M
Mark Hemer
Researcher at Hobart Corporation
Publications - 124
Citations - 5855
Mark Hemer is an academic researcher from Hobart Corporation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Wind wave & Hindcast. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 112 publications receiving 4553 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark Hemer include University of Tasmania & Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation.
Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
Changes in climate extremes and their impacts on the natural physical environment.
Sonia I. Seneviratne,Neville Nicholls,David R. Easterling,Clare Goodess,Shinjiro Kanae,James P. Kossin,Yali Luo,José A. Marengo,Kathleen Mc Innes,Mohammad Rahimi,Markus Reichstein,Asgeir Sorteberg,Carolina Vera,Xuebin Zhang,Matilde Rusticucci,Vladimir Semenov,Lisa V. Alexander,Simon Allen,Gerardo Benito,Tereza Cavazos,John J. Clague,Declan Conway,Paul M. Della-Marta,Markus Gerber,Sunling Gong,Bhupendra Nath Goswami,Mark Hemer,Christian Huggel,Bart van den Hurk,Viatcheslav Kharin,A. Kitoh,Albert Klein Tank,Guilong Li,Simon J. Mason,William Mc Guire,Geert Jan van Oldenborgh,Boris Orlowsky,Sharon Smith,Wassila M. Thiaw,Adonis F. Velegrakis,Pascal Yiou,Tingjun Zhang,Tianjun Zhou,Francis W. Zwiers +43 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors address changes in weather and climate events relevant to extreme impacts and disasters, such as hurricanes, floods, droughts, hurricanes, and floods, which can lead to extreme conditions or impacts.
Journal ArticleDOI
Projected changes in wave climate from a multi-model ensemble
TL;DR: In this paper, the first community-derived multi-model ensemble of wind-wave climate projections show agreement over extended regions of the global ocean and large uncertainty in available wave-climate projections is found to be due to downscaling methods.
Journal ArticleDOI
Variability and trends in the directional wave climate of the Southern Hemisphere
TL;DR: The effect of interannual climate variability and change on the historic, directional wave climate of the Southern Hemisphere is presented in this article, where the dominant modes of variability are identified using an empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI
Robustness and uncertainties in global multivariate wind-wave climate projections
Joao Morim,Joao Morim,Joao Morim,Mark Hemer,Xiaolan L. Wang,Nick Cartwright,Claire Trenham,Alvaro Semedo,Ian R. Young,Lucy Bricheno,Paula Camus,Mercè Casas-Prat,Li H. Erikson,Lorenzo Mentaschi,Nobuhito Mori,Tomoya Shimura,Ben Timmermans,Ole Johan Aarnes,Øyvind Breivik,Øyvind Breivik,Arno Behrens,Mikhail Dobrynin,Melisa Menendez,Joanna Staneva,Michael Wehner,Judith Wolf,Bahareh Kamranzad,Adrean Webb,Justin E. Stopa,Fernando Pinheiro Andutta +29 more
TL;DR: In this article, the first coherent, community-driven, multi-method ensemble of global wave climate projections is assessed, showing widespread ocean regions with robust changes in annual mean significant wave height and mean wave period of 5-15% and shifts in mean wave direction of 5 −15°, under a high-emission scenario.
Journal ArticleDOI
Wind Waves in the Coupled Climate System
TL;DR: A qualitative overview of the main relevant surface gravity wave-driven processes at the air-sea interface that may have an important role in the coupled climate system in general and the atmospheric and oceanic boundary layers in particular is provided in this article.