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Warmer Oceans Are Changing the Season for Harmful Algal Blooms

There is an increased need for monitoring and adaptation

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Our researchers are employed either at NORCE, UiB, the Nansen Center or the Institute of Marine Research. The researchers work together across various scientific disciplines. Find researchers with backgrounds in meteorology, oceanography, geology, geophysics, biology and mathematics, among others.

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Researchers at Bjerknes are involved in several projects, both nationally and internationally. The projects are owned by the partner institutions, with the exception of our strategic projects.

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Researchers at the Bjerknes Center publish more than 200 scientific articles each year.

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11.08.25

Prof. David M. Schultz: "Cold Fronts: The Unknown Knows"

Abstract When thinking about human understanding, there are known knowns. These are things that we know we know. There are also known unknowns, things we do not know. Unknown unknowns are things that we don't know we don't know. Finally, there are the unknown knowns---things we do not know we know. Operational experience and the scientific literature tell us that the structure and dynamics of fronts are more complicated than our common perception of them---in other words, there are unknown knowns. Many of these unknown knowns have existed since the earliest work on fronts in the early part of the 20th century, meaning we have not evolved with the state of the science. Come prepared to have your foundations in atmospheric science challenged as I show freaks of nature (that are more common that you may realize), including cold fronts tilting forward over the warm air, cold fronts where the wind shift is not coincident with the temperature gradient, and cold fronts characterized by surface warming after frontal passage! I will also discuss the issue of how cold fronts move and whether they necessarily move faster than warm fronts. Speaker information Short biography David Schultz is Professor of Synoptic Meteorology at the University of Manchester. He has published over 200 journal articles on atmospheric phenomenon from as small as mammatus and tornadoes to as large as the global circulation during the Snowball Earth 2.5 billion years ago. His principal research interests are extratropical cyclones, fronts, severe convective storms, and the organization of precipitation, where he has helped modernize and extend the Norwegian cyclone model, the formation of occluded fronts, and airstreams such as the cold conveyor belt and sting jet. He has been critical of poor science and communication, specifically the language around instabilities and the scientific literature published on the effect of weather on the spread of COVID-19. He has received multiple teaching and supervision awards, including the 2023 Inaugural Education Award from the Royal Meteorological Society. He was the third-longest serving Chief Editor in the 151-year history of Monthly Weather Review (2008–2022) and recipient of the 2024 Cleveland Abbe Award for Distinguished Service from the American Meteorological Society. He is author of Eloquent Science: A Practical Guide to Becoming a Better Writer, Speaker, and Atmospheric Scientist, which has been translated into Chinese and published by the China Meteorological Press.
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11.08.25

BCCR Hazards meeting

Hi everyone, We’ll meet in the Bjerknes Meeting Room on the 3rd floor on Monday 11 August, 11–12h. A program will be sent around closer to the day, but one topic will be a discussion on Bjerknes strategy. If you have anything to share with the Hazards Group, let me know in advance. I’ll send a reminder out in early August. Enjoy the summer! Stijn
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12.08.25

Disputas: Johannes Hardeng

Johannes Hardeng disputerer 12.8.2025 for ph.d.-graden ved Universitetet i Bergen med avhandlingen "Floods and avalanches in a changing climate". https://www.uib.no/nye-doktorgrader/179017/klima-i-endring-flom-og-skred-i-norge-gjennom-10-000-%C3%A5r