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Prof. Gabriel Ngar-cheung Lau

Professor Gabriel Ngar-cheung Lau is the lead scientist of the Climate Diagnostics Project at the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). He concurrently serves as a Lecturer with the rank of Professor at the Department of Geosciences and Program of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences at Princeton University. Professor Lau was born in Hong Kong and spent his youth there. He majored in physics at United College, the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), where he received the B.Sc. degree in 1974. He proceeded to pursue graduate studies at the University of Washington in Seattle, and received the Ph.D. degree in atmospheric sciences in 1978. He then went to Princeton and has been associated with the research and teaching programs at GFDL throughout the past 31 years. Professor Lau's principal research interests are concerned with the behaviour of atmospheric and oceanic phenomena in various geographical regions, with typical time scales ranging from hours to several years. These features include day-night differences, day-to-day weather disturbances in warm and cold seasons, persistent flow structures, monsoonal circulations, and changes in the air-sea coupled system associated with El Nino. His primary research tools include datasets based on in situ observations and remote-sensing platforms, as well as output from experiments and simulations with numerical models. He has authored or coauthored over 100 publications in various scientific journals, and has been designated as a Highly Cited Researcher by the ISI Web of Knowledge.

Professor Lau is a recipient of the Run Run Shaw Postgraduate Scholarship of CUHK (1974), Clarence Leroy Meisinger Award of the American Meteorological Society (AMS, 1990), Unusually Outstanding Performance Award of the U.S. Department of Commerce (1991), and Hong Kong Observatory (HKO) 120th Anniversary Distinguished Meteorologist Award (2003). He was elected as a Fellow of AMS (1991), and was editor of the AMS Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences (1996-1999). He was a contributing author of the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which was recognized by the Nobel Peace Prize (2007). He was an invited speaker at the Scientific Forum in celebration of the 70th anniversary of Southwestern Union University at Kunming, China (2008). Professor Lau has also served as the C.N. Yang Visiting Fellow at CUHK, Science Advisor to the HKO and the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Visiting Professor at Peking University, and external reviewer at National Taiwan University. He was a member of various scientific committees of AMS, NOAA and the World Meteorological Organization.

Rainstorms, Typhoons and Cold Surges in East Asia: Observation, Simulation and Impact of Climate Change

13 January 2010

  synopsis  |  video  




Prof. Mona Baker
Prof. Jere R. Behrman
Prof. Jenefer Blackwell
Prof. Raymond Boudon
Prof. Lex Brown
Prof. Louis Caplan
Sir Iain Chalmers
Prof. Jean-Lou Chameau
Prof. David Christiani
Sir Liam Donaldson
Prof. Jacquelynne S. Eccles
Prof. Richard P. Gabriel
Prof. Ludwig J. Gauckler
Prof. Ian Roger Gough
Prof. Claudio Grossman
Prof. Ulf Hannerz
Prof. Ewald M. Hennig
Prof. Michael L. Honig
Prof. Michael D. Johnson
Prof. Iain Johnstone
Prof. Gabriel Ngar-cheung Lau
Prof. David Lieberman
Prof. John W. Meyer
Prof. Takeshi Oka
Prof. Neil Bryan Oldridge
Prof. Gordon Richardson
Prof. AnnaLee Saxenian
Prof. T.M. Scanlon
Prof. Katherine Schipper
Prof. Jaap Valk
Prof. Wang Kon-well
Prof. Xie Yu
Prof. Alfred W.K. Yung
薛永年教授
 
The University gratefully acknowledges the generous donation of the Wei Lun Foundation Ltd. for the establishment of the Wei Lun Visiting Professorship / Fellowship Programme.
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