*** Welcome to piglix ***

Helmut Landsberg

Helmut Erich Landsberg
Helmutlandsberg.png
Born February 9, 1906
Frankfurt, Germany
Died December 6, 1985 (1985-12-07) (aged 79)
Geneva, Switzerland
Citizenship United States
Institutions

University of Frankfurt
Pennsylvania State University
University of Chicago

NOAA
University of Maryland
Alma mater University of Frankfurt
Doctoral advisor Beno Gutenberg
Known for Climatology
Notable awards National Medal of Science (1983)

University of Frankfurt
Pennsylvania State University
University of Chicago

Helmut Erich Landsberg (1906–1985) was a noted and influential climatologist. He was born in Frankfurt, Germany, February 9, 1906 and died December 6, 1985 in Geneva, Switzerland while attending a meeting of the World Meteorological Organization. Landsberg was an important figure in meteorology and atmospheric science in education, public service and administration. He authored several notable works, particularly in the field of particulate matter and its influence on air pollution and human health. He is the first to write in English about the use of statistical analysis in the field of climatology and implemented such statistical analysis in aiding military operations during World War II. He received a number of significant honors during his life. Several honors are now bestowed in his name in recognition of his contributions to his field.

Landsberg received his Ph.D. from the University of Frankfurt in Germany, where Beno Gutenberg was his advisor. Gutenberg was a pupil of the founder of modern seismology Emil Johann Wiechert. and served as a director of the Taunus Observatory of Geophysics and Meteorology at that university before moving to the United States in 1934 to teach geophysics and meteorology at the Pennsylvania State University. While there, he offered a graduate seminar on bioclimatic problems, the first such graduate course to be taught in the United States. He was subsequently appointed to the faculties of the University of Chicago (1941) and the University of Maryland (1967), with which he continued to work until his death. At Maryland, he served as first Director of the Graduate program in Meteorology (later named the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science), and of the Institute for Fluid Dynamics and Applied Mathematics.


...
Wikipedia

...