Graham Feingold
|
Cloud & Aerosol Processes NOAA | ![]() |
| Mailing address: NOAA ESRL Chemical Sciences Division 325 Broadway, R/CSD2 Boulder, CO 80305 USA | |
| Phone: (303) 497-3098 Fax: (303) 497-5340 Email: Graham.Feingold@noaa.gov |
Graham Feingold is a research scientist at NOAA's Earth System Research Laboratory in Boulder, Colorado. His interests lie in aerosol-cloud-precipitation interactions and implications for climate change. His focus is on process level studies using high resolution models and observations (aircraft and surface remote sensing) at the cloud scale (10s of meters to 10s of kms). He received his PhD in Geophysics and Planetary Sciences (summa cum laude) from the Tel Aviv University in 1989. His research interests include lidar and radar remote sensing of clouds and aerosol, modeling and remote sensing of aerosol-cloud interactions ("indirect effects"), "cloud burning" or the "semi-direct effect," and cloud processing of aerosol through multiphase chemistry. He has authored or co-authored more than 85 peer-reviewed articles on these subjects. Feingold is an associate editor of the online journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (ACP), a contributor to the Climate Change Science Program, chapter author of the International Aerosol-Precipitation Scientific Assessment Project, and a NOAA representative to EarthCare. He is a member of the IGAC and the Aerosol-Cloud-Precipitation-Climate (ACPC) steering committees.
Education
1989: Ph.D, Geophysics (summa cum laude),
Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences, Tel Aviv University.
1985: MSc, Geophysics (summa cum laude),
Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences, Tel Aviv University.
1982: B.Sc, Geophysics and Atmospheric Sciences,
Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences, Tel Aviv University.
Research
Aerosol-Cloud Interactions, Cloud Microphysics, Aerosol Direct and Indirect Effects, Surface remote sensing of aerosol-cloud interactions, Airborne measurements of Aerosol and Cloud properties.
Current Topics
Model simulations of Pockets of Open Cells (POCs)
Aerosol Effects on Precipitation
Small cumulus clouds: their importance for climate and their response to aerosol perturbations
last modified: January 14, 2010

