Carol Anne Clayson
Carol Anne Clayson is an American physical oceanographer. Her research studies the processes connecting the ocean to the atmosphere through both high-resolution remote sensing and computer models, including the transport of heat, fresh water, and water vapor through the ocean and atmosphere, and the effects of these processes on climate and weather. She is a part time senior scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Provided by Wikipedia
Showing 1 - 4 results of 4 for search 'Carol Anne Clayson', query time: 0.03s
Refine Results
-
1
Diurnal Surface Flux Variability Over Western Boundary Currents by Carol Anne Clayson, James B. Edson
Published 2019-08-01
Article -
2
FluxSat: Measuring the Ocean–Atmosphere Turbulent Exchange of Heat and Moisture from Space by Chelle L. Gentemann, Carol Anne Clayson, Shannon Brown, Tong Lee, Rhys Parfitt, J. Thomas Farrar, Mark Bourassa, Peter J. Minnett, Hyodae Seo, Sarah T. Gille, Victor Zlotnicki
Published 2020-06-01
Article -
3
Air-Sea Fluxes With a Focus on Heat and Momentum by Meghan F. Cronin, Chelle L. Gentemann, James Edson, Iwao Ueki, Mark Bourassa, Mark Bourassa, Shannon Brown, Carol Anne Clayson, Chris W. Fairall, J. Thomas Farrar, Sarah T. Gille, Sergey Gulev, Simon A. Josey, Seiji Kato, Masaki Katsumata, Elizabeth Kent, Marjolaine Krug, Peter J. Minnett, Rhys Parfitt, Rhys Parfitt, Rachel T. Pinker, Paul W. Stackhouse, Sebastiaan Swart, Sebastiaan Swart, Hiroyuki Tomita, Douglas Vandemark, A. Robert Weller, Kunio Yoneyama, Lisan Yu, Dongxiao Zhang
Published 2019-07-01
Article -
4
Physics of diurnal warm layers : turbulence, internal waves, and lateral mixing by Bogdanoff, Alec Setnor
Published 2017Other Authors: “…Thomas Farrar and Carol Anne Clayson.…”
Thesis