Saturday, December 28, 2024

Arizona, phoenix and ASU

This is Kosame writing again haha

After I finished AGU24 in Washington, DC, I also headed to Phoenix, Arizona to meet up with an old friend of ours, Moiz !


Moiz is now working as a postdoctoral researcher at Arizona State University, and as one of my mentors and a good friend, I felt I had to seize the opportunity to meet him in the United States.

About Arizona, Phoenix and Tempe

Unlike Washington, D.C., far to the east, Arizona is located in the southwest of the United States, and the Colorado River runs through the state until it empties into the Gulf of California in Mexico.

The Arizona State University I visited is located in Phoenix, the capital city of Arizona, which is also the fifth largest city in the United States.

Mention of Arizona, can not be separated from the Grand Canyon and that bright deep red, as if mixed with purple sunset color is the name card of the state.


According to Moiz, the best season in Phoenix is winter, different from the summer when the temperature is more than 40 degrees, the winter here has been maintained at about 25 degrees, and the air is far from dry, it can be said to be quite pleasant.

The sky here is always blue, and the towering red mountains and the oasis of the city together constitute a blue - red - green color of the city landscape.

What a place.

About ASU

Arizona State University (ASU) is a public research university in the United States. Its educational philosophy is "first-class education, no one is forgotten", committed to providing students with quality education and promoting social development.

ASU's hydrology program is particularly suited for students interested in water management in arid regions, climate change adaptation, and interdisciplinary research. Its strong research centres and practical projects provide students with a wealth of learning and practical opportunities, particularly in the areas of urban water management and hydrological sustainability.

My first impression of it was a huge oasis in the middle of a red desert. The whole campus is very large, and the greening is meticulous and neat, and you can feel that every grass, tree, flower and tree in the campus are carefully and seriously treated. The convenient transportation and convenience stores everywhere give me the illusion that I am not in the United States. Coincidentally, I arrived at the time of the official graduation season for American college students. The campus is full of graduates taking graduation photos.


ASU is indeed full of beauty and dignity.

About our meet

Moiz and I haven't seen each other in a year, and while we maintain at least a bi-weekly online meeting, it's much more enjoyable to see someone in person and have a face-to-face conversation.

Moiz showed me a lot of research done by teachers and students in his school. They were all very "Solid". I felt that they were all very practical and novel. For instance, Moiz is working on identifying drought signals in Arizona. hourly and 1km data are used for analysis to analyze how drought conditions change in Arizona, and the entire research data are open access. The NOAA National Water Model CONUS Retrospective Dataset, Neural hydrology and other new technologies with open access are all very exciting. 

The most striking thing is that most of the research here is combined with machine learning, using machine learning to analyze rainfall, analyze water quality and so on. These are built on top of the Supercomputing Center (SOL) provided by ASU, which provides a total of 21,000 CPUs and 290 A100 Gpus, and students and faculty at school can obtain a virtual computing environment at any time upon request. This is quite surprising.

At the end

I have to say, it's been a short time, but I like Phoenix better than Washington, DC. Love it for its canyon fortitude and its oasis of vitality. Considering that both TSMC and Intel are building new factories in Phoenix, I think technology will be synonymous with the city's future.

Best
From Kosame


AGU 2024 Kawasaki Group

Hi everyone this is Kosame writing!

This time we crossed the ocean to attend AGU 2024 from December 8th - 15th in Washington, D.C.!



It is reported that more than 25,000 participants from more than 100 countries attended the annual meeting this year. As the world's largest Earth and space science event, scientists, educators, and policymakers from around the world come to answer the question, "What's next for science?"

At the site, there are many lectures and poster exhibitions every day, including, of course, the familiar field of hydrology.

There are a lot of exciting things, including meeting with the developers I use the model. The feasibility, accuracy and application range of the model for dam operation restoration are discussed. I believe there will be more cooperation in the future.

When it comes to hydrological models, researchers in different fields and different contents use different models. However, we can still find some "mainstream" : the HAND flood Model and NOAA National Water Model are used or mentioned many times, and researchers in American universities say that they have good data support and ease of use.

Dam renovation is an area of interest to me, and I have seen a lot of research focused on this area. For example, in Brazil and the United States, there are many studies on the construction of solar panels on the surface of reservoirs. On the one hand, solar panels can supplement and adjust the entire power system of DAMS. On the other hand, in areas with strong sunlight, solar panels can effectively reduce water evaporation from reservoirs.


Besides, I also enjoyed some very good lectures. Some of them are eye-opening, such as a talk about hydrological research and the relationship between languages, which is an unimagined Angle. Of course, Kawasaki sensei also spoke on stage about our research.

All in all we had a very good time in AGU24. In addition to the academic content, we also took a tour of Washington, DC.


Washington, D.C. 's warm winter sun and parks are charming.
Warmly,
Kosame



Thursday, December 26, 2024

 

~世界銀行 東京防災ハブ セミナーに  川崎が登壇します ~

【セミナー】世界銀行東京防災ハブ「リスクからレジリエンスへ」 

(English will follow)

世界銀行 東京防災ハブ 公開セミナー「リスクからレジリエンスへ:世界銀行における自然災害迅速被害推定(GRADE)の成果、イノベーションと今後の展開 」をご案内します。皆様、奮ってご参加ください。

セミナーでは 川崎 が登壇します。

講演2 気候適応策としての治水投資による貧困と格差の削減

東京大学未来ビジョン研究センター 教授 川崎昭如

 

【イベント詳細】

●日時:2025年1月8日(水)午後3時30分~午後5時15分

●開催形式

ハイブリット(会場参加またはWebexによるオンライン参加)

●場所 (会場参加者)

世界銀行東京事務所   東京都千代田区内幸町2-2-2 富国生命ビル14

Tokyo Development Learning Center (TDLC)スタジオ

●使用言語: 日本語、英語(同時通訳付)

●参加費: 無料

●お申込み及びプログラム詳細 : 以下の登録フォームからお申込みください(要参加登録)。

 https://www.worldbank.org/ja/events/2025/01/08/24th-disaster-risk-management-seminar-tokyo-organized-by-the-world-bank-gfdrr-drmhubtokyo?abc


ご案内

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Whwo-FCG9fw1_8x-h41xtImSbMZ9mWws/view?usp=drive_link

 ----------------------------------

【Seminar】World Bank Tokyo DRM Hub/Disaster Risk Management Seminar

Notice for

Disaster Risk Management Seminar organized by the World Bank Tokyo DRM Hub Public symposium : From Risk to Resilience: Achievements, Innovations and Opportunities of the Global Rapid post-disaster Damage Estimation (GRADE) at the World Bank.

We welcome your participation.

Kawasaki will be speaking at the seminar:

2nd presentation

Reducing Poverty and Inequality through Flood Control Investments as a Climate Adaptation Strategy

Professor Akiyuki Kawasaki

Institute for Future Initiatives, The University of Tokyo

 

EVENT DETAILS

DATE/TIME: January 8, 2025, Wednesday,15:30 -17:15

FORMAT:

Hybrid (In-person participation or online participation by Webex)

VENUE (In-person): World Bank Tokyo Office

 (Fukoku Seimei Building 14th floor, 2-2-2 Uchisaiwaicho, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo)

LANGUAGE: English and Japanese (with simultaneous interpretation)

ADMISSION: Free

For registration and details, please access from here:

 

https://www.worldbank.org/en/events/2025/01/08/24th-disaster-risk-management-seminar-tokyo-organized-by-the-world-bank-gfdrr-drmhubtokyo