Item talk:Q159965
From geokb
orcid:
meta: status_code: 200 timestamp: '2023-10-20T09:25:47.864462' url: https://pub.orcid.org/v3.0/0000-0001-5141-026X/record orcid: activities: {} history: claimed: true completion-date: null creation-method: DIRECT deactivation-date: null last-modified-date: value: 1658877164989 source: null submission-date: value: 1658877140572 verified-email: true verified-primary-email: true person: name: created-date: value: 1658877140847 credit-name: null family-name: value: Hiestand given-names: value: Mikael last-modified-date: value: 1658877140847 path: 0000-0001-5141-026X source: null visibility: public
usgs_staff_profile:
meta: url: https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/mikael-p-hiestand timestamp: '2024-01-30T22:16:54.703188' status_code: 200 profile: name: Mikael P Hiestand, Ph.D. name_qualifier: null titles: - Mendenhall Fellow organizations: - !!python/tuple - Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center - https://www.usgs.gov/centers/eros email: mhiestand@usgs.gov orcid: 0000-0001-5141-026X intro_statements: - Dr. Mikael Hiestand is a Mendenhall Fellow and research geographer with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center and the University of California, Santa Barbara Climate Hazard Center. expertise_terms: - Climate Science - Remote Sensing - Evapotranspiration - Synoptic Climatology - Synoptic Climatology - Surface Energy Fluxes professional_experience: - '2022 to present: Mendenhall Postdoctoral Fellow, United States Geological Survey Earth Resources Observation and Science Center and University of California Santa Barbara Climate Hazards Center' education: [] affiliations: [] honors: [] abstracts: [] personal_statement: Dr. Mikael Hiestand is a Mendenhall Fellow and research geographer with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center and the University of California, Santa Barbara Climate Hazard Center. Mikael completed his M.S. and Ph.D. Geography and Climate Science at The Pennsylvania State University. His dissertation work focused on how differences in moisture fluxes from midwestern croplands and forests interact with synoptic patterns to influence spatial patterns in convective cloud systems. Mikael is currently working on using remotely sensed vegetation data for enhanced drought monitoring and evapotranspiration prediction.