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Posts by Eric Bruning

Those are some nontrivial differences! For my electrification interests, the droplet and graupel sensitivities are obviously quite important. Seems like a result that should inform our current and future electricity forward modeling work.

1 hour ago 1 1 0 0

Neat that the right hand branch from tower 1 stays illuminated while there’s cutoff and darts on the left through the same channel base. Would be interesting to see if a simple two-branch system with varied charge density could reproduce these cutoff dynamics in the Pantuso and da Silva model.

1 week ago 1 0 1 0

Possibly a decoy emissary from the P3 microphysics scheme, proceed with caution.

1 week ago 4 0 0 0

GLM has been game-changing
for the community that monitors meteors. Great example!

It’s also one of the many new capabilities that would be lost in the current plan to stop flying a GLM-like instrument after the current fleet reaches end of life.

1 month ago 14 6 0 0

The full complaint is worth a read. There are several additional overreaches in there that I wasn't previously aware of.

1 month ago 29 11 1 2
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White House plan to break up iconic U.S. climate lab moves forward Bidders have lined up to take over pieces of the National Center for Atmospheric Research

My latest for @science.org on the fraught future of NCAR as NSF's deadline nears. It can still go so many ways.

1 month ago 114 89 4 7

Yes, I’m receiving reports of an intensifying lake effect band

1 month ago 1 0 1 0
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What the National Center for Atmospheric Research means to the atmospheric sciences Born out of a time of great need for the federal government, NCAR plays a role with few analogues.

Great piece out today in Physics Today on historical origins, contemporary relevance, & fundamental irreplaceability of the National Center for Atmospheric Research, which remains at imminent risk of dismantling for partisan political reasons.

2 months ago 331 180 6 2
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Code sprints are social so you don’t need to run solo.

I’ll be happy if at least one person gets the reference, but it’s more likely this joke will crash.

2 months ago 1 0 1 0
A Carbone brand glass jar of marinara cheekily annotated with the number 42

A Carbone brand glass jar of marinara cheekily annotated with the number 42

Running a grad student code sprint tonight with a spaghetti meal. We have this sauce for fans of the history of weather radar color maps. @pyart.bsky.social

2 months ago 7 0 1 0

As the AMS Annual Meeting approaches, don’t forget that TTU Atmospheric Science is hiring for two faculty positions. We’ll be at the meeting and can visit if you have any questions in advance of the application deadline.

3 months ago 10 5 0 0
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Zeynep Tufecki on having the wrong nightmares about generative AI I was writing a blog post where I was going to reference Zeynep Tufecki’s 2025 NeurIPS keynote, and realized there isn’t a solid synopsis online.

Wrote a summary of a great keynote by @zey.bsky.social at NeurIPS, arguing that we’re having the wrong nightmares about AI: not AGI or superhuman benchmarks, but good-enough genAI at scale threatens "load bearing frictions" society relies on to signal effort, authenticity, sincerity, credibility.

3 months ago 81 27 2 1
Job announcement for Texas Tech University flood monitoring and modeling system

Job announcement for Texas Tech University flood monitoring and modeling system

🚨 METEOROLOGICAL JOB ANNOUNCEMENT 🚨

In response to the deadly flooding event that occurred in the Texas Hill Country this past summer, TTU has received $24M from the state legislature to develop and implement a weather measurement and modeling system to serve the state.

4 months ago 7 9 0 0
Score report from the ESPN app’s Lock Screen feature, showing a TTU victory

Score report from the ESPN app’s Lock Screen feature, showing a TTU victory

Score report from the full ESPN app, showing an Arkansas victory

Score report from the full ESPN app, showing an Arkansas victory

Second game in a row where the lock screen score is opposite the in-app score. You’ve got a bug, @espn.com!

4 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Do you love to write code or teach others about data-centered Earth Systems Science? Interested in the interplay of science and data? The NSF Unidata Summer Internship program is looking for you! Apply by February 6, 2026 to work with us next summer: buff.ly/5nsLdRu

4 months ago 21 18 0 0

I continue to be surprised every time this happens to me! Facts show I must grudgingly accept it.

4 months ago 3 0 0 0

Even if changes were all in summer I still might not see them until mid-semester when I reran a particular bit of code the one time I needed it. Long-term stability is a bigger help than specific timing.

It’s vexing w.r.t. devs wanting to move things forward vs. users’ intermittency.

4 months ago 1 0 0 0

Adding my own ux reaction/fears here, the challenge in tracking this down is that there are about 20 versions of the underlying library in between, it’s a low-level change affecting a core operation, and, practically, it’s unknown if I need to spend 10 min or a day to figure it out.

4 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Example: this worked in xarray 2023.4.2 with no warnings but in 2025.06.0: “IndexError: arrays used as indices must be of integer (or boolean) type.” No idea what changed.

ix = {'track': [slice(1, 2, None), slice(4, 5, None)], 'cell': [np.int64(1), np.int64(4), np.int64(49),]}
ds = ds[ix]

4 months ago 1 0 1 0

My re-teach cycle is about 2 yrs., so a bit longer than that would be ideal. Feels like I see some new decision/persnicketiness on that cycle with some regularity. Really breaks flow of lecture prep when you have to switch to debugging coder brain to get the red (warnings) out.

4 months ago 3 0 1 0

Took advantage of being sick today to make a joke about amplitude and phase shifts to my voice as part of an exam review on the frequency domain. 😎

4 months ago 7 0 1 0

Thomas Kinkade bad CGI front exterior

5 months ago 0 0 0 0

Calling all ensemble forecast system enthusiasts! The State of Texas is funding development of a new ensemble prediction system (100 members, 2km grid spacing) with an embedded WoFS interface, to be developed at Texas Tech! Passing along 3 open research scientist positions towards that development:

5 months ago 26 14 3 2

Nope!

5 months ago 2 0 1 0

Texas Tech Geosciences is hiring two open-rank Atmospheric Science faculty positions in Precipitation Hazards, and in Data Science; part of an interdisciplinary, multi-year Atmospheric Hazards Strategic Hire. See the details for the Precipitation and Data Science positions and join us in fall 2026!

5 months ago 9 16 0 1

I have been wondering what is the driving philosophy of the present political moment. Focus here is placed on a particular philosophy of apocalyptic thinking, not the politics of WWII Germany.

6 months ago 3 0 0 0
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Yeah, that’s more than enough. I think a fair share is 3x the amount of your first and student authored papers each year. I bet you’ve exceeded that?

7 months ago 1 0 1 0

Good read on an advancement in the fundamental mathematical physics that we use to quantify the atmosphere. Fun to imagine how the result might also apply to improved statistical representations of cloud and precipitation particle interactions.

8 months ago 3 0 0 0
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DOE climate report response form We are collecting names to assemble a writing team to respond to the DOE climate working group report. If you'd like to contribute, enter your info below. At this point, there is no guarantee what we'll do (if anything), but we want to keep our options open by collecting names. If you have any further questions, feel free to email me. We are primarily looking for Ph.D. scientists at universities or government labs in appropriate fields. I realize that this will exclude some qualified people and I apologize, but we felt this was necessary for a variety of reasons.

🚨 If you're interested in working on a coordinated response to the DOE climate report, please enter your info on this google form 🚨

Please RT this so as many people see it as possible.

forms.gle/BL9xUAfRxA...

8 months ago 201 236 12 17

“If the U.S. is no longer the world’s technoscientific superpower, it will almost certainly suffer for the change. … Science itself, in the global sense, will be fine. The deep human curiosities that drive it do not belong to any nation-state. An American abdication will only hurt America.”

8 months ago 6 3 0 0