Researcher | Editorial Board Member | Urban Climate & Atmospheric Modeling
Exploring urban-climate interactions through high-resolution modeling
I am a climate scientist specializing in urban climate, extreme weather events, regional weather and climate modeling, and land–atmosphere interactions. My work examines how evolving land-use and land-cover patterns interact with atmospheric processes to shape high-impact events such as heat waves, urban heat islands, and extreme precipitation. I use a combination of reanalysis products, global climate model simulations, and convection-permitting regional models (WRF/UrbanWRF) to understand the physical mechanisms driving these extremes and to quantify their changes across scales—from neighborhoods to megaregions.
My research integrates data-driven analysis, urban systems modeling, and climate diagnostics to generate actionable insights for cities adapting to a warming world. I collaborate with interdisciplinary partners to evaluate climate risk, improve extreme-event attribution, and develop science-based strategies that support resilience planning for urban communities. Ultimately, my goal is to bridge advanced climate modeling with real-world decision-making, helping cities anticipate and respond to intensifying heat, flooding, and compound climate hazards.
Research: Urbanization and its Interaction with Weather and Climate
Specialization: Remote Sensing & GIS
Specialization: Agricultural Engineering
Arizona State University
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
CSIR Fourth Paradigm Institute
National Institute of Technology, Rourkela
Galgotias University, Greater Noida
Urban heat islands, land use change impacts, urbanization effects on local climate
High-resolution WRF simulations, model sensitivity studies, parameterization schemes
Extreme precipitation events, monsoon variability, climate change impacts
Satellite data analysis, land cover classification, geospatial modeling