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Enrico Scoccimarro
Researcher at Central Maine Community College
Publications - 133
Citations - 5049
Enrico Scoccimarro is an academic researcher from Central Maine Community College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate model & Tropical cyclone. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 110 publications receiving 3752 citations. Previous affiliations of Enrico Scoccimarro include National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology & SERC Reliability Corporation.
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Journal ArticleDOI
High Resolution Model Intercomparison Project (HighResMIP v1.0) for CMIP6
Reindert J. Haarsma,Malcolm J. Roberts,Pier Luigi Vidale,Catherine A. Senior,Alessio Bellucci,Qing Bao,Ping Chang,Susanna Corti,Neven S. Fučkar,Virginie Guemas,Jost von Hardenberg,Wilco Hazeleger,Wilco Hazeleger,Chihiro Kodama,Torben Koenigk,L. Ruby Leung,Jian Lu,Jing-Jia Luo,Jiafu Mao,Matthew S. Mizielinski,Ryo Mizuta,Paulo Nobre,Masaki Satoh,Enrico Scoccimarro,Tido Semmler,Justin Small,Jin-Song von Storch +26 more
TL;DR: The High-ResMIP (High-resolution Model Intercomparison Project) as mentioned in this paper is a multi-model approach to the systematic investigation of the impact of horizontal resolution on the simulated mean climate and its variability.
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Effects of Tropical Cyclones on Ocean Heat Transport in a High-Resolution Coupled General Circulation Model
Enrico Scoccimarro,Silvio Gualdi,Alessio Bellucci,Antonella Sanna,Pier Giuseppe Fogli,Elisa Manzini,Marcello Vichi,Paolo Oddo,Antonio Navarra +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the interplay between tropical cyclones (TCs) and the Northern Hemispheric ocean heat transport (OHT) is investigated, and results from a numerical simulation of the twentieth-century and twenty-first-century climates, following the 20C3M and A1B scenario protocols, respectively, have been analyzed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Changes in Tropical Cyclone Activity due to Global Warming: Results from a High-Resolution Coupled General Circulation Model
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the possible changes that greenhouse global warming might generate in the characteristics of tropical cyclones (TCs) using scenario climate simulations carried out with a fully coupled high-resolution global general circulation model.
Journal ArticleDOI
Hurricanes and climate: The U.S. Clivar working group on hurricanes
Kevin Walsh,Suzana J. Camargo,Gabriel A. Vecchi,Anne Sophie Daloz,James B. Elsner,Kerry Emanuel,Michael Horn,Young-Kwon Lim,Malcolm J. Roberts,Christina M. Patricola,Enrico Scoccimarro,Adam H. Sobel,Sarah Strazzo,Gabriele Villarini,Michael Wehner,Ming Zhao,James P. Kossin,Timothy E. LaRow,Kazuyoshi Oouchi,Siegfried D. Schubert,Hui Wang,Julio T. Bacmeister,Ping Chang,Fabrice Chauvin,Christiane Jablonowski,Arun Kumar,Hiroyuki Murakami,Tomoaki Ose,Kevin A. Reed,Ramalingam Saravanan,Yohei Yamada,Colin M. Zarzycki,Pier Luigi Vidale,Jeffrey A. Jonas,Naomi Henderson +34 more
TL;DR: The relationship between tropical cyclone formation rates and climate variables such as mid-tropospheric vertical velocity has been investigated in this article, with decreased climatological vertical velocities leading to decreased tropical cyclones formation.