Research using RHESSys presented at the 2024 AGU Conference in Washington DC, as well as presentations by Tague Team Lab colleagues and collaborators. RHESSysGrace Stephenson, Naomi Tague, Janet Choate – UC Santa BarbaraEco-hydrological Modeling of Post-fire Recovery in Central California Coastal Watersheds Lawrence E Band, Rouyu Zhang, Daniel Pelletier – University of VirginiaPatterns and PathwaysContinue reading “AGU 2024 Representation”
Category Archives: RHESSys
RHESSys conference announcement
RHESSys Conference 2024 Location: VirtualDate: 1-2 May 2024Registration Cost: FREEAbstract Deadline: 15 March 2024Website: https://rhessys.github.io/conferences/conference_2024 RHESSys Conference 2024 seeks to bring together members of the RHESSys community to share, learn, and network with one another. The conference will be held virtually on 1-2 May 2024. We welcome presentations on all topics related to RHESSys, includingContinue reading “RHESSys conference announcement”
Erin Hanan accepts new faculty position!
Please join us in congratulating former PhD student/post doc Erin Hanan on her new faculty position as Assistant Professor of Fire Ecology in the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences at the University of Nevada, Reno. Dr. Erin Hanan has been a valuable member of the Tague Team Lab and has made important contributions toContinue reading “Erin Hanan accepts new faculty position!”
PhD student Julian Reyes successful defense – Congratulations Dr. Reyes!
We congratulate Julian Reyes, PhD student in Civil and Environmental Engineering at Washington State University – and Tague Team Lab friend and collaborator – on successfully defending his PhD “Characterizing rangeland ecosystems and their sustainable management in a changing climate”. Dr. Reyes developed a new approach to modeling carbon allocation and his research led toContinue reading “PhD student Julian Reyes successful defense – Congratulations Dr. Reyes!”
Tague and RHESSys on ScienceNode
The online publication ScienceNode, which explores the real-world impact of advanced computing and networks, talked with Naomi Tague about the use of RHESSys in looking at how fire risk changes over time and space in the article ‘Computer models aren’t playing with fire’. Read the article
