Introduction
Good afternoon! My name is Valerie Polukhtin, I’m a future Class of 2025 graduate, and I’m just about getting ready to start my senior project.
My interests lie with mathematical modeling (I’m planning to major in applied math) as well as environmental science and sustainability, so I’ve decided to combine these interests into a senior project at the ASU Department of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning under the Urban Climate Research Center. My faculty advisor at school is Mr. McClernon.
My site advisor, Matei Georgescu, actually has his background in atmospheric sciences and was trained in the development and use of regional climate models to address land-atmosphere models. So, for example, one thing he studied was how changing the crop in a crop belt might impact the surrounding climate. It’s only been in the last 4 to 5 years that his research has shifted to the urban environment, where he studies larger regional models. These larger models are really just a combination of many models working together, which includes an urban model.
After meeting online the first time, Matei Georgescu mentioned he was currently writing a review article on the history of urban planning, with a goal to submit the paper by the end of May. He believes there is little or no analysis of model skill and that model skill has not improved in the last ten years, but he wants to investigate his claims more deeply. For my project, I do not expect, in the approximately three months, there will be enough time to do any independent research, so I will most likely helping him review climate models from the last decade to help with the paper. Additionally, more on my own, I’m hoping to learn more about climate models to gain greater insight into that field of research.
I plan to start next week, but this week, on Monday, February 3rd, I actually dropped by ASU to watch a guest lecture Georgescu sent a flyer to. The lecturer, Dr. Timon McPhearson, is a professor at The New School in New York and has several distinctions, including being a lead author for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Sixth Assessment Report. He gave a brief overview discussing the flood models the New York city hired him to construct after storms in Texas worried them. Originally, with a budget of about $2 million, they wanted to construct 200 scenarios, but computational costs limited them to only 2 scenarios. Even then, these scenarios accurately predicted, for example, the flooding paths and heights from Hurricane Ida before it happened and allowed the city government to more effectively allocate funds for improvements in the future. This general lecture helped provide me more insight into the real-world applications of work in departments like those around the country.
I’m hoping to start more readings next week and start helping with my site advisor’s review article.
Comments:
All viewpoints are welcome but profane, threatening, disrespectful, or harassing comments will not be tolerated and are subject to moderation up to, and including, full deletion.