stringtranslate.com

Roman Glazman

Roman Evsey Glazman (June 26, 1948 – April 24, 2006) was a Russian American physicist and oceanographer.

Early life and education

Roman E. Glazman was born in St. Petersburg, Russia, on June 26, 1948,[1] in a secular Jewish family. He became a citizen of the United States on October 28, 1985 and completed his PhD in Ocean Engineering at the University of Rhode Island in 1985.[citation needed]

Career

Glazman's scientific research was the study of ocean and atmosphere. He began working at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge and Pasadena, California.

Glazman published more than 40 works in oceanography[2] in scientific journals and completed over 60 research studies presenting at International Scientific Conferences, including OCEANS Conference,[3] Geoscience and Remote Sensing International Symposium (IGARSS), Wormley Conference, American Geophysical Union Conference (AGU),[4] International Association for Physical Sciences of the Ocean, International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics.[5]

Glazman conducted exploratory expeditions in the Bering Sea and the North Pacific Ocean off the coast of Kamchatka and Japan, the Arctic, as well as the Barents Sea off the coast of Finland. He took measurements of the depths and salinity of oceans, of the wind forces, pressures and surface temperatures, by experimentation equipped with vessel technology available in the 1970s.[citation needed]

The topics in which Glazman made contributions include wave dynamics,[6] capillary- and inertia-gravity waves,[7] nonlinear waves and turbulence, Rossby waves, sea level measurements, sea surface geometry, magnetic field at sea surface, wind generated wave dynamics,[8] adsorbed film and oscillations.

Selected publications

References

  1. ^ "Roman Glazman". Physics Today. April 2006. doi:10.1063/PT.4.2329.
  2. ^ "Library of Oceanography". works by Roman E. Glazman and co-authors at Library of Oceanography
  3. ^ Roman E. Glazman. "Experiments on Sea Level Measurements Using S-Band Interferometric Techniques, 1981".
  4. ^ "Long Internal Gravity Waves as a Factor Of Large Scale Transport".
  5. ^ "Fluctuations of SST and CHL-A Concentration Caused by Baroclinic Inertia-Gravity Waves" (PDF).
  6. ^ Glazman, R. E.; Patzert, W. C. (21 October 2001). "Equatorial Wave Regime Rossby Solitons".
  7. ^ Glazman, Roman E. (January 1995). "A Simple Theory of Capillary-Gravity Wave Turbulence" (PDF). J. Fluid Mech. 293: 25–34. doi:10.1017/S0022112095001613. S2CID 6084781.
  8. ^ "The Effect of the Degree Of Wave Development On The Sea State Bias in Radar Altimetry Measurement".

External links