- Basil John Mason
Sir Basil John Mason, CB, FRS (born
18 August 1923 ) is an expert oncloud physics and former Director of the UKMeteorological Office .His work includes the
Mason Equation , giving the growth or evaporation of small water droplets. He worked atImperial College London ,UK from 1948-1965, where he was appointed as a lecturer inmeteorology in 1948, and in 1961 he was made professor of cloud physics.In the 1960s he helped to modernise the
World Meteorological Organization .In 1965 he was awarded the
Chree Medal by theInstitute of Physics and elected aFellow of the Royal Society . He was Director of the UKMeteorological Office from 1965-1983, and was President of theRoyal Meteorological Society from 1968 to 1970, and is an honorary member of that society. In 1972 he received theRumford Medal from theRoyal Society .In 1973, he was made a companion of the
Order of the Bath . From 1974 he has been a Fellow at Imperial College. He was Treasurer for the Royal Society from 1976-1986. In 1979, he was knighted for his services to meteorology. He gave the Royal Society's 1990Rutherford Memorial Lecture inCanada . In 1991 he received theRoyal Medal of theRoyal Society . He was Chancellor of theUniversity of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology until 1996, when he was succeeded by Sir Roland Smith. In 1998 he received an honoraryDoctor of Science degree from theUniversity of Reading .The National Portrait Gallery has a portrait of Mason. In 2004, Mason opened the Mason Centre for Environmental Flows at the
University of Manchester . In 2006, an endowment from Mason enabled the Royal Meteorological Society to establish the Mason Gold Medal. Mason is also Chairman of the British Physics Olympiad Committee.Bibliography
* "The Physics of Clouds" (1957)
* "Clouds, Rain and Rainmaking" (1962)
* "The Surface Waters Acidification Programme" (editor, 1990)
* "Acid Rain: Its Causes and its Effects on Inland Waters" (1992)
* "Highlights in Environmental Research - Professorial Inaugural Lectures at Imperial College" (editor, 2000).References
B. J. Mason (1957) "The Physics of Clouds" Oxford University Press
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