J
Joseph Hamman
Researcher at National Center for Atmospheric Research
Publications - 36
Citations - 1194
Joseph Hamman is an academic researcher from National Center for Atmospheric Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Environmental science & Climate change. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 25 publications receiving 582 citations. Previous affiliations of Joseph Hamman include University of Washington.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
xarray: N-D labeled arrays and datasets in Python
Stephan Hoyer,Joseph Hamman +1 more
TL;DR: This approach combines an application programing interface (API) inspired by pandas with the Common Data Model for self-described scientific data to provide a toolkit and data structures for N-dimensional labeled arrays.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Variable Infiltration Capacity model version 5 (VIC-5): infrastructure improvements for new applications and reproducibility
TL;DR: The development and release of VIC-5 represents a significant step forward for the VIC user community in terms of support for existing and new model applications, reproducibility, and scientific robustness.
Journal ArticleDOI
How Do Modeling Decisions Affect the Spread Among Hydrologic Climate Change Projections? Exploring a Large Ensemble of Simulations Across a Diversity of Hydroclimates
O. Chegwidden,Bart Nijssen,David E. Rupp,Jeffrey R. Arnold,Martyn P. Clark,Martyn P. Clark,Joseph Hamman,Shih-Chieh Kao,Yixin Mao,Naoki Mizukami,Philip W. Mote,Ming Pan,Erik Pytlak,Mu Xiao +13 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the ways in which four different steps in the modeling chain influence the spread in projected changes of different aspects of hydrology, and they show that the ways we represent the future atmosphere and land surface can have strong effects on our final predictions.
Posted ContentDOI
Systematic over-crediting in California's forest carbon offsets program
Grayson Badgley,Jeremy Freeman,Joseph Hamman,Barbara Haya,Anna T. Trugman,William R. L. Anderegg,Danny Cullenward +6 more
TL;DR: The design of California’s prominent forest carbon offsets program is evaluated and it is demonstrated that its climate-equivalence claims fall far short on the basis of directly observable evidence.
Journal ArticleDOI
Systematic over-crediting in California's forest carbon offsets program.
Grayson Badgley,Jeremy Freeman,Joseph Hamman,Barbara Haya,Anna T. Trugman,William R. L. Anderegg,Danny Cullenward +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluate the design of California's prominent forest carbon offsets program and demonstrate that its climate-equivalence claims fall far short on the basis of directly observable evidence.