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I-I Lin

Researcher at National Taiwan University

Publications -  99
Citations -  5860

I-I Lin is an academic researcher from National Taiwan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sea surface temperature & Tropical cyclone. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 98 publications receiving 4874 citations. Previous affiliations of I-I Lin include Scott Polar Research Institute & Academia Sinica.

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New evidence for enhanced ocean primary production triggered by tropical cyclone

TL;DR: In this article, the long-neglected contribution of tropical cyclones to ocean primary production may be as much as 20-30% with an average of 14 cyclones passing over the South China Sea.
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Upper-Ocean Thermal Structure and the Western North Pacific Category 5 Typhoons. Part I: Ocean Features and the Category 5 Typhoons’ Intensification

TL;DR: Based on 13 years of satellite altimetry data, in situ and climatological upper-ocean thermal structure data, best-track typhoon data of the U.S. Joint Typhoon Warning Center, together with an ocean mixed layer model, 30 western North Pacific category 5 typhoons that occurred during the typhoon season from 1993 to 2005 are systematically examined in this paper.
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The Interaction of Supertyphoon Maemi (2003) with a Warm Ocean Eddy

TL;DR: In this article, an investigation of the interaction between Supertyphoon Maemi, the most intense tropical cyclone in 2003, and a warm ocean eddy in the western North Pacific was presented.
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Sources, solubility, and dry deposition of aerosol trace elements over the East China Sea

TL;DR: In this paper, a total of 47 marine aerosols collected from the East China Sea between the spring of 2005 and 2007 were analyzed for both the water-soluble and the total concentrations of 25 trace elements and phosphorus and the watersoluble major ions, organic carbon, as well as silicon.
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Warm ocean anomaly, air sea fluxes, and the rapid intensification of tropical cyclone Nargis (2008)

TL;DR: In this article, it was observed that the subsurface ocean is evidently warmer than climatology, as characterized by the depth of the 26°C isotherm of 73-101 m and the tropical cyclone heat potential of 77-105 kj cm−2.