Jerry Straka

Jerry Michael Straka
Straka (center), Bob Davies-Jones (left), and Erik Rasmussen (right) during Project VORTEX on 14 April 1994.
Alma mater University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (B.S., 1984; M.S., 1986)
University of Wisconsin–Madison (Ph.D., 1989)
Known for Severe convective storm field research and numerical modeling, model development, cloud and precipitation physics and observations, development and deployment of mobile mesonets and mobile Doppler radars
Scientific career
Fields Meteorology
Institutions University of Oklahoma
Thesis Hail Growth in a Highly Glaciated Central High Plains Multi-cellular Hailstorm (1989)
Doctoral advisor Pao K. Wang
Other academic advisors Robert Ballentine
Doctoral students Paul Markowski, Sonia Lasher-Trapp, Mark Askleson, Allison Silveira, Matthew Vandenbrooke
Other notable students Kyle Beatty, Aaron Kennedy

Jerry Michael Straka is an American atmospheric scientist with expertise microphysics of clouds, cloud modeling, and dynamics of severe convection in conjunction with weather radar. He was in leadership roles in both the VORTEX projects and subsequent field research focusing on tornadogenesis.[1]

Straka earned a B.S. and M.S. in 1984 and 1986, respectively, from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. His masters dissertation was: A Mesoscale Numerical Study of Environmental Conditions Preceding the 08 June 1984 Tornado Outbreak over South Central Wisconsin. Straka earned a Ph.D. in meteorology from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1989 with the doctoral dissertation: Hail Growth in a Highly Glaciated Central High Plains Multi-cellular Hailstorm. He is a professor at the University of Oklahoma in Norman.[2]

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