Raffaele Ferrari

Cecil & Ida Green Professor of Oceanography
Co-Director, MIT Lorenz Center
Phone
Office
54-1620

Bio

Professor Raffaele Ferrari is a physical oceanographer building next-generation models to understand ocean circulation and the inner workings of climate. He is interested in the role of the ocean in climate. His research group focuses on turbulence in the ocean and atmosphere, the impact of ocean turbulence on marine biology and the carbon cycle, and the role of the ocean in present, past, and future climates.

He is co-principal investigator on two ambitious projects that are building new, higher-resolution climate modeling tools: the Climate Modeling Alliance (CliMA), co-led with Caltech Professor Tapio Schneider, is a Caltech-JPL-MIT collaboration to develop a next-generation climate model that leverages AI tools to learn from observations; and Bringing Computation to the Climate Challenge, co-led with MIT Professor Noelle Selin, is an MIT Climate Grand Challenges project aimed at developing fast emulators of full climate models to democratize access to climate information. I’m also principal investigator of the Bottom Boundary Layer observational program in the North Atlantic to study deep ocean turbulence. 

Raffaele Ferrari joined the EAPS faculty in 2002. Prior to arriving at MIT, he was a postdoctoral scholar at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Ferrari served as the chair of the EAPS Program in Atmospheres, Oceans and Climate from 2012-2022 and is currently co-Director of the MIT Lorenz Center, a think-tank created to attract a diverse community interested in the fundamentals of climate science.

Education & Credentials

BS & MS, Physics, Università di Torino, 1994
PhD, Fluid Dynamics, Politecnico di Torino, 1999
PhD, Oceanography, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, 2000