Researcher

Professor Liz Ritchie-Tyo

My Expertise

tropical cyclones/hurricanes/typhoons, severe weather impacts, climate and weather phenomena

Keywords

Fields of Research (FoR)

Atmospheric Dynamics, Climatology (excl. Climate Change Processes), Climate Change Processes

SEO tags

Biography

Liz Ritchie obtained her Ph.D. from Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. She is a Professor in the School of Science, and the Associate Dean for Education, at UNSW Canberra (located at ADFA), Australia. Prof. Ritchie’s broad research interests are tropical cyclones, tropical meteorology, extreme weather and climate impacts on societies.

For Future Research Students:

*** PhD scholarship top-up opportunity *** A project is available with...view more

Liz Ritchie obtained her Ph.D. from Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. She is a Professor in the School of Science, and the Associate Dean for Education, at UNSW Canberra (located at ADFA), Australia. Prof. Ritchie’s broad research interests are tropical cyclones, tropical meteorology, extreme weather and climate impacts on societies.

For Future Research Students:

*** PhD scholarship top-up opportunity *** A project is available with CSIRO examining the microphysical structure of tropical convection using new cubesat high spatial and spectral resolution observations in tropical cyclones and organised (Hector) thunderstorms. If interested, contact me at e.ritchie@adfa.edu.au.

Ph.D. scholarships of $35,000 (AUD) are available for high-achieving students (H1/High Distinction in their UG program and/or have completed a Masters by Research) in tropical cyclones, climate, societal impacts, remote sensing, and meteorological modelling under my supervision. if you are interested contact me at e.ritchie@adfa.edu.au.

Research: Physical understanding, estimation, and prediction of tropical cyclogenesis, tropical cyclone structure and intensity change, the extratropical transition of tropical cyclones and their downstream impacts, and tropical cyclone landfall impacts on natural environments and societies. Climate and environmental impacts on extreme weather behaviour. Weather Phenomena. Tropical cyclone storm surge and sedimentation from fresh-water inundation.

Applied Research Areas: Remote sensing detection, estimation, and prediction of tropical cyclones and other extreme weather. 

Professional Engagement: Prof. Ritchie is a Fellow of the American Meteorological Society, an editor of Weather and Forecasting and former editor of the Monthly Weather Review. She is a member of the World Meteorological Organization's (WMO) Working Group on Tropical Cyclones and the Australian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society's expert group on weather and weather prediction, has served on numerous NASA panels including Chair of the Senior Review, is a former Councillor of the American Meteorological Society, served on the U.S. Joint Hurricane Testbed Steering Committee, and has served in a number of leadership roles for the WMO International Workshop on Tropical Cyclones.

Publications: Prof. Ritchie has over 60 peer-reviewed journal papers and book chapters, and 150+ conference papers. For publication details see the link in the red box on the right of the webpage.

Funding: Prof. Ritchie is currently funded by an ARC Discovery project grant.  She has successfully obtained significant external funding for her research that includes the US Office of Naval Research, National Science Foundation, the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and the Australian Bureau of Meteorology.


My Awards

Fellow of the American Meteorological Society

 


My Research Supervision


Supervision keywords


Areas of supervision

tropical cyclone rainfall/intensity/structure/genesis/extratropical transition processes

tropical cyclone landfall impacts

climate and extreme weather

satellite-based remote-sensing applications for atmospheric processes and weather

AI/neural networks for atmospheric processes and weather


Currently supervising

Landfall Impacts of typhoons in Southeast Asia

Influence of storm surge on the GBM delta region

Neural Networks for tropical cyclone radiation

Risk from tropical cyclones under climate change in Bangladesh

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Location

Room G26, Bldg 26, SSCI, UNSW Canberra, AUSTRALIA


Contact

+61 2 5114 5656