News News Events All News Stories All news stories Filter by Topics Academics Active Learning Labs AI / Machine Learning Allston Campus Applied Computation Applied Mathematics Applied Physics Alumni Awards Computational Science & Engineering Data Sciences Dean REEF Makerspace Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Diversity / Inclusion Electrical Engineering Entrepreneurship Environment Environmental Science & Engineering Ethics Events Geoengineering Graduate Student Profile Health / Medicine Industry K-12 Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Date Showing 140 of 162 results Feb 20, 2013 Report views climate change as national security issue Researchers at Harvard and NOAA examine connections between global climate change, national security, and politics (Harvard Gazette) Environment, Computer Science, Climate, Feb 12, 2013 HIPPO global-scale air chemistry dataset now available Open-access data from 64 research flights offers insight into the global carbon cycle and aerosols for climate modeling Environment, Climate, Jan 23, 2013 Researchers see complexity in China's emissions Clean air bid faces resistance, Wall Street Journal reports Environment, Climate, Dec 17, 2012 Asking the hard questions about climate change A Q&A with climate and geoengineering expert David Keith Environment, Climate, Nov 30, 2012 Climate expert Jim Anderson wins Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award With the help of spy planes and B-57 bombers, Jim Anderson discovered the link between climate change and ozone loss (Smithsonian Magazine) Environment, Climate, Oct 21, 2012 Targeting solar geoengineering to minimize risk and inequality New study suggests that solar geoengineering can be tailored to reduce inequality or to manage specific risks like the loss of Arctic sea ice Environment, Climate, Applied Physics, Oct 16, 2012 Jelly-like atmospheric particles resist chemical aging Findings will affect scientific models of cloud formation and light absorption Environment, Climate, Sep 17, 2012 Using space tech to avert climate Armageddon A Q&A with geoengineering expert David Keith (Forbes) Climate, Applied Physics, Jul 30, 2012 Airborne pollutants lead a double life Harvard-UBC research shows organic and inorganic materials in airborne particles can remain separate, in a double layer Environment, Climate, Applied Physics, Jul 26, 2012 Increased risk of ozone loss from convectively injected water vapor Atmospheric chemists report a serious and wholly unexpected risk of ozone loss over the United States in summer (Harvard Magazine) Environment, Climate, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 12 Page 13 Current page 14 Page 15 Page 16 … Page 17 17 Next page › Last page »
Feb 20, 2013 Report views climate change as national security issue Researchers at Harvard and NOAA examine connections between global climate change, national security, and politics (Harvard Gazette) Environment, Computer Science, Climate,
Feb 12, 2013 HIPPO global-scale air chemistry dataset now available Open-access data from 64 research flights offers insight into the global carbon cycle and aerosols for climate modeling Environment, Climate,
Jan 23, 2013 Researchers see complexity in China's emissions Clean air bid faces resistance, Wall Street Journal reports Environment, Climate,
Dec 17, 2012 Asking the hard questions about climate change A Q&A with climate and geoengineering expert David Keith Environment, Climate,
Nov 30, 2012 Climate expert Jim Anderson wins Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award With the help of spy planes and B-57 bombers, Jim Anderson discovered the link between climate change and ozone loss (Smithsonian Magazine) Environment, Climate,
Oct 21, 2012 Targeting solar geoengineering to minimize risk and inequality New study suggests that solar geoengineering can be tailored to reduce inequality or to manage specific risks like the loss of Arctic sea ice Environment, Climate, Applied Physics,
Oct 16, 2012 Jelly-like atmospheric particles resist chemical aging Findings will affect scientific models of cloud formation and light absorption Environment, Climate,
Sep 17, 2012 Using space tech to avert climate Armageddon A Q&A with geoengineering expert David Keith (Forbes) Climate, Applied Physics,
Jul 30, 2012 Airborne pollutants lead a double life Harvard-UBC research shows organic and inorganic materials in airborne particles can remain separate, in a double layer Environment, Climate, Applied Physics,
Jul 26, 2012 Increased risk of ozone loss from convectively injected water vapor Atmospheric chemists report a serious and wholly unexpected risk of ozone loss over the United States in summer (Harvard Magazine) Environment, Climate,