On September 17, NBC’s StormTracker 4 team visited Cook Campus, the site of the Doppler radar tower with its 1,000,000 watts of cutting-edge technology. IT’S GOT THE POWER! StormTracker 4 is powered by one million watts of cutting-edge technology. It can generate 1,000 pulses within the blink of an eye. And it has a range […]
Search Results for: "Anthony Broccoli"
Hurricane Harvey, 5 years after Sandy
Anthony Broccoli – Department of Environmental Sciences
Climate change: 5 signs it’s already begun in NJ
Anthony Broccoli – Department of Environmental Sciences, Rutgers Climate Institute
Climate scientist: Sea level rise will intensify storms along Jersey’s coast
Anthony Broccoli – Department of Environmental Sciences, Rutgers Climate Institute
State lawmakers get a wake-up call on climate change
Anthony Broccoli – Department of Environmental Sciences
Rutgers Atmospheric Science Graduate Program Turns 10 Years Old
Faculty, students and alumni of the Rutgers Graduate Program in Atmospheric Science (GPAS) marked the 10th anniversary of the program’s establishment with an afternoon symposium held during the Spring semester at the Cook Student Center. The event featured a keynote address by Arlene Fiore, professor and accomplished atmospheric chemist from Columbia University, as well as […]
Tyler Janoski (SEBS’17) – A Habit of Excellence
By Samuel Ludescher (SAS’18). Tyler Janoski is a double major who will graduate in spring 2017 with a bachelor’s degree in both meteorology and marine science, carrying a 4.0 G.P.A. into his final semester at the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences. He’s made a habit of excellence throughout his undergraduate academic career, carefully […]
NBC partnership brings new weather technology to Rutgers students
Robert Goodman – School of Environment and Biological Sciences, Dean’s Office
Anthony Broccoli – Department of Environmental Sciences
Dylan Dreyer – Alumnus
Whodunnit?: The Case of Global Warming
To identify the cause of global warming, Dr. Anthony Broccoli of Rutgers University looks at the evidence just as Sherlock Holmes would. A review of physics leads to the primary suspect: heat-trapping greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide.
What Did Actual Scientists Think Of The Pope’s Climate Encyclical?
The Vatican’s new encyclical is being hailed as one of the most important statements on climate change ever produced by the Catholic Church. But it’s also being decried as misplaced, by some who say Pope Francis- a man of faith- has no business discussing matters of science… ThinkProgress asked three climate scientists to weigh in on three specific passages in the encyclical that get wonky about the science of climate change, and got varied answers. However, all three said Francis (who himself has a technician’s degree in chemistry) was correct that humans are causing potentially catastrophic climate change via greenhouse gas emissions… “Based on what I have seen of the science in the encyclical, most climate experts would find little to disagree with,” said Anthony Broccoli, a professor of environmental sciences at Rutgers University.