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Medwin Prize in Acoustical Oceanography
The Acoustical Society of America announces the availability of a prize
to honor continuing research accomplishments of young and mid- career
scientists in Acoustical Oceanography.
Consideration will be given to
individuals whose work demonstrates the candidate's effective use of
sound in the discovery and understanding of physical and biological parameters
and processes in the sea.
For the purposes of this Prize, research based
solely on computer models will not be accepted as a substitute for ocean
experiments or effective, small-scale laboratory models and experiments.
The applicant or nominee need not be a member of the Acoustical Society
of America.
Further
details are available here.
Medwin Prize Recipients:
Dr. Svein Vagle
Institute of Ocean Sciences in Victoria, Canada.
Dr. Vagle was selected as the as
the recipient of the 2005 Medwin Prize in Acoustical Oceanography from the Acoustical Society of America. He
received the Prize for “development of experimental techniques to probe the upper ocean boundary layer.”
His Medwin Prize Lecture (Vancouver Meeting) was titled “Acoustic explorations of the upper ocean boundary layer.”
Dr. Stan Dosso
University of Victoria, Canada.
Dr. Dosso was selected as the recipient of the 2004 Medwin Prize in Acoustical Oceanography from the Acoustical
Society of America. He received the Prize for “the development of non-linear methods for geoacoustic
inversion and acoustic localization.” His Medwin Prize Lecture (New York Meeting) was titled “Ocean
acoustic inversion for seabed geoacoustic properties.”
Dr. Jeffrey A. Nystuen
Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington.
Dr. Nystuen was selected as the recipient of the 2003 Medwin Prize
in Acoustical Oceanography from the Acoustical Society of America. He received the Prize for the development and effective use of measurements
of underwater sound generated by rain to determine rainfall rate and
type at sea. He received the Prize and gave the Medwin Prize lecture
at the spring 2003 ASA meeting in Nashville. The title of the Medwin
Prize lecture was "The sound of Rainfall at Sea."
Dr. Bruce Cornuelle
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University
of California at San Diego.
Dr. Cornuelle was selected as the recipient of the
2002 Medwin Prize in Acoustical Oceanography from the Acoustical Society
of America. He received the Prize and gave the Medwin Prize lecture
at the spring 2002 ASA meeting in Pittsburgh. His citation reads: "for
the effective use of sound in the discovery and understanding of physical
processes in the sea, using inverse methods to interpret long-range acoustic
propagation data."
Timothy G. Leighton
Institute of sound and Vibration Research, Southampton
University, UK.
Dr. Leighton received the first Medwin Prize in Acoustical Oceanography at the 2001 meeting held in Ft. Lauderdale. He was awarded the prize "for
the effective use of sound in the discovery and understanding of physical
processes and parameters in the sea, particularly ocean bubbles."
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