MS
Milind Sharma
Assistant Research Scientist (Atmospheric sciences; Meteorology; Cloud physics; Atmospheric dynamics; Atmospheric aerosols; Adverse weather events)
Texas, USA
I am an assistant research scientist in the Department of Atmospheric Sciences at Texas A&M University.
Postdoc (2022-2024) - Texas A&M University (Department of Atmospheric Sciences)
Ph.D. (2016-2022) - Purdue University (Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences)
M.E. (2014-2016) - Indian Institute of Science (Department of Civil Engineering)
B.Tech. (2010-2014) - National Institute of Technology, Jalandhar (Department of Civil Engineering)
Publications
- Polarimetric and Electrical Structure of the 19 May 2013 Edmond–Carney, Oklahoma, Tornadic Supercell
- The Relationship Between Cloud Microphysics and Electrification in Southeast U.S. Storms Investigated Using Polarimetric, Cold Pool, and Lightning Characteristics
- Spatiotemporal analysis of cold pool and lightning observations for a tornadic supercell from VORTEX-SE 2016 field campaign
- Observational Analysis of the Electrical and Kinematic Structure of a Tornadic Supercell
- Observations of Severe Storms by a Low-Power, Polarimetric, Phased-Array Mobile Radar
- Observations of ZDR columns in supercells in 2019 by a mobile, dual-polarized, phased array radar
- A Case Study of Kinematical, Microphysical, and Lightning Characteristics of a Tornadic Supercell
- Investigating the Coupling of Supercell Dynamics and Microphysics through Lightning and Cold Pools
- Analysis of a ZDR Column Footprint Relative Lightning Flash Size Distribution during the 19 May 2013 Norman--Shawnee Supercell
- Texas A&M University Mobile Facility Measurements during TRACER Field Campaign Report
- Investigating temporal characteristics of polarimetric and electrical signatures in three severe storms: Insights from the VORTEX-Southeast field campaign
- Spatially distributed atmospheric boundary layer properties in Houston – A value-added observational dataset
- TAMU TRACER: Targeted Mobile Measurements to Isolate the Impacts of Aerosols and Meteorology on Deep Convection
- Observed variability in convective cell characteristics and near-storm environments across the sea and bay-breeze fronts in southeast Texas
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Co-workers & collaborators
- CN
Christopher Nowotarski
- AR
Anita Rapp
- SB
Sarah Brooks
- ST
Seth Thompson
- BC
Bo Chen
- RT
Robin Tanamachi