Giles Harrison

Giles Harrison is Professor of Atmospheric Physics at the Department of Meteorology at the University of Reading, where he has served twice as Head of Department. His research work continues over 250 years of UK studies in atmospheric electricity, in its modern form an interdisciplinary topic at the intersection of aerosol and cloud physics, solar-climate and internal climate interactions, scientific sensor development and the retrieval of quantitative data from historical sources.

He has authored or co-authored over 250 papers, co-edited Planetary Atmospheric Electricity.[1] and written a postgraduate textbook on meteorological measurements.[2] His research includes development of new instruments and methods, particularly for exploiting meteorological balloon technologies, and generated some of the first airborne measurements in UK airspace of Icelandic volcanic ash from Eyjafjallajökull, during the April 2010 flight ban.

He was educated at Marling School Stroud, and St Catharine’s College Cambridge. He holds doctorates from Imperial College London (PhD 1992), and the University of Cambridge (ScD 2014). He has been elected to the Academia Europea and is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. In 2011 he was the Bill Bright lecturer at the International Electrostatics Conference and in 2016 he was awarded the Appleton Medal and Prize by the Institute of Physics.[3] He chairs the Royal Meteorological Society's Special Interest Group on atmospheric electricity and serves on the Editorial Board of Environmental Research Letters.

References

  1. Planetary Atmospheric Electricity | François Leblanc | Springer.
  2. Harrison, R Giles (2014). Meteorological measurements and instrumentation. Wiley. ISBN 9781118745755.
  3. Physics, Institute of. "2016 Appleton Medal and prize of the Institute of Physics". www.iop.org. Retrieved 2016-12-30.
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