Deciding on a school is one of the most important career decisions you will make. We are proud of our programs and the achievements of both our faculty and our students. We invite you join us. Please allow us to fill you in a little on the University, our program. Our undergraduate Earth System Science Degree is grounded on our very successful M.S. and Ph.D. programs. Our University The University was founded in the 1960s, and continues to grow and gain recognition. A strong research university is made even more so by the continuing pioneering achievements of its faculty (and students), and UAH’s rise to prominence has clearly been fueled by efforts such as those in the Atmospheric Science Department. |
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Dr. Richard McNider, distinguished professor emeritus in atmospheric and mathematical sciences, receives the 2013 AMS award for Outstanding Contribution to the Advance of Applied Meteorology from the organization's president, Dr. Louis W. Uccellini, at the AMS awards banquet on Wednesday, Jan. 9. He was recognized by the AMS for "innovative contributions to dealing with agricultural drought by improving monitoring and forecasting technology, and for promoting sustainable irrigation in the Southeast." McNider was largely responsible for founding UAHuntsville's remote sensing laboratory, which led to the creations of both the Earth System Science Center and the Atmospheric Science Department.
To read about this award,
On Friday, November 16th, the Department of Atmospheric Science held a Highlights Review of the 3rd Panama Research and Study Abroad Program at the Shelby Center for Science and Technology from 1-3PM. The program gave the UAHuntsville student researchers who spent their summers in Panama studying climate change and sustainable development, a chance to talk about the research they did during the 8-week program.
"Mom! Dad! It's a twister!" Five-year-old Lauren Kliesner from Madison watches carefully as the "tornado" her father spun up in a bottle spins into another bottle. Lauren and her family were among the hundreds of people who attended the 2012 Rocket City Weather Fest at UAH's Shelby Center.
Five students in UAH's Earth system science MS program presented results
from their research at the International Astronautical Congress in Naples,
Italy, in early October. In addition to presenting their work at regular
(not student) sessions, the students also met with NASA Administrator
Charles Bolden (center) and Associate Administrator Michael O'Brien. They
discussed their use of date from NASA satellites and their collaborations
with NASA, including SERVIR.







