Matthew C. Wheeler: h-index, Total Citations, and Citation Map
Matthew C. Wheeler's h-index is 55 (94 i10-index, 32,764+ total citations across 219+ publications) according to Google Scholar as of June 2026. Matthew C. Wheeler is affiliated with Bureau of Meteorology.
Matthew C. Wheeler is a researcher affiliated with Bureau of Meteorology, specializing in Tropical meteorology, monsoons, equatorial waves. Their work has been cited 32,764 times. This profile visualizes their global influence, spanning a global audience.
Matthew C. Wheeler's Citation Metrics
Bibliometric impact based on 219 indexed publications. Of these, 3 are original research articles — the rest are literature highlights, conference abstracts or theses.
- H-Index
- 55
- i10-Index
- 94
- Total Citations
- 32,764
- Citing Countries
- 0
As of June 2026.
Matthew C. Wheeler has an h-index of 55 and 32,764 total citations across 219 publications, with research cited by institutions in 0 countries.
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Climate change 2007-the physical science basis: Working group I contribution to the fourth assessment report of the IPCC
200711,870
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Citation Trend (Last 10 Years)
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About Matthew C. Wheeler's research
Matthew C. Wheeler is a researcher in Tropical meteorology, monsoons and equatorial waves at Bureau of Meteorology. Their work has been cited 32,764 times across 219 publications (h-index 55), according to Google Scholar.
Their most-cited work, “Climate change 2007-the physical science basis: Working group I contribution to the fourth assessment report of the IPCC” (2007), has accumulated 11,870 citations. Other influential works include “An all-season real-time multivariate MJO index: Development of an index for monitoring and prediction” (2004) with 3,809 citations and “Convectively coupled equatorial waves: Analysis of clouds and temperature in the wavenumber–frequency domain” (1999) with 2,292 citations.











