Northrop Grumman has generously contributed
funds to help support this series.

2008 Waynick Lecture

"Global Climate Change: Human Causes and Responses"
Friday, May 2, 2008 - 8:00 p.m.
104 Keller Building - Penn State University - University Park, PA

Abstract: I will describe evidence for contemporary climate change and our understanding of its causes, with emphasis on the human-enhanced greenhouse effect. After identifying the principal greenhouse gases and their sources, he will focus on carbon dioxide released from fossil-fuel burning and on current and future energy consumption. Prospective actions to mitigate (lessen or slow) climate change and to adapt (to lessen impacts) to it while also meeting energy needs will be discussed as a worldwide challenge.

2008 Colloquium Lecture

“Global Climate Change”
Friday, May 2, 2008 - 2:30 p.m.
101 Electrical Engineering East - Penn State University - University Park, PA

Ralph J. Cicerone
Presented by:
Ralph J. Cicerone, Ph.D.
President,
National Academy of Sciences

Past Lectures

1984-1998 Lectures
1999 Lecture 2000 Lecture
2001 Lecture 2002 Lecture
2003 Lecture 2004 Lecture
2005 Lecture 2006 Lecture
2007 Lecture  

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Arthur Henry Waynick
1905-1982

Dr. Waynick profoundly influenced the course of radio science and atmospheric research, both in the United States and abroad. His interest in these fields was established during a period of study at the Cavendish Laboratory from 1937-39. He returned to the United States in 1939, worked in the Harvard University Underwater Sound Laboratory, then transferred to Penn State in 1947. Here he joined the Department of Electrical Engineering and served as head and as the first departmental A. Robert Noll Professor until his retirement in 1971.

In 1949 he founded the Ionosphere Research Laboratory, later to become the Communications and Space Sciences Laboratory at Penn State, served as its director until his retirement, and continued an active participation until his death. Of particular note was his policy of bringing together a group of outstanding international scientists as resident consultants to the laboratory, a program that proved immensely productive in engaging both staff and students in cooperative research activities in important new fields of study.

He was chairman of the U. S. National Committee of URSI in 1954 and was a member of the U. S. National Committee for the IGY, the NSF Advisory Panel of the IQSY, and the National Academy of Sciences Geophysical Research Board Panel on the IQSY. He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences Space Science Board Committee on Atmospheres of the Earth and the Planets and also served as chairman of the NSF Advisory Panel on Atmospheric Sciences. He was a Fellow of the IEEE and a member of the National Academy of Engineering.


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