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One of the questions that guides and passionates me is the physical understanding of liquid-gas interactions. In 2017, I received my PhD degree from Ecole Centrale de Lyon (France) in Fluid Dynamics where I developed and code a novel shallow-water type model to represent a thin liquid film sheared by water vapor in steam turbines. With the motivation to take part in climate research, I became a climate postdoctoral researcher at LOCEAN-IPSL (Paris, France). I investigated the role of sea-ice on local and large-scale atmospheric and oceanic circulations for scales ranging from interannual to hundreds of years. In 2021, I joined the Institute Dom Luiz (University of Lisbon, Portugal) as a postdoctoral Researcher where I continued to work on ocean-atmosphere interactions but with a particular focus on extreme events in the North Atlantic and the Mediterranean. Since September 2023, I have been working at the IMT-Atlantique (Plouzané, France) on abrupt changes in the Arctic with clustering/machine learning techniques.

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I participated in several international projects (Blue-Action, Archange, Gotham, Roadmap, CLIMArcTIC). I also won a grant from the IPSL-2020 call to study the troposphere-stratosphere interactions in the Arctic (ROQBAR project, 5 collaborators). Besides, I embarked on two oceanographic cruises (MOOSE-GE in 2018 (2 weeks) and PIRATA in 2021 (2 months)) and I was involved in outreach climate events (Festival of Science, Train du Climat, French Science Academia…). I am currently co-editor of the special issue on sea ice-ocean interactions hosted by Frontiers in Marine Science.

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