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Shih-Yu Wang

Researcher at Utah State University

Publications -  213
Citations -  7560

Shih-Yu Wang is an academic researcher from Utah State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Precipitation & Monsoon. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 203 publications receiving 5898 citations. Previous affiliations of Shih-Yu Wang include National Central University & Iowa State University.

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Observational and Synoptic Analyses of the Winter Precipitation Regime Change over Utah

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors further analyzed the winter precipitation regime in the state of Utah and found that the proportion of winter precipitation falling as snow has decreased by 9% during the last half century, a combined result from a significant increase in rainfall and a minor decrease in snow.
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Measuring East Asian summer monsoon rainfall contributions by different weather systems over Taiwan

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined quantitative measurements of climatological rainfall contributed by these weather systems that will help to validate simulations of the EASM climate system and facilitate water management by government agencies.
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Anthropogenic footprint of climate change in the June 2013 northern India flood

TL;DR: In this paper, meteorological and climatic conditions leading up to this rainfall event in 2013 and similar cases were analyzed for the period of 1979-2012, and attribution analysis was performed to identify the natural and anthropogenic influences on the climate anomalies using the historical single-forcing experiments in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5.
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Consecutive Extreme Flooding and Heat Wave in Japan: Are They Becoming a Norm?

TL;DR: In 2018, Japan experienced two contrasting, yet consecutive, extreme events: a devastating flood in early July followed by unprecedented heat waves a week later as discussed by the authors, highlighting several compound factors: a strengthened subtropical anticyclone, a deepened synoptic trough, and Typhoon Prapiroon that collectively enhanced the Baiu rainband, fostering heavy precipitation.
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A planetary-scale land - sea breeze circulation in East Asia and the western North Pacific

TL;DR: A detailed examination of the global reanalysis data suggests that this local landsea breeze circulation apparently couples with the global-scale diurnal atmospheric pressure tide to produce a planetary-scale land-sea breeze with a spatial scale of ∼1000 km over the western North Pacific.