2018 CSDMS meeting-080: Difference between revisions
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{{CSDMS meeting personal information template-2018 | {{CSDMS meeting personal information template-2018 | ||
|CSDMS meeting first name=Jenny | |CSDMS meeting first name=Jenny | ||
|CSDMS meeting last name= | |CSDMS meeting last name=Suckale | ||
|CSDMS meeting institute=Stanford University | |CSDMS meeting institute=Stanford University | ||
|CSDMS meeting city=Stanford | |CSDMS meeting city=Stanford |
Revision as of 11:41, 19 February 2018
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Jenny Suckale choose to not submit an abstract for this conference.
Natural disasters push the process of scientific
discovery to its limits: Their enormous scale makes them difficult to
recreate in the lab, their destructive power and rare occurrence limit
the possibility of acquiring field data, and their profoundly nonlinear
behavior over a wide range of scales poses significant modeling
challenges. In this talk, I explore how we can leverage insights from
four different natural systems to contribute to our fundamental
scientific understanding of the role that multiphase processes play in
the onset and evolution of extreme events and to our ability to mitigate
associated risks.