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Appendix D Biographical Sketches of
Committee Members
JACK G. CALVERT has been a Senior Scientist in the
Atmospheric Chemistry and Aeronomy Division of the
National Center for Atmospheric Research since 1982.
He received his Ph.D. in physical chemistry from
U.C.L.A. in 1949 and served one year as National
Research Fellow (Ottawa, Canada) in 1950. He joined
the faculty of The Ohio State University at that time
and was Kimberly Professor of Chemistry from 1974 to
1981. His major research interests are in
photochemistry and tropospheric chemistry.
JAMES N. GALLOWAY is an Associate Professor in the
Department of Environmental Sciences, University of
Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia. He received his
Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of California,
San Diego, in 1972. His research interests are in
aquatic and atmospheric chemistry.
JEREMY M. HALES is Associate Department Manager for the
Geosciences Research and Engineering Department of
Battelle-Pacific Northwest Laboratories. He currently
is Guest Researcher at the Meteorological Institute of
Stockholm University. He received his Ph.D. in
chemical engineering from the University of Michigan
in 1968. His research interests are in simultaneous
mass transfer and chemical reaction in polluted
atmospheric environments, with special applications to
reactive storm-model development.
GEORGE M. HIDY is Vice President and Chief Scientist for
Environmental Research & Technology, Inc. He received
his D.Eng. in chemical engineering from The Johns
Hopkins University in 1962. Since then he has devoted
his research primarily to aerosol science, with
particular concern for atmospheric chemical processes.
Dr. Hidy has pioneered in the study of regional-scale
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atmospheric chemistry of sulfates; he was one of the
designers and principal investigators of the Sulfate
Regional Experiment (SURE).
JAY S. JACOBSON is a plant physiologist in the
Environmental Biology Program of the Boyce Thompson
Institute in Ithaca, New York. He received his Ph.D.
in botany from Columbia University in 1960. He has
adjunct appointments in the Department of Natural
Resources and Center for Environmental Research at
Cornell University. His research interests are in
plant physiology, agriculture, and analytical
chemistry relating especially to the air pollutants
hydrogen fluoride, ozone, sulfur dioxide, and acid
rain.
ALLAN LAZRUS is a Senior Scientist and Project Leader of
the Reactive Gases and Particles Project at the
National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder,
Colorado. He completed three years of graduate work
toward the Ph.D. in organic chemistry at the
University of Colorado. His research interests
include oxidation processes occurring in clouds
leading to the formation of sulfate and nitrate and
measuring sulfur and halogen compounds in volcanic
eruptions and trace chemistry of the stratosphere.
JOHN M. MILLER has been Coordinator of all NOAA
activities in precipitation chemistry and acid rain
since 1978. He received his Ph.D. in meteorology from
Pennsylvania State University in 1972 and completed
postdoctoral studies in atmospheric chemistry at the
University of Frankfurt. He is a member of the
Commission on Atmospheric Chemistry and Global
Pollution (IUGG). His research interests are
precipitation chemistry and the use of meteorological
parameters to evaluate long-range transport of acidic
materials.
VOLKER MOHNEN is Director of the Atmospheric Sciences
Research Center and Research Professor at the State
University of New York at Albany. He received his
Ph.D. in physics, with a minor in astrophysics and
meteorology, from the University of Munich, Germany,
in 1966. He joined the State University of New York
system in 1967. His major research interests are in
aerosol physics and heterogeneous atmospheric
chemistry. Currently he also serves on the National
Research Counc~l's Panel on Global Tropospheric
Chemistry and is a member of the Advisory Committee
for Atmospheric Sciences or the National Science
Foundation.
Representative terms from entire chapter:
atmospheric research