Susanna Corti

Susanna Corti

personal informations

Born on 18 June 1962 in Bologna, Italy
Classical studies at the High School
Degree in Physics
Ph.D. in Physics with a thesis on atmospheric dynamics

ACADEMIC DEGREES

1989Degree in Physics at the Faculty of Sciences, University of Bologna. Final thesis (Tesi di Laurea) on greenhouse effect in the atmosphere and climate sensitivity.

1990Diploma of the Physics Specialization School at the University of Bologna

1994Ph.D. in Physics/Geophysics at the University of Bologna - Thesis on low and ultra-low frequency atmospheric variability in a 3-level T21 quasi-geostrophic model.

RESEARCH EXPERIENCE

1991-92 ATMOSPHERIC DYNAMICS GROUP BOLOGNA (ADGB)
University of Bologna-Physics Dept., Bologna, Italy
Ph.D. Student
Diagnostics of blocking events in the Northern Hemisphere during the winter.


1993 (Feb - Oct) EUROPEAN CENTRE FOR MEDIUM RANGE WEATHER FORECASTS (ECMWF)
Shinfield Park, Reading, Berkshire RG2 9AX, United Kingdom
Ph.D. Student-Visiting Scientist
Long term integrations with a quasi-geostrophic three level atmospheric model. Diagnosis of weather regimes behaviour.


1994-95-96
(Dec 1993 - Feb 1996)
ECMWF and ADGB JOINT PROJECT (made as part of a European Union project Short-term Climate Variability under contract EV5V-CT93-0279) Workplaces: University of Bologna, Department of Physics - ECMWF
Consultant
Analysis and interpretation of results from long integrations of a realistic quasi-geostrophic model on the basis of the behaviour of simple nonlinear systems. Investigation of the dynamical origin of interannual and interdecadal fluctuations in the statistical properties of low-frequency variability analysing the role of internal nonlinear dynamics and the effects of variations in atmospheric forcing arising from the lower boundary. Application of adjoint techniques to study the predictability of transitions between quasi-geostrophic model weather regimes. Identification of fairly distinct paths in phase space associated with predictable and unpredictable transitions. Analysis and comparison of weather and climate predictability properties in this model.

1996-2001 (Apr 1996 - Oct 2001) CINECA Inter-University Consortium
Casalecchio di Reno, Bologna, Italy
PostDoc Fellowship (from July 1998 staff)
Quantification of potential predictability of seasonal fluctuations in climate using ensembles of GCM simulations performed at ECMWF, initialised using reanalysis data-sets and forced with observed sea surface temperature fields.
Statistical analysis of the relationship between variability of surface air temperature and frequency of large-scale atmospheric regimes / teleconnection patterns on the interdecadal time-scale.
Modulation of atmospheric intraseasonal variability by boundary forcing on the interannual and decadal timescale.
Identification of forcing errors in GCMs.


2001 up to present INSTITUTE OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES AND CLIMATE (ISAC) - NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL (CNR) Bologna, Italy.
Staff Scientist.
Assessment of the influence of tropical SST anomalies (ENSO) and land surface conditions on circulation regimes (like NAO, PNA, and Asian and African Monsoon).
Study of the relationship, which involves nonlinear feedbacks, between extratropical SSTs anomalies and the stabilisation of circulation regimes (i.e. tendency to partially lock the atmosphere into a given regimes).
Study of the model(s) systematic error.
Evaluation of the vertical structure of weather regimes, utilising the reanalysis datasets, and their potential role in accounting for discrepancies between observed surface and tropospheric temperature trends.
Evaluation of the significance of any discrepancies between observed regime behaviour and that simulated by the current generation of A-OGCMs.
Evaluation of the extent to what anthropogenic climate change can be understood in terms of changes to the PDFs of these regimes.
nvestigation of the predictability and persistence properties of global and local weather regimes and clarification of the role that chaotic fluctuations between quasi-stationary regimes play in the dynamics of climate;
Sensitivity integrations with a simplified model in order to understand the structural stability properties of weather regimes when a variable external forcing is applied.
Theoretical studies of predictability in Dynamic Meteorology and Climate.

INTERNATIONAL PROJECTS

Principal Investigator in the following projects funded by the European Commission:
V Framework "Environment and Sustanable Development": VI Framework "Global Change and Ecosystems":

TEACHING EXPERIENCE

Lecturer of Atmospheric Dynamics at the University of Ferrara, Physics Department, for the years: 2002/2003 and 2003/2004.

EDITORIAL ACTIVITIES

Executive Editor of "Climate Dynamics" since July 2007.

EXPERIENCE IN REVIEW/EVALUATION

Several peer reviews for the following scientific journals: Monthly Weather Review, Journal of Climate, Journal of Geophysical Research, Journal of Atmospheric Sciences, Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, Tellus
Evaluator of research proposals for the programme "Environment and Sustainable Development" of the Commission of the European Communities within the V and VI Framework Programmes
Reviewer for the NOAA's Office of Global Program on Climate Variability and Predictability
eviewer for the NOAA's Office of Climate Change Detection and Attribution Project

PUBLICATIONS