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Environmental Sciences

D-Index
47
Citations
7775
World Ranking
5828
National Ranking
103

Overview

Hideharu Akiyoshi is affiliated with the National Institute for Environmental Studies in Japan. Their research primarily focuses on Earth and Planetary Sciences, with significant contributions in Environmental Science. The scientist's work is notably concentrated in the subfields of Atmospheric Science, Global and Planetary Change, Astronomy and Astrophysics, and Environmental Chemistry.

The research topics covered by Hideharu Akiyoshi include Atmospheric Ozone and Climate, Atmospheric chemistry and aerosols, Atmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics, Climate variability and models, Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics, Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics, and Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena.

Recent noteworthy publications by Hideharu Akiyoshi are:

  • Tropospheric Ozone Assessment Report, 2020, published in Elementa Science of the Anthropocene
  • Stratospheric water vapor affecting atmospheric circulation, 2023, published in Nature Communications
  • Projecting ozone hole recovery using an ensemble of chemistry-climate models weighted by model performance and independence, 2020, published in Atmospheric chemistry and physics
  • Chlorine partitioning near the polar vortex edge observed with ground-based FTIR and satellites at Syowa Station, Antarctica, in 2007 and 2011, 2020, published in Atmospheric chemistry and physics
  • PSTEP: project for solar-terrestrial environment prediction, 2021, published in Earth Planets and Space

Hideharu Akiyoshi frequently publishes in various scientific venues. The most frequent publishing venues include Atmospheric chemistry and physics and Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres each with three publications, followed by Research Square with two, Elementa Science of the Anthropocene with one, and Nature Communications with one publication.

The scientist has collaborated extensively with several frequent co-authors, including:

  • Y. Yamashita
  • David A. Plummer
  • Patrick Jöckel
  • Olaf Morgenstern
  • Guang Zeng

Best Publications

  • Assessment of temperature, trace species, and ozone in chemistry-climate model simulations of the recent past

    V. Eyring;N. Butchart;D. W. Waugh;H. Akiyoshi

  • Review of the global models used within phase 1 of the Chemistry–Climate Model Initiative (CCMI)

    Olaf Morgenstern;Michaela I. Hegglin;Eugene Rozanov;Fiona M. O'Connor

  • The impact of stratospheric ozone recovery on the Southern Hemisphere westerly jet.

    S.-W. Son;L. M. Polvani;D. W. Waugh;H. Akiyoshi

  • Multimodel projections of stratospheric ozone in the 21st century

    V. Eyring;D. W. Waugh;G. E. Bodeker;Eugene C. Cordero

  • Impact of stratospheric ozone on Southern Hemisphere circulation change: A multimodel assessment

    S.-W. Son.;E. P. Gerber;J. Perlwitz;J. Perlwitz;L. M. Polvani

  • Chemistry-Climate Model Simulations of Twenty- First Century Stratospheric Climate and Circulation Changes

    Neal Butchart;I. Cionni;V. Eyring;T. G. Shepherd

  • 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

  • Multimodel assessment of the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere: Tropics and global trends

    A. Gettelman;M. I. Hegglin;S.-W. Son;Jung-Hyun Kim

  • Multimodel climate and variability of the stratosphere

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

  • Tropospheric Ozone Assessment Report: A critical review of changes in the tropospheric ozone burden and budget from 1850 to 2100

    A. T. Archibald;J. L. Neu;Y. F. Elshorbany;O. R. Cooper;O. R. Cooper

  • Estimates of Ozone Return Dates from Chemistry-Climate Model Initiative Simulations

    Sandip S. Dhomse;Douglas Kinnison;Martyn P. Chipperfield;Ross J. Salawitch

  • Climate change projections and stratosphere–troposphere interaction

    Adam A. Scaife;Thomas Spangehl;David R. Fereday;Ulrich Cubasch

  • Coupled chemistry climate model simulations of the solar cycle in ozone and temperature

    John Austin;K. Tourpali;E. Rozanov;H. Akiyoshi

  • Review of the formulation of present-generation stratospheric chemistry-climate models and associated external forcings

    Olaf Morgenstern;M. A. Giorgetta;K. Shibata;V. Eyring

  • Stratosphere‐troposphere coupling and annular mode variability in chemistry‐climate models

    Edwin P. Gerber;Mark P. Baldwin;Hideharu Akiyoshi;John Austin

  • The Tropical Tropopause Layer 1960–2100

    Andrew Gettelman;Thomas Birner;Veronika Eyring;H. Akiyoshi

  • Projections of UV radiation changes in the 21st century: impact of ozone recovery and cloud effects

    Alkiviadis F. Bais;Kleareti Tourpali;Andreas Kazantzidis;Hideharu Akiyoshi

  • Improved predictability of the troposphere using stratospheric final warmings

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

  • Multimodel assessment of the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere: Extratropics

    M. I. Hegglin;A. Gettelman;P. Hoor;R. Krichevsky

  • The impact of stratospheric ozone recovery on tropopause height trends.

    Seok-Woo Son;Lorenzo M. Polvani;Darryn W. Waugh;Thomas Birner

  • Revisiting the mystery of recent stratospheric temperature trends.

    Amanda C. Maycock;William J. Randel;Andrea K. Steiner;Alexey Yu Karpechko

Frequent Co-Authors

Eugene Rozanov
Eugene Rozanov Saint Petersburg State University
Olaf Morgenstern
Olaf Morgenstern National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research
Martyn P. Chipperfield
Martyn P. Chipperfield University of Leeds
Slimane Bekki
Slimane Bekki Sorbonne University
David A. Plummer
David A. Plummer Environment and Climate Change Canada
Douglas E. Kinnison
Douglas E. Kinnison National Center for Atmospheric Research
Giovanni Pitari
Giovanni Pitari University of L'Aquila
Sandip Dhomse
Sandip Dhomse University of Leeds
Martine Michou
Martine Michou Federal University of Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées
Kiyotaka Shibata
Kiyotaka Shibata Kochi University of Technology

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