46 Papers
149 Citations
Min Xu is an academic researcher from Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate model & Environmental science. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 43 publications. Previous affiliations of Min Xu include University of Maryland, College Park & Nanjing University.
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Papers
The DOE E3SM v1.1 Biogeochemistry Configuration: Description and Simulated Ecosystem-Climate Responses to Historical Changes in Forcing
Susannah M. Burrows,M. E. Maltrud,Xiaojuan Yang,Qing Zhu,Nicole Jeffery,Xiaoying Shi,Daniel M. Ricciuto,Shanlin Wang,Gautam Bisht,Jinyun Tang,J. D. Wolfe,Bryce E. Harrop,Balwinder Singh,L. Brent,L. Brent,S. Baldwin,Tian Zhou,Philip Cameron-Smith,Noel Keen,Nathan Collier,Min Xu,Elizabeth Hunke,Scott Elliott,Adrian K. Turner,Hongyi Li,Hailong Wang,Jean-Christophe Golaz,Benjamin Bond-Lamberty,Forrest M. Hoffman,Forrest M. Hoffman,William J. Riley,Peter E. Thornton,Katherine Calvin,L. R. Leung +33 more
TL;DR: The Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM), E3SMv1.1-BGC as mentioned in this paper has been used in the Coupled Climate-Carbon Cycle Model Intercomparison Project and other projects to explore the impacts of structural uncertainty in representations of nitrogen and phosphorus limitation.
Regional Climate–Weather Research and Forecasting Model
Xin-Zhong Liang,Min Xu,Xing Yuan,Tiejun Ling,Hyun Il Choi,Feng Zhang,Ligang Chen,Shuyan Liu,Shenjian Su,Fengxue Qiao,Yuxiang He,Julian X. L. Wang,Kenneth E. Kunkel,Wei Gao,Everette Joseph,Vernon R. Morris,Tsann Wang Yu,Jimy Dudhia,John Michalakes +18 more
TL;DR: The CWRF as discussed by the authors is developed as a climate extension of the Weather Research and Forecasting model by incorporating numerous improvements in the representation of physical processes and integration of external (top, surface, lateral) forcings that are crucial to climate scales, including interactions between land, atmosphere, and ocean; convection and microphysics; and cloud, aerosol, and radiation.
148
How Did Urban Land Expand in China between 1992 and 2015? A Multi-Scale Landscape Analysis.
TL;DR: It is found that China experienced a rapid and large-scale process of urban expansion between 1992 and 2015, with urban land increasing in size nearly fivefold and with an average annual growth rate of 8.10%, almost 2.5 times as rapid as the global average.
Regional scale cropland carbon budgets
Xuesong Zhang,Roberto C. Izaurralde,David H. Manowitz,Ritvik Sahajpal,Tristram O. West,Allison M. Thomson,Min Xu,Kaiguang Zhao,Stephen D. LeDuc,James Williams +9 more
TL;DR: A novel geospatial cropland carbon modeling system based on a mechanistic agroecosystem model flexible to be updated and adapted for different agricultural models so long as they require similar input data, and to be linked with socio-economic models to understand the effectiveness and implications of diverse C management practices and policies.