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Neven S. Fučkar
Researcher at Barcelona Supercomputing Center
Publications - 25
Citations - 2313
Neven S. Fučkar is an academic researcher from Barcelona Supercomputing Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Arctic ice pack & Sea ice. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 25 publications receiving 1717 citations. Previous affiliations of Neven S. Fučkar include Environmental Change Institute & Princeton University.
Papers
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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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The Synchrosqueezing algorithm for time-varying spectral analysis
TL;DR: It is shown that Synchrosqueezing is robust to bounded perturbations of the signal and to Gaussian white noise, which justifies its applicability to noisy or nonuniformly sampled data that is ubiquitous in engineering and the natural sciences.
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Contribution of ocean overturning circulation to tropical rainfall peak in the Northern Hemisphere
Dargan M. W. Frierson,Yen-Ting Hwang,Neven S. Fučkar,Richard Seager,Sarah M. Kang,Aaron Donohoe,Elizabeth A. Maroon,Xiaojuan Liu,David S. Battisti +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the meridional overturning circulation contributes significantly to the hemispheric asymmetry in tropical rainfall by transporting heat from the Southern Hemisphere to the Northern Hemisphere, and thereby pushing the tropical rain band north.
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A review on Arctic sea‐ice predictability and prediction on seasonal to decadal time‐scales
Virginie Guemas,Edward Blanchard-Wrigglesworth,Matthieu Chevallier,Jonathan J. Day,Michel Déqué,Francisco J. Doblas-Reyes,Neven S. Fučkar,Agathe Germe,Ed Hawkins,Sarah Keeley,Torben Koenigk,David Salas y Mélia,Steffen Tietsche +12 more
TL;DR: A review of the potential sources of Arctic sea-ice predictability on these time-scales is presented in this paper, where the inherent potential predictability limit with state-of-the-art models is estimated, together with their performance.
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Southern hemisphere origins of the 1976 climate shift
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify an abrupt climate shift in 1976 with surface temperatures changing from cooler than normal to warmer than normal in the span of about 1 year and show that this climate shift originates with subsurface temperature anomalies in the south tropical Pacific Ocean which propagate first to the western boundary, then northward to the equator, and finally eastward along the equatorial to 140° W where they rise to the surface.