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Andrew Charlton-Perez

Andrew Charlton-Perez

D-Index & Metrics

Environmental Sciences

D-Index
43
Citations
7367
World Ranking
7084
National Ranking
543

Overview

Andrew Charlton-Perez is affiliated with the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. Their research primarily spans the fields of Environmental Science and Earth and Planetary Sciences, with significant work also contributing to subfields such as Global and Planetary Change, Atmospheric Science, Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis, Electrical and Electronic Engineering, and General Health Professions.

The scientist's research focuses on diverse topics related to climate variability, atmospheric phenomena, and their broader environmental and health impacts. Key areas explored include climate variability and models, meteorological phenomena and simulations, atmospheric ozone and climate, atmospheric and environmental gas dynamics, climate change and health impacts, global health care issues, and energy load and power forecasting.

Notable recent papers authored or co-authored by Andrew Charlton-Perez include:

  • "Sudden Stratospheric Warmings," 2020, published in Reviews of Geophysics
  • "Advances in the Application and Utility of Subseasonal-to-Seasonal Predictions," 2021, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
  • "Uncertainty in the Response of Sudden Stratospheric Warmings and Stratosphere-Troposphere Coupling to Quadrupled CO2 Concentrations in CMIP6 Models," 2020, Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres
  • "Advances in the Subseasonal Prediction of Extreme Events: Relevant Case Studies across the Globe," 2022, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
  • "Long-range prediction and the stratosphere," 2022, Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics

Frequent co-authors of Andrew Charlton-Perez include:

  • Simon H. Lee
  • Daniela I. V. Domeisen
  • Amy H. Butler
  • David Brayshaw
  • Wan Ting Katty Huang

The scientist publishes regularly in venues such as:

  • Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research)
  • Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
  • Meteorological Applications
  • Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society
  • Robust Assessment and Communication of Environmental Risk (RACER) under the Probability, Uncertainty & Risk in the Environment (PURE) Consortium (University of Reading Research Data Archive)

Best Publications

  • Sudden Stratospheric Warmings

    Mark P. Baldwin;Blanca Ayarzagüena;Thomas Birner;Thomas Birner;Neal Butchart

  • On the Lack of Stratospheric Dynamical Variability in Low‐Top Versions of the CMIP5 Models

    Andrew J. Charlton-Perez;Mark P. Baldwin;Thomas Birner;Robert X. Black

  • The influence of stratospheric vortex displacements and splits on surface climate

    Daniel M. Mitchell;Lesley J. Gray;James Anstey;Mark P. Baldwin

  • The role of the stratosphere in subseasonal to seasonal prediction Part II: Predictability arising from stratosphere ‐ troposphere coupling

    Daniela I. V. Domeisen;Amy H. Butler;Amy H. Butler;Andrew J. Charlton-Perez;Blanca Ayarzagüena;Blanca Ayarzagüena

  • Stratospheric Communication of El Niño Teleconnections to European Winter

    Christopher James Bell;Lesley Janet Gray;Andrew James Charlton-Perez;Manoj Mukund Joshi

  • Multi-model assessment of stratospheric ozone return dates and ozone recovery in CCMVal-2 models

    V. Eyring;I. Cionni;G. E. Bodeker;Andrew J. Charlton-Perez

  • The predictability of the extratropical stratosphere on monthly time‐scales and its impact on the skill of tropospheric forecasts

    Om P. Tripathi;Mark Baldwin;Andrew Charlton-Perez;Martin Charron

  • Multimodel climate and variability of the stratosphere

    N. Butchart;Andrew J. Charlton-Perez;I. Cionni;S. C. Hardiman

  • Assessing and understanding the impact of stratospheric dynamics and variability on the earth system

    Edwin P. Gerber;Amy Butler;Natalia Calvo;Andrew Charlton-Perez

  • The Role of the Stratosphere in Subseasonal to Seasonal Prediction: 1. Predictability of the Stratosphere

    Daniela I.V. Domeisen;Amy H. Butler;Amy H. Butler;Andrew J. Charlton‐Perez;Blanca Ayarzagüena;Blanca Ayarzagüena

  • Associations between stratospheric variability and tropospheric blocking

    Tim James Woollings;Andrew James Charlton-Perez;S. Ineson;A. G. Marshall

  • A New Look at Stratospheric Sudden Warmings. Part III: Polar Vortex Evolution and Vertical Structure

    N. J. Matthewman;J. G. Esler;A. J. Charlton-Perez;Lorenzo M. Polvani

  • Northern winter climate change: Assessment of uncertainty in CMIP5 projections related to stratosphere-troposphere coupling

    E. Manzini;A. Yu. Karpechko;J. Anstey;M. P. Baldwin

  • Advances in the application and utility of subseasonal-to-seasonal predictions

    Christopher J. White;Daniela I. V. Domeisen;Nachiketa Acharya;Elijah A. Adefisan

  • Predicting Sudden Stratospheric Warming 2018 and Its Climate Impacts With a Multimodel Ensemble

    Alexey Yu. Karpechko;Andrew Charlton‐Perez;Magdalena Balmaseda;Nicholas Tyrrell

  • The influence of the stratospheric state on North Atlantic weather regimes

    Andrew J. Charlton‐Perez;Laura Ferranti;Robert W. Lee

  • Characterizing the Variability and Extremes of the Stratospheric Polar Vortices Using 2D Moment Analysis

    Daniel Mitchell;Andrew James Charlton-Perez;Lesley Janet Gray

  • The Climate-system Historical Forecast Project: do stratosphere-resolving models make better seasonal climate predictions in boreal winter?

    Amy H. Butler;Amy H. Butler;Alberto Arribas;Maria Athanassiadou;Johanna Baehr

  • Advances in the subseasonal prediction of extreme events: Relevant case studies across the globe

    Unknown

  • Comparison of co-located independent ground-based middle atmospheric wind and temperature measurements with numerical weather prediction models

    A. Le Pichon;J. D. Assink;P. Heinrich;E. Blanc

  • Improved predictability of the troposphere using stratospheric final warmings

    Steven C. Hardiman;Neal Butchart;Andrew J. Charlton-Perez;Tiffany A. Shaw

  • Enhanced long-range forecast skill in boreal winter following stratospheric strong vortex conditions

    Om P Tripathi;Andrew Charlton-Perez;Michael Sigmond;Frederic Vitart

Frequent Co-Authors

Amy H. Butler
Amy H. Butler National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Edwin P. Gerber
Edwin P. Gerber Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences
Michael Sigmond
Michael Sigmond Environment and Climate Change Canada
Lesley J. Gray
Lesley J. Gray University of Oxford
Mark P. Baldwin
Mark P. Baldwin University of Exeter
Seok-Woo Son
Seok-Woo Son Seoul National University
Eleanor J. Highwood
Eleanor J. Highwood University of Reading
Lorenzo M. Polvani
Lorenzo M. Polvani Columbia University

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