Department of Atmospheric Sciences | University of Illinois

Atmospheric Sciences | PEOPLE | FACULTY

GREG MCFARQUHAR

The most fundamental and complex problems in climate and weather research today are our poor understandings of the basic properties of clouds and our inability to determine quantitatively the many effects cloud processes have on weather and climate. Estimates from current climate models indicate that Earth's average surface temperature will warm from 1.5 to 4.5°C by 2100 due to increases in greenhouse gases. Most of the very large uncertainty in this estimate is attributed to different treatments of clouds in climate models.

On the weather scale, the energy produced by one day of rain within a hurricane is 200 times the worldwide electrical generating capacity, and the destructive force of hurricane precipitation causes the world's greatest natural disasters, yet we have not yet developed a quantitative understanding of the cloud processes that release this energy. I have developed complimentary research programs addressing the most pressing issues in weather and climate research under the overarching theme of clouds and their relation to climate and weather using a combination of field observations, satellite retrievals and numerical modeling studies.

My specific research efforts are advancing our understanding of 1) how clouds affect the transmission of radiation through the atmosphere; 2) how clouds and their impacts are represented in climate and weather models; 3) how cloud processes affect hurricane evolution; and 4) how anthropogenic aerosols affect clouds and Earth's energy and water cycle. I currently receive funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF), the Department of Energy (DOE), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to support my research. In the past 5 years, my graduate students and I have participated in field projects in Darwin Australia (tropical convection and cirrus), Prudhoe Bay Alaska (Arctic mixed-phase clouds), Cape Verde Islands, Africa (impact of Saharan dust on hurricane genesis), San Jose Costa Rica (hurricane genesis and intensification), St. Louis Missouri (bow echoes), Houston Texas (aerosol impacts on clouds) and Cleveland Ohio (freezing rain). The most exciting aspect of my work is the linkage of these field observations with numerical models, including cloud resolving, mesoscale and single column models.

Future modeling and observational studies will examine aerosols, clouds and convection over Oklahoma, aerosol impacts on Arctic clouds over Alaska, investigations of winter cyclone snow bands and continued work on hurricanes. Graduate students and postdoctoral research associates are active collaborators in all my projects, with my students presenting their research at conferences and publishing papers in the scientific literature. I am always looking for more students to join my group and help me determine how we can improve our knowledge of the properties and impacts of clouds together.

Professor
Office: 211 Atmospheric Sciences
Phone: (217) 265-5458
E-mail: mcfarq at atmos.uiuc.edu
Web Site
Curriculum Vitae


Education:

  • Ph.D. Atmospheric Physics, University of Toronto, 1993
  • M.Sc. Atmospheric Physics, University of Toronto, 1989
  • B.Sc. Mathematics and Physics, University of Toronto, 1987