Delphine Farmer Explained

Delphine Kasimira Farmer
Workplaces:Colorado State University
Alma Mater:McGill University
University of California, Berkeley
Thesis Title:Biosphere-atmosphere exchange of reactive nitrogen oxides between the atmosphere and a ponderosa pine forest
Thesis Url:https://worldcat.org/en/title/263469713
Thesis Year:2007

Delphine Farmer is a Canadian chemist who is a professor at the Colorado State University. Her research considers the development of scientific instruments for atmospheric science. She was awarded the American Geophysical Union Atmospheric Sciences Ascent Award in 2022.

Early life and education

Farmer grew up in Canada.[1] Her father was an oceanographer, and she spent her childhood playing in his laboratory.[2] She has credited her love of physics to a high school teacher, and her love of chemistry to an undergraduate lecturer. She was an undergraduate student at McGill University, and a postgraduate student at the University of California, Berkeley. During her doctoral studies, she spent a year in the Sierra Nevada, where she used mass spectrometry to understand the mountain air. Farmer then moved to the University of Colorado Boulder, where she spent a month in the Amazon rainforest.

Research and career

In 2011, Farmer joined the Colorado State University. Farmer studies outdoor and indoor atmospheric chemistry.[3] She looks to understand the sources and sinks of trace gases in the atmosphere. She spent 2014 as a Resident Fellow in the Colorado State University School of Global Environmental Sustainability.[4]

Farmer studied the impact of wildfires on air quality.[5] She used data from the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Southern Great Plains observatory.[5] She made her measurements using an ultra-high-sensitivity aerosol spectrometer[6] The spectrometer uses a laser to determine the size of aerosol particles.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Farmer studied the quality of indoor air.[7] [8] [9]

Farmer was awarded the American Geophysical Union Atmospheric Sciences Ascent Award in 2022.[10]

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. 621: Delphine Farmer, PhD – Indoor vs Outdoor Air Chemistry: Cooking, Cleaning and COVID . en . 2022-09-09. YouTube.
  2. Web site: Notman . Nina . 'We are missing a massive environmental problem' . 2022-09-09 . RSC Education . en.
  3. Web site: Dr Delphine Farmer . 2022-09-09 . The Aerosol Society.
  4. Web site: Delphine Farmer – Sustainability . 2022-09-09 . sustainability.colostate.edu.
  5. Web site: Scientists Examine the Black Carbon Impacts of Wildfires and Biomass Burning . 2020-11-05. 2022-09-09 . www.arm.gov.
  6. Web site: UHSAS > Ultra-high Sensitivity Aerosol Spectrometer. 2022-09-09 . www.arm.gov.
  7. News: Still Disinfecting Surfaces? It Might Not Be Worth It . en . NPR.org . 2022-09-09.
  8. News: Mandavilli . Apoorva . 2020-09-27 . How to Keep the Coronavirus at Bay Indoors . en-US . The New York Times . 2022-09-09 . 0362-4331.
  9. Web site: 2020-09-25 . Smoke and COVID-19 drove us inside — but the air in there wants to kill you . 2022-09-09 . Grist . en-us.
  10. Web site: Ishii . Faith . 2022-09-06 . 2022 AGU Section Awardees and Named Lecturers . 2022-09-09 . Eos . en-US.