D. Menemenlis, Curriculum Vitae

Submitted:

N. Gruber, et al. Oceanic sources and sinks of atmospheric CO2. Global Biogeochem. Cycles.

B. Fox-Kemper and D. Menemenlis. Can Large Eddy Simulation Techniques Improve Mesoscale Rich Ocean Models? Ocean Modeling.

In Press:

G. Boezio, D. Menemenlis, and C. Mechoso. Impact of ECCO Ocean State Estimates on the Initialization of Seasonal Climate Forecasts. J. Climate.

2007:

C. Hill, D. Menemenlis, B. Ciotti, and C. Henze (2007). Investigating solution convergence in a global ocean model using a 2048-processor cluster of distributed shared memory machines. Scientific Programming, 12, 107-115.

I. Fukumori, D. Menemenlis, and T. Lee (2007). A near-uniform basin-wide sea level fluctuation of the Mediterranean Sea. J. Phys. Oceanogr., 37, 338-358.

D. Menemenlis, I. Fukumori, and T. Lee (2007). Atlantic to Mediterranean sea level difference driven by winds near Gibraltar Strait. J. Phys. Oceanogr., 37, 359-376.

S. Fletcher, N. Gruber, et al. (2007). Inverse estimates of the oceanic sources and sinks of natural CO2 and their implied oceanic transport. Global Biogeochem. Cycles, 21, GB1010.

2006:

N. Krakauer, J. Randerson, et al. (2006). Carbon isotope evidence for the latitudinal distribution and wind speed dependence of the air-sea gas transfer velocity. Tellus, 58B, 390-417.

S. Fletcher, N. Gruber, et al. (2006). Inverse estimates of anthropogenic CO2 uptake, transport, and storage by the ocean. Global Biogeochem. Cycles, 20, GB2002.

P. Heimbach, et al. (2006). Combining altimetric and all other data with a general circulation model. Proceedings of 15 Years of Progress in Radar Altimetry Symposium, Venice, Italy.

2005:

R. Gross, I. Fukumori, and D. Menemenlis (2005). Atmospheric and oceanic excitation of decadal-scale earth orientation variations. J. Geophys. Res., 110, B09405.

D. Menemenlis, I. Fukumori, and T. Lee (2005). Using Green's functions to calibrate an ocean general circulation model. Mon. Weather Rev., 133, 1224-1240.

D. Menemenlis, C. Hill, et al. (2005). NASA supercomputer improves prospects for ocean climate research. Eos Trans. AGU, 86, 89, 95-96.

Older manuscripts: