Alan J. Faller Explained

Alan J. Faller
Birth Name:Alan Judson Faller
Birth Date:1929 3, mf=yes
Birth Place:Roslindale, Massachusetts, U.S.
Death Place:Melrose, Massachusetts
Alma Mater:MIT (B.S., 1951; M.Sc., 1953, Sc.D. 1957 - Atmospheric Sciences)
Known For:Small oceanic and atmospheric circulation research
Awards:Guggenheim Fellowship
Field:Meteorology, oceanography

Alan Judson Faller (March 4, 1929 – March 12, 2022) was an American meteorologist and oceanographer specializing in small oceanic and atmospheric circulation. He was the son of the Olympic runner Fred Faller.[1]

Career

In 1949, Faller took a one-year sabbatical from his studies at MIT to spend a year in the arctic (at the Resolute Bay weather station) collecting atmospheric data with weather balloons. While there, he and an associate discovered a cairn on Griffith Island, marking what appeared to be a grave. As a result of Faller's notice to a Canadian archeologist, it was later discovered through research that this was the grave of an officer on, buried there in 1850 during the Resolute's first search for Sir John Franklin and pursuit of the Passage.

After returning to MIT and completing his Sc.D., Faller was a researcher at WHOI from 1954 to 1963. From 1963 to 1989 he was a professor at the University of Maryland in the Institute of Fluid Dynamics and Applied Mathematics. His research was critical in the understanding of Langmuir circulations.[2] and two instabilities of Ekman boundary layers.

Selected writings

Some of Alan J. Faller's publications include:

Awards and honors

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alan J. Faller . Gately Funeral Home . 8 September 2023.
  2. Book: Lumley, John. Fluid Mechanics and the Environment: Dynamical Approaches: A Collection of Research Papers Written in Commemoration of the 60th Birthday of Sidney Leibovich. 2008-01-11. Springer. 9783540445128. en.