AOML scientists honored at AMS 2026 ceremony - NOAA/AOML
AOML Communications
Published on: January 27, 2026
On
Posted on
January 27, 2026
by
AOML Communications
to
Events
Featured at NOAA
AOML scientists honored at AMS 2026 ceremony
Sundararaman “Gopal” Gopalakrishnan, PhD,
senior meteorologist in the Hurricane Research Division (HRD) at NOAA’s Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory, has been elected a
Fellow
of the American Meteorological Society (AMS). Fellows are elected for their “outstanding contributions to the atmospheric or related oceanic or hydrologic sciences or their applications during a substantial period of years.” Gopal is the head of the HRD modeling group and is currently serving as the developmental manager for NOAA’s
Hurricane Forecast Improvement Program
(HFIP). Gopal has over 60 publications in peer-reviewed international journals and has served as an Associate Editor for the Monthly Weather Review and Weather and Forecasting.
HRD scientists
Ghassan J Alaka Jr
and
Frank D. Marks
(retired) and CIMAS scientist
Andrew Hazelton
, with partners Xiaomin Chen and Chunxi Zhang, were presented with the
Banner I. Miller Award
at the 2026 AMS conference in Houston, Texas. The Banner I. Miller Award is given biannually for an outstanding contribution to the science of hurricane and tropical weather forecasting published in a journal with international circulation during the 48 months prior to the deadline for nominations. The team was awarded this honor for developing a high-wind boundary-layer parameterization scheme that advances the intensity, including rapid intensification, and forecast skill of NOAA’s operational
Hurricane Analysis and Forecast System (HAFS)
model.
These honors underscore the outstanding contributions of our scientists and the critical role of AOML in advancing hurricane research.
Tags
awards
Previous
Previous post:
Employing ‘Omics techniques to examine crucial restoration efforts across the Mission: Iconic Reefs
Next
Next post:
In the wake of hurricanes: satellites and robots reveal an altered biogeochemical landscape
US