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Simon Wild

Researcher at Barcelona Supercomputing Center

Publications -  16
Citations -  752

Simon Wild is an academic researcher from Barcelona Supercomputing Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Storm & Western Hemisphere Warm Pool. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 16 publications receiving 528 citations. Previous affiliations of Simon Wild include University of Birmingham & Free University of Berlin.

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Consistency of Temperature and Precipitation Extremes across Various Global Gridded In Situ and Reanalysis Datasets

TL;DR: In this article, the consistency of temperature and precipitation extremes between these datasets was assessed by comparing multiple global gridded datasets of in situ observations and reanalyses to make inferences on the robustness of the obtained results.
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North Atlantic climate far more predictable than models imply

TL;DR: In this article, a two-stage post-processing technique was used to adjust the variance of the ensemble-mean North Atlantic Oscillation forecast to match the observed variance of a predictable signal.
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Reanalysis suggests long‐term upward trends in European storminess since 1871

TL;DR: In this article, the 20th century reanalysis (20CR) dataset was used to investigate regional trends of wind storm occurrence in Europe using the surface observations only, which produces storm events in good agreement with the traditional ERA40 and NCEP reanalyses.
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Future changes in European winter storm losses and extreme wind speeds inferred from GCM and RCM multi-model simulations

TL;DR: In this article, a storm loss model was applied to the GCM and RCM simulated wind speeds, resulting in realistic mean loss amounts calculated from 20th century climate simulations, although the inter-annual variability of losses is generally underestimated.
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Different long-term trends of extra-tropical cyclones and windstorms in ERA-20C and NOAA-20CR reanalyses

TL;DR: In this paper, the representation of extra-tropical cyclones and windstorms over the Northern and Southern Hemisphere during the respective 6-month winter seasons was evaluated regarding the representation.