Helene Hewitt | |
Birth Name: | Helene Theresa Banks |
Workplaces: | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute |
Alma Mater: | Cambridge University University of Southampton |
Thesis Title: | Intrusions and mixing in the Western Equatorial Pacific Ocean. |
Thesis Url: | http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/53655962 |
Thesis Year: | 1996 |
Helene Hewitt is a British climate scientist who is a research fellow at the Met Office. Her research considers climate and ocean models. Hewitt serves on the CLIVAR Ocean Model Development Panel. She was awarded an Order of the British Empire in the 2022 Birthday Honours.
Hewitt grew up in Wombourne, Staffordshire, where she attended Ounsdale High School. She studied mathematics at the University of Cambridge, where she was a student at Fitzwilliam College. Hewitt was a doctoral researcher at the University of Southampton, where she studied the Western Equatorial Pacific Ocean.[1] She worked on the World Ocean Circulation Experiment and at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution as a doctoral student.
In 1996, Hewitt joined the Met Office, where she has developed and assessed climate models. In 2003, Hewitt was made Head of Ocean and Sea Ice model development. Hewitt's model, HadGEM3, combined NEMO and CICE, computational models which simulate the movement of sea ice and ocean circulation.
Hewitt coordinated the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report on the Ocean, Cryosphere and Sea Level Change.[2] She oversees the Ocean Modelling group at the Met Office Hadley Centre, where she develops global and shelf configurations for coupled predictions across multiple different timescales.
Hewitt was appointed an Order of the British Empire in the 2022 Birthday Honours.[3]