- Horace R. Byers
Infobox Scientist
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name = Horace Byers
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birth_date =March 12 ,1906
birth_place =Seattle, Washington
death_date =May 22 ,1998
death_place =Montecito, California
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fields =Meteorology
workplaces =University of Chicago
Texas A&M University
alma_mater =University of California, Berkeley
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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religion =Horace Robert Byers (b.
March 12 ,1906 inSeattle, Washington , d.May 22 ,1998 inMontecito, California ) was an Americanmeteorologist who pioneered inaviation meteorology , synoptic weather analysis (weather forecasting ), severe convective storms,cloud physics , andweather modification . Byers is most well known for his work as director of U.S. Weather Bureau's Thunderstorm Project in which, among other things, the modern cell morphology and life cycle of athunderstorm were established. He is also known for his professional involvement withCarl-Gustaf Arvid Rossby andTetsuya Theodore Fujita .During high school Byers developed a strong interest in journalism and worked as a reporter around the San Francisco Bay area, full-time for a year after graduation and then part time while at the
University of California, Berkeley . At university he became acquainted with science in the geography department and chose atmospheric sciences as his career. He graduated with an A.B. degree in geography in 1929, afterward studying meteorology under Rossby and Hurd C. Willett at theMassachusetts Institute of Technology on a fellowship from the Daniel Guggenheim Fund, receiving his M.S. in 1932. In 1934 he earned an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship to study meteorology, attaining his Sc. D. in 1935.Byers joined the faculty of the
University of Chicago in 1940, eventually helping establish the Department of Meteorology. There he developed internationally renowned work during his 25 year tenure, about half of that as chairperson of the department. In 1965 he moved toTexas A&M University and was the first dean of geosciences until his retirement in 1974.He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences, president of the
American Meteorological Society , and theInternational Association of Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics .References
* [http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=10169&page=33 NAS biographical memoirs]
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