
Member Since 2005
Andy F. Thompson
Professor of Environmental Science and Engineering, California Institute of Technology
Professional Experience
California Institute of Technology
Professor of Environmental Science and Engineering
2011 - Present
Education
University of California San Diego
Doctorate
Honors & Awards
Outstanding Reviewer Award - JGR-Oceans
Received December 2017
Ocean Sciences Early Career Award
Received December 2013
Andrew Thompson received the 2013 Ocean Sciences Early Career Award at the 2013 AGU Fall Meeting, held 9–13 December in San Francisco, Calif. The award recognizes “significant contributions to and promise in the ocean sciences.”
Andrew Thompson received the 2013 Ocean Sciences Early Career Award at the 2013 AGU Fall Meeting, held 9–13 December in San Francisco, Calif. The award recognizes “significant contributions to and promise in the ocean sciences.”
Response
I would like to thank my nominator, Jess Adkins, as well as my supporters for their contributions to my nomination and the AGU Ocean Sciences section for its selection. It is an honor to join the past recipients of this award.
I have had the privilege to interact with and learn from a number of talented scientists. The two who deserve the most recognition are Bill Young and Karen Heywood. Bill’s responses to my “quick, 2-minute questions” never lasted less than 2 hours and always required at least one complete covering of the blackboard. I do not remember a time when I left (or staggered from) his office without some new and typically profound idea to consider. It is the mentoring relationship that I strive to emulate with my own students. Karen was brave to hire me when I threw my hat into the observational ring and continues to be supportive of my group’s work. Karen, with her love of a good gadget, is responsible for getting me hooked on ocean gliders, and I am thrilled that it has resulted in us continuing to collaborate on exciting science together.
Based on these influences, it is perhaps not surprising that my research interests have veered toward the intersection of dynamical questions about rotating, stratified, turbulent fluids and the interpretation of these dynamics from hard-earned but ultimately imperfect sets of observations. Pursuing these interests has given me the opportunity to work at a number of diverse institutions, and I especially acknowledge the support of the UK’s Natural Environment Research Council, which provided a great deal of independence shortly after my Ph.D. Along the way I have benefited from conversations with too many people to mention here, although George Veronis, Peter Haynes, Alberto Naveira Garabato, Raf Ferrari, and Jess Adkins have been particularly helpful. Most importantly, this journey would not have been nearly as fun or productive without my family sharing the experience and propping me up along the way.
The combination of autonomous vehicles and satellite products is changing how observations interface with ocean circulation models. Making the best use of these resources will be a challenge for our generation. I look forward to tackling this topic through the always stimulating and often humbling experience of advising students and postdocs. It makes my appreciation of those who have supported me all the stronger.
—ANDREW THOMPSON, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena
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Publications

Submesoscale Eddy Contribution to Ocean Vertical Heat Flux Diagnosed From Airborne Observations
Submesoscale eddies (those smaller than 50 km) are ubiquitous throughout the ocean, as revealed by satellite infrared images. Diagnosing their...
January 14, 2025

Interactions Between Multiple Physical Particle Injection Pu...
December 12, 2024

Tracer Stirring and Variability in the Antarctic Circumpolar...
January 22, 2024
AGU Abstracts
The Greenland Ice Sheet Large Ensemble
MODELING OF THE CRYOSPHERE: GLACIERS AND ICE SHEETS III ORAL
cryosphere | 11 december 2024
Alexander Robel, Vincent Verjans, Lizz Ultee, Hele...
Ice loss from the Greenland Ice Sheet has accelerated in recent decades, potentially driven by a combination of human-caused climate change and intern...
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Ice Shelf Melt Feedbacks in a Circumpolar Model
ICE-OCEAN INTERACTIONS ALONG ANTARCTICA'S CONTINENTAL SHELF I ORAL
ocean sciences | 10 december 2024
Madeleine K. Youngs, Andrew Stewart, Andrew F. Tho...
The rate of ice shelf melt in Antarctica is one of the largest uncertainties for future sea level rise. However, this effect is not included in many c...
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Transient overturning changes cause upper-ocean nutrient decline in a warming climate
ADVANCES IN UNDERSTANDING GLOBAL MERIDIONAL OVERTURNING CIRCULATION FROM PAST TO FUTURE: INSIGHTS FROM MULTIPLE APPROACHES I ORAL
paleoceanography and paleoclimatology | 09 december 2024
Andrew F. Thompson, Shantong Sun, Jimin Yu, Lixin ...
Both numerical models and proxy data suggest that sustained climate warming produces multi-centennial changes in nutrient and biological productivity,...
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Check out all of Andy F. Thompson’s AGU Research!
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