Father, husband, and hydrology & remote sensing professor at Tsinghua University. Passionate about running, swimming, and water & remote sensing research
Thank The Guardian for reporting our recent paper @ScienceAdvances on ocean greenness decline using multi-source data and an AI model. https://t.co/cAGKem2d12 @MichaelEMann@NASAOcean@theAGU
Glad to share that our study on monitoring global river water levels using the Sentinel-3 satellites has just been published at Nature Communications: https://t.co/4GsDLS0YCH
"World’s oceans losing their greenness through global heating, study finds" | Great piece by @JonathanWatts for The @Guardian on our (Hong, @DiLong5 et al) new article in @ScienceAdvances: https://t.co/iciiSLDP81
A new study finds the ocean’s “greenness” is in decline—and the increasing loss of phytoplankton will alter the marine carbon cycle. https://t.co/QrxsCvexUS
C.N. Yang has passed, age 103.
Yang was awarded the Nobel prize at 35, for parity violation (shared with T.D. Lee). But his greatest contribution was probably Yang-Mills theory, now referred to as gauge theory. When I was a student the former designation was as common as the latter.
Freeman Dyson called Yang "the pre-eminent stylist of 20th-century physics".
"Dr. Yang's sense of mathematical beauty turns his least important calculations into miniature works of art, and turns his deeper speculations into masterpieces."
Dyson believed only Albert Einstein and Paul Dirac exceeded Yang as stylists in physics.
Ocean phytoplankton nurtures ecosystems and keeps the climate livable, but new research suggests that the biological carbon pump is breaking down due to global warming.
https://t.co/l4Ui9zIi54
"Declining ocean greenness and phytoplankton blooms in low to mid-latitudes under a warming climate" | Our (Hong et al) new article in @AAAS@ScienceAdvances: https://t.co/SreU3s07Ke
"Earth’s Oceans Lose Some of Their Luster" | Nice piece by @bberwyn in @InsideClimate news on our (Hong et al) new @ScienceAdvances article: https://t.co/ww5nmtAHRR
Unprecedented groundwater recovery (~0.7 m/yr) driven by water diversions, strict pumping regulations, and a wet climate occurred in the North China Plain after decades of depletion, showing large-scale recovery is possible under human intervention. https://t.co/CIcfKG9YQn
Our study "Global dominance of seasonality in shaping lake-surface-extent dynamics" is now published in @Nature. We reveal how seasonal rhythms govern the dynamics of ~1.4 million lakes globally.
🔗 https://t.co/0ZQYFJpIJd
#ClimateChange#RemoteSensing#Hydrology#LakeDynamic
Recently I had the privilege of revisiting the Three Gorges Reservoir (TGR) after 19 years since my days as a junior student. The evolving climate is altering reservoir functions. In the extreme 2022 drought in the Yangtze, TGR struggled to impound water #ClimateChange#Hydrology
Our study delves into deriving weekly reservoir water storage through a unique blend of optical and SAR imagery along with satellite altimetry, revealing Lancang River played a pivotal role in alleviating the severe 2019-2020 drought of Mekong River. 🌊🛰️https://t.co/MfGhfuypOG
The "Rivers and Lakes" collection published by Nature Communications (https://t.co/DCk0J1uRwd). I'm delighted to share that our paper on the eight-century reconstruction of streamflow in the Tibetan Plateau using tree ring data has been included in this collection.
Final program of the upcoming Gordon Conference on Catchment Science 2023. There will be lots of fantastic events. Welcome to attend it.
https://t.co/MU2IePhAV9
See some of the fantastic talks lined up for GRS/GRC this year. As an early career researcher, you have two more days (!) to apply for an oral presentation yourself https://t.co/7cIhGgZV4E @nativehydro@LiReactiveWater@shanagland@keiyoshi08
Glad to share we developed a Soil Moisture to Runoff (SM2R) model for estimating monthly streamflow for ungauged basins using soil moisture dynamics from reanalysis data without invoking gauging station data.
https://t.co/wMIZxJAW2A