Geoengineering and Ozone Holes

Wispy pink clouds high in the atmosphere at sunset

NASA/Lamont Poole

Lecture
Mar. 26, 2025

5:30 – 7:00 pm MDT

NSF NCAR Mesa Lab and Online

Event info coming soon

Simone Tilmes

Atmospheric Chemistry Observations and Modeling Laboratory (ACOM), NSF NCAR

Dr. Simone Tilmes is a Project Scientist II at U.S. National Science Foundation National Center for Atmospheric Research (NSF NCAR) and the liaison for the Community Earth System Model (CESM) chemistry-climate working group. Her scientific interests cover the understanding and evaluation of chemical, aerosol and dynamical processes in chemistry-climate models. She has investigated past, present and future evolution of the ozone hole in both hemispheres based on models and observations. Her recent work also focuses on tropospheric chemistry, aerosols, air quality, long-range transport of pollutants, and of tropospheric ozone. She further studies the impact of geoengineering on the Earth’s climate system, the hydrological cycle, and the impact of solar radiation management on dynamics and chemistry in both troposphere and stratosphere. She published more than 100 peer reviewed papers.