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  1. Dr. Jiali Wang is an atmospheric scientist in Environmental Science Division at Argonne. Dr. Wang received her Ph.D degree in atmospheric science in 2012, and has been working at Argonne since then. She also holds a fellowship member with NAISE at Northwestern University, as well as CASE at University of Chicago.

  2. 2020年10月6日 · Jiali Wang, Argonne atmospheric and Earth scientist. Predicted changes in the number of days and area with extremely high drought index, from historical period to late 21 st century. Shading indicates changes in the number of days; significant changes are hashed. Dots indicate that a grid cell has an index value greater than 600 in the future.

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  4. 2019年11月12日 · “ It describes everything you see outside of your window,” said Jiali Wang, an environmental scientist at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory, “ from the clouds, to the sun’s radiation, to snow to vegetation — even the way

  5. 2019年11月22日 · — Jiali Wang, Argonne assistant atmospheric scientist Their submission, “ Risk and Resiliency of Infrastructure, Southeastern USA , for AT & T,” outlines Argonne’s role in helping AT & T develop a predictive tool to help create climate resiliency responses to localized flooding.

  6. 2024年3月4日 · Jiali Wang, another EVS scientist, and Bonnie Basiorka, from Argonne’s Financial Management and Procurement Services ( FMPS) directorate, were recognized for their contributions to NTNS-led projects. “ Congratulations to our colleagues on earning the highest recognition from the Secretary of Energy,” said Argonne Director Paul Kearns.

  7. Dr. Lin Yan and Jiali Wang from Argonne’s Environmental Science Division ( EVS ), in collaboration with Argonne’s Mathematics and Computer Science Division ( MCS ), Ohio State University, and the University of Utah, introduced a new TC tracking framework, called TROPHY (topologically robust physics-informed tracking framework).

  8. 2016年3月3日 · LOUISE LERNER. |. March 3, 2016. Rao Kotamarthi and Jiali Wang spend their days looking at a future Earth. The two scientists work on simulations and techniques to project what the climate will look like 100 years from now. What might precipitation over the United States look like in 2094?