Kim Hoogewind
Forecast Applications & Social Science Team (FASST)
Job Title:Research Scientist
Affiliation:CIWRO
Email:Email hidden; Javascript is required.
Kim is a Research Scientist with CIWRO/NSSL and serves as the CIWRO team lead or the Forecast Applications and Social Science Team in the Forecast Research and Development Division of NSSL. Her research broadly encompasses severe convective storms and climate, which includes severe weather climatology, climate variability and change, subseasonal-to-seasonal predictability, and reconstructions of historical tornado outbreaks using convection-allowing models.
Degree (Ph.D, M.S, B.A, etc.) | Major Subject | University or College Name | Year (YYYY) (optional) |
---|---|---|---|
Ph.D. | Atmospheric Science | Purdue University | 2016 |
M.S. | Atmospheric Science | Purdue University | 2012 |
B.S. | Meteorology, Geography | Central Michigan University | 2009 |
- Severe Convective Storms
- Synoptic and mesoscale meteorology
- Climate variability and change
- Multiscale predictability
- Subseasonal prediction
- Convection-allowing modeling
- Regional Climate Modeling
- American Meteorological Society member
- Associate Editor, Weather and Forecasting, American Meteorological Society
Award Name | Year |
---|---|
Outstanding Reviewer for AGU Geophysical Research Letters | 2022 |
Clark, A. J., I. L. Jirak, B. T. Gallo, K. H. Knopfmeier, B. Roberts, M. Krocak, J. Vancil, K. A. Hoogewind, N. A. Dahl, E. D. Loken, D. Jahn, D. Harrison, D. Imy, P. Burke, L. Wicker, P. S. Skinner, P. L. Heinselman, P. Marsh, K. A. Wilson, A. Dean, G. J. Creager, T. A. Jones, J. Gao, Y. Wang, M. Flora, C. K. Potvin, C. A. Kerr, N. Yussouf, J. Martin, J. Guerra, B. C. Matilla, T. J. Galarneau, 2022: The 2nd Real-Time, Virtual Spring Forecasting Experiment to Advance Severe Weather Prediction. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 103, E1114–E1116, doi:10.1175/BAMS-D-21-0239.1
2022: Are Trends in Convective Parameters over the United States and Europe Consistent between Reanalyses and Observations?. Journal of Climate, 35, 12, 3605–3626, doi:10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0135.1.
, M. Taszarek, J. T. Allen, K. A. Hoogewind,Clark, A. J., I. L. Jirak, B. T. Gallo, B. Roberts, A. R. Dean, K. H. Knopfmeier, L. J. Wicker, M. Krocak, P. S. Skinner, P. L. Heinselman, K. A. Wilson, J. Vancil, K. A. Hoogewind, N. A. Dahl, G. J. Creager, T. A. Jones, J. Gao, Y. Wang, E. D. Loken, M. Flora, C. A. Kerr, N. Yussouf, S. R. Dembek, W. Miller, J. Martin, J. Guerra, B. Matilla, D. Jahn, D. Harrison, D. Imy, M. C. Coniglio, 2021: A Real-Time, Virtual Spring Forecasting Experiment to Advance Severe Weather Prediction. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 102-4, April 2021, E814–E816, doi:10.1175/BAMS-D-20-0268.1.
Potvin, C. K., P. S. Skinner, K. A. Hoogewind, M. C. Coniglio, J. A. Gibbs, A. J. Clark, M. L. Flora, A. E. Reinhart, J. R. Carley, E. N. Smith, 2020: Assessing Systematic Impacts of PBL Schemes on Storm Evolution in the NOAA Warn-on-Forecast System. Monthly Weather Review, 148, 2567–2590, doi:10.1175/MWR-D-19-0389.1.
Taszarek, M., J. T. Allen, T. Púčik, K. A. Hoogewind, H. E. Brook2020: Severe Convective Storms across Europe and the United States. Part II: ERA5 Environments Associated with Lightning, Large Hail, Severe Wind, and Tornadoes. Journal of Climate, 33, 10263–10286, doi:10.1175/JCLI-D-20-0346.1.
,Hoogewind, K. A., D. R. Chavas, B. A. Schenkel, and M. E. O’Neill, 2020: Exploring Controls on Tropical Cyclone Count through the Geography of Environmental Favorability. Journal of Climate, 33, 1725–1745, https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-18-0862.1.
Trapp, R. J., K. A. Hoogewind, and S. Lasher-Trapp, 2019: Future Changes in Hail Occurrence in the United States Determined through Convection-Permitting Dynamical Downscaling. Journal of Climate, 32, 5493–5509, https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-18-0740.1.
Trapp, R. J., and K. A. Hoogewind, 2018: Exploring a possible connection between U.S. tornado activity and Arctic sea ice. npj Clim. Atmos. Sci., 1, 14, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41612-018-0025-9.
Hoogewind, K. A., M. E. Baldwin, and R. J. Trapp, 2017: The Impact of Climate Change on Hazardous Convective Weather in the United States: Insight from High-Resolution Dynamical Downscaling. Journal of Climate, 30, 10081–10100, https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0885.1.
Trapp, R. J., and K. A. Hoogewind, 2016: The Realization of Extreme Tornadic Storm Events under Future Anthropogenic Climate Change. Journal of Climate, 29, 5251–5265, https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-15-0623.1.