Courses

Courses taught at UCLA by Holger Brix (hbrix@ucla.edu)



AOS3:
Introduction to Atmospheric Environment

Syllabus (spring quarter '09)
Lecture, three hours; discussion, one hour. Nature and causes of weather phenomena, including atmospheric circulation, clouds and storms, lightning and precipitation, fronts and cyclones, and tornadoes and hurricanes. Atmospheric radiation, global warming, and greenhouse effect. P/NP or letter grading.

Dates: MWF, 11:00A-11:50A, WGYOUNG CS76 (Click here for the official class pages or here to download the syllabus.



AOS1:
Climate Change: from Puzzles to Policy

Syllabus (summer and fall quarters '08)
Lecture, four hours. Overview of fundamentals of Earth's climate, including greenhouse effect, water and chemical cycles, outstanding features of atmospheric and ocean circulation, and feedback between different system components. Exciting and contentious scientific puzzles of climate system, including causes of ice ages, greenhouse warming, and El Niño. Importance of climate science and prediction to society, with emphasis on science's role in identifying, qualifying, and solving environmental problems such as ozone hole and greenhouse warming. P/NP or letter grading.

Fall Dates: TR, 9:30A-10:45A, WGYOUNG CS76 (Click here for the official class pages.)

Summer Dates: TR, 10:45A-12:50P, MS7124 (Click here for the official class pages.)



AOS105/EEB139:
Introduction to Chemical Oceanography

Syllabus (fall quarter '06)
Lecture three hours. Requisite none. Introductory course for physical sciences, life sciences, or engineering majors interested in the oceanic environment.
The chemical composition of the oceans and the nature of the physical, chemical, and biological processes governing this composition in the past and present. The cycles of major and minor oceanic constituents, with focus on those that are most important for life, i.e. carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, silicon, and oxygen. Processes investigated are primary production, export production, remineralization, diagenesis, air-sea gas exchange. Role of ocean biogeochemical cycles for climate. Letter grading

Dates MWF, 11-11:50, MS7124B (Click here for more details)

13MAR09