wumingna

Doctoral Degree in Science

Faculty of Higher Institutions

Institute of Atmospheric Physics, CAS

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Gender:Female
Date of Birth:1995-03-14
Business Address:Science and education Building No. 409 , Jincheng Rd 68, Wuhan East Lake High-tech Development Zone, Wuhan, PRC
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Dr. Mingna Wu, a holder of a PhD in Meteorology, serves as a Tensure-track Associate Professor in the Department of Atmospheric Science at the School of Environmental Studies, China University of Geosciences. She obtained her Bachelor of Science degree in 2017 from the College of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences at Ocean University of China. In July 2022, she completed her Doctor of Philosophy degree from the Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences under the supervision of Professor Zhou Tianjun. She is the recipient of various prestigious awards, including the National Scholarship for Doctoral Students, the Zhu-Li-Yuehua Outstanding Doctoral Scholarship of CAS, and the Beijing Excellent Graduate. Dr. Wu's research interests center on model simulation and projection, tropical atmospheric circulations, air-sea interactions, and East Asian summer monsoon. Her scholarly contributions are widely recognized, with six academic papers published in top-tier journals such as Nature Communications, Journal of Climate, and Geophysical Research Letters. Additionally, she has been granted a patent for her innovative research.


Publications

1. Wu, M., Zhou, T., Li, C., Li, H., Chen, X., Wu, B., Zhang, W., and Zhang, L. (2021) A very likely weakening of PacificWalker Circulation in constrained near-future projections. Nature Communications, 12, 6502.


2. Wu, M., Zhou, T., and Chen, X. (2021) The Source of Uncertainty in Projecting the Anomalous Western North Pacific Anticyclone during El Niño–Decaying Summers, Journal of Climate, 34(16), 6603-6617.


3. Wu, M., Zhou, T., Chen, X., and Wu, B. (2020) Intermodel uncertainty in the projection of the Anomalous western North Pacific Anticyclone associated with El Niño under global warming. Geophysical Research Letters, 47, e2019GL086139.


4. Liu, S., Zhou, T., Jiang, J., Zuo, M., and Wu, M. (2023) Tropical Amplification in Tropospheric Warming Simulated using the Flexible Global Ocean–Atmosphere–Land System Version3 Climate System Model. Chinese Journal of Atmospheric Sciences, 47(1): 86-100. (in Chinese with English abstract)

5. Chen, Z., Zhou, T., Chen, X., Zhang,W., Zhang, L.,Wu, M., and Zou, L. (2022) Observationally constrained projection of Afro-Asian monsoon precipitation. Nature Communications, 13, 2552.


6. Ding, T., Guo, Z., Zhou, T., Hu, S., Chen, X., He, L., and Wu, M. (2022) The Role of Air-sea Coupling in Simulating East Asian Summer Monsoon and responses to pre-winter El Niño—Based on FGOALS-g3. Chinese Journal of Atmospheric Sciences. (in Chinese with English abstract)









[1] 2017.9  to  2022.6
Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy | Meterology  | Postgraduate (Doctoral) | Ph.D.
[2] 2013.9  to  2017.6
Ocean Universtity of China | Atmospheric Science | Undergraduate (Bachelor’s degree) | Bachelor's Degree

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[1] Climate change
[2] Large-scale atmospheric circulation
[3] Climate simulation and projection

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