Post-doc research
Starting December 2007, I am working as a post-doc research associate at the Department of Geophysics at the University of Chile. I am working with on a number of projects, using the WRF model to investigate rainfall patters in the Andes on multiple timescales. I am collaborating with Dr. Rene Garreaud and other members of the department in these projects.
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Introducing Dr. Barrett
I successfully defended my dissertation at the University
of
Oklahoma! Entitled "Characteristics of tropical cyclones in the North Atlantic and East Pacific", I examined patterns of TC activity in relationship with leading modes of climate oscillation, from the intraseasonal to multidecadal. My parents came out to celebrate the graduation ceremony at OU.
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Visiting scientist and scholar
From September 2006 to February 2007, I am visiting the Institute for Geophysics, Astrophysics,
and Meteorology at the University of Graz. I teach one lecture
course, Severe and Unusual Weather and Climate Events, and I also teach a seminar course on
the same topic. Additionally, I am collaborating with Dr. Andreas Gobiet at the Wegener Center for
Climate and Global Change on a climate project studying the Genoa cyclone.
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CCME 2006: 1st International Conference
Click here to read my manuscript presented
at the 1st International Conference on Climate
Change and the Middle East, Istanbul Technical University, Turkey
November 20-23, 2006.
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86th Annual Meeting: Atlanta Jan 2006
Click here to read the abstract
submitted for my presentation in the 22nd International Conference on Interactive Information Processing Systems for Meteorology, Oceanography, and
Hydrology.
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Fulbright Barbados
In August 2005, I embarked on a ten-month research tenure as a Fulbright Fellow. I visited the Caribbean Institute for
Meteorology and Hydrology in Husbands, St. James, Barbados, under the mentorship of Drs. Colin Depradine and Horace Burton. During my time on
Barbados, I simulated the passage of Hurricane Ivan (2004) through the southern Windward islands using the MM5 model. Visit my personal blog
for highlights of my time in Barbados.
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PR set at the OKC Marathon!
I ran a personal best 3:38:56 at the 5th Annual OKC Memorial Marathon. I am floored at such a fast time, especially considering (1) it was my fourth marathon in 2.5 yrs, (2) it was 50 mins faster than my first marathon in Chicago, and (3) it was 17 mins faster than my downhill Top of Utah performance!
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85th Annual Meeting: San Diego Jan 2005
Click here to read the abstract submitted 30 July 2004, and click here to read the extended abstract.
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Master of Science
degree in hand! I finished my degree requirements and received
my MS in meteorology from the University of Oklahoma on Saturday May 8, 2004. My parents came
to visit and hiked in the Wichita mountains. I passed the Ph.D. qualifying
exam in September 2004 and am currently beginning research for my dissertation.
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Top of Utah Marathon
is complete! I ran a personal best 3:56:06 in the beautiful, downhill course. Here are some picture updates - both from the race and the weekend trip with Andy to northern Utah. Favorite quote: "Let's go to Idaho to have lunch!"
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Destination: Pikes Peak Summit!
Kevin Warren, Andy Taylor, and I departed Norman on Friday, 3 Sept 2004 on our way to Colorado Springs, CO. We camped at Black Mesa SP Fri. night, and arrived at the home of my UNC friend, Mike Johnson, Sat. afternoon. We departed for the 8-hr climb early Sun, started our hike at 6 a.m., and ascended the summit about 1:45 p.m. Click here for all of our pictures.
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Hurricane Season 2004
winds down after an incredibly active August and September. Four hurricanes made landfall in the U.S. (Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne) while Hurricane Alex and Tropical Storm Gaston brushed the N.C. coast. This was also a record year for tropical cyclone-spawned tornadoes, with indications of several hundred touchdowns. Follow the conclusion of the 2004 hurricane season with forecasters at the National Hurricane Center.
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ROTATE-2004 ends
along with the joint OU/UMass field campaign. While severe activity was minimal in Oklahoma and Texas,
both projects collected data on several days in the central plains.
· May 12, 2004 (KS)
· May 22, 2004 (NE)
· May 29, 2004 (OK)
· June 11, 2004 (IA)
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Record tornado
droughts end in both Kansas and Oklahoma! After frustrating both scientists and storm chasers, Oklahoma's drought ended on March 4 (292 consecutive days without a tornado) and Kansas's drought ended March 27 (235 days without a tornado).
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2003 Chicago Marathon
I ran and finished the 2003 Chicago Marathon in 4:27:03, which is ~3 mins faster than last year. However, because of deployment with the DOWs to intercept Isabel (with the Center for Severe Weather Research research project), I didn't train as well as I should have. I cramped in both legs and ended up walking the final 5 miles. No regrets though; it was only motivation to run a 1:47:11 half-marathon in Oklahoma City on 25 Apr 2004!
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Hurricane Isabel impacts eastern U.S.
on Thursday 18 September 2003. Click here for the
storm summary from the National Weather Service office in Morehead City,
NC. Check out the post storm reports from NWS-Wakefield
(VA) and NWS-Raleigh
(NC). Also view
images from the SMART-R mobile doppler radar deployments in down-east NC during Isabel.
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