Rong Fu

Rong Fu

Actor

Rong Fu is a Chinese climatologist, meteorologist, researcher, professor, and published author with more than 100 articles, books, and projects detailing the changes that occur in Earth's atmosphere and how that affects areas such as climate, seasons, rainfall, and the like. Dr. Rong Fu has been invited to present and attend over 115 presentations, seminars, and administered over 32 projects that received over 11 million dollars in funding. The focus of Dr. Fu’s research is convection; cloud and precipitation processes and their role in climate, atmospheric transport in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere, the interaction between the atmosphere and ocean and land/ vegetation, satellite remote sensing applications and retrievals, the interaction between rainfall rates and the rainforest in regions of the Amazon in South America, and drought prediction in states across the United States, including California and Texas. She is currently a professor in the Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Department at UCLA and the associate director of UCLA's Joint Instititute for Regional Earth System Science and Engineering. She is also an adjunct professor in the Jackson School of Geosciences at the University of Texas at Austin.
Rong Fu is a Chinese climatologist, meteorologist, researcher, professor, and published author with more than 100 articles, books, and projects detailing the changes that occur in Earth's atmosphere and how that affects areas such as climate, seasons, rainfall, and the like. Dr. Rong Fu has been invited to present and attend over 115 presentations, seminars, and administered over 32 projects that received over 11 million dollars in funding. The focus of Dr. Fu’s research is convection; cloud and precipitation processes and their role in climate, atmospheric transport in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere, the interaction between the atmosphere and ocean and land/ vegetation, satellite remote sensing applications and retrievals, the interaction between rainfall rates and the rainforest in regions of the Amazon in South America, and drought prediction in states across the United States, including California and Texas. She is currently a professor in the Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Department at UCLA and the associate director of UCLA's Joint Instititute for Regional Earth System Science and Engineering. She is also an adjunct professor in the Jackson School of Geosciences at the University of Texas at Austin.