Tomoro Yanase

Atmospheric Scientist | Tropical Dynamics and Convective Organization

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Current Positions

Assistant Professor, University of Hyogo, Kobe, Japan

Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellow, Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany


Understanding how moist convection organizes the climate system

I am an atmospheric scientist studying tropical dynamics and the large-scale organization of moist convection.
My research seeks to clarify how small-scale convective processes interact with large-scale circulation to shape climate structure and variability.

A central theme of my work is the self-organization of clouds and moist convection in idealized climate systems.
Through theoretical modeling and cloud-resolving numerical experiments, I investigate fundamental mechanisms governing:

  • Convective self-aggregation
  • Radiative–convective equilibrium (RCE)
  • Moisture–circulation feedback processes
  • ITCZ formation and variability
  • Hadley–Walker circulation dynamics

I am particularly interested in developing physically transparent dynamical frameworks that bridge cloud-scale processes and planetary-scale circulation.


Research Approach

My work integrates:

  • Idealized climate modeling
  • Cloud-resolving simulations (including SCALE-RM)
  • Theoretical analysis of moist dynamical systems
  • High-performance computing for large-scale numerical experiments

The goal is to deepen the fundamental understanding of cloud–climate interactions from first principles.


Ideas (Informal Notes)

I occasionally share short, informal research notes and conceptual discussions.
These posts outline exploratory ideas and theoretical questions that may develop into future projects.

Ideas & Notes

news

Feb 21, 2026 Website migration to al-folio (work in progress).