Gretchen Keppel-Aleks
Gretchen Keppel-Aleks is an American scientist and associate professor at the University of Michigan in the College of Engineering's department of Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering. She primarily focuses on Earth's climate and the effects of greenhouse gasses on Earth's atmosphere. Keppel-Aleks has been named a Kavli Fellow by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.
Career and research
Career history
Keppel-Aleks began her academic career working as a research assistant during both her undergraduate and graduate and studies. Currently, Keppel-Aleks works as a research assistant at the University of Michigan. She works in the department of Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering.Under the supervision of Paul O. Wennberg, Keppel-Aleks completed her dissertation in 2012. Her thesis, titled "Constraints on the global carbon budget from variations in total column carbon dioxide", examines the importance of evaluating patterns of CO2 when predicting models of global climate change.
Research
Keppel-Aleks fields of interests are: the carbon cycle and climate interactions, the remote sensing of atmospheric gasses and vegetation properties, Earth System modeling, and atmospheric tracer transport.Keppel-Aleks has made many notable research contributions, especially surrounding greenhouse gas emissions and global climate change. She led several research projects, such as a project titled "Developing a Mechanistic Understanding of Variability in the Atmospheric CO2 Growth Rate Owing to Interannual Climate Oscillations", in which scientists explored how Earth systems react to a changing climate. She has also participates in NASA's OCO-2 research team, in which she and 20 other scientists work to investigate how human populations interact with, and contribute to the presence of CO2 in Earth's atmosphere.