeton University in 2019.

36 min

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