Tomoro Yanase
Atmospheric Scientist | Tropical Dynamics and Convective Organization
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.
news
| Feb 21, 2026 | Website migration to al-folio (work in progress). |
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