| October
25, 2004
Scripps Atmospheric Scientist
Appointed To Pontifical Academy Of Sciences
By Mario Aguilera
V. Ramanathan,
an internationally renowned atmospheric scientist at Scripps
Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego,
has been appointed by Pope John Paul II to be an academician
of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences. Ramanathan will receive
the honor from the pope during the academy's Plenary Session
in Rome the week of Nov. 5-8.
Ramanathan
is director of the Scripps Center for Clouds, Chemistry, and
Climate and professor of climate and atmospheric sciences. He
also holds the Victor C. Alderson Chair of Applied Ocean Science.
He has been affiliated with Scripps since 1990.
"Ramanathan's
work is transforming our understanding of the climate change
dilemma facing humankind," said Scripps Director Charles
F. Kennel. "We must now be concerned with how the growing
concentration of greenhouse gases in the earth's atmosphere
combines with the atmospheric brown cloud of air pollution that
Ramanathan and his collaborators discovered. We now can see
a direct relationship between pollution, climate change and
human health. Climate change affects every human being on earth
and all its living things. It is entirely fitting that the Pontifical
Academy, with its global perspective, has honored Ramanathan."
Ramanathan's research
focuses on global climate dynamics, aerosols, the greenhouse
effect, clouds and satellite remote sensing. In 1975 he became
the first to demonstrate that chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) are
major greenhouse gases and significant contributors to global
warming. He is currently co-chief scientist of Project Atmospheric
Brown Cloud, a cooperative research project of the United Nations
Environment Programme, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration and participating member nations, to study the
mixture of pollutants formed by fossil fuel combustion and rural
biomass burning.
Ramanathan's previous
honors include the 2002 Carl-Gustaf Rossby Research Medal from
the American Meteorological Society, the Buys Ballot Medal from
the Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences, and a medal for Exceptional
Scientific Achievement from NASA. He is a member of the National
Academy of Sciences, and a fellow of the American Meteorological
Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science
and the American Geophysical Union.
The Pontifical Academy
of Sciences was originally founded in 1603. Its current aim
is to promote the progress of the mathematical, physical and
natural sciences and the study of epistemological problems.
Candidates for a seat in the academy are chosen, "on the
basis of their eminent original scientific studies and of their
acknowledged moral personality, without any ethnic or religious
discrimination, and are nominated for life by sovereign act
of the Holy Father."
Academicians contribute
to the activities of the academy by attending scientific meetings,
including the academy's Plenary Sessions, proposing subjects
for scientific meetings, nominating outstanding scientists for
membership in the academy and nominating young scientists of
international reputation for the Pius XI Medal.
Scripps Contacts: Contacts:
Dora Dalton or Mario Aguilera
(858) 534-3624
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