Georgy Golitsyn Explained

Georgy Sergeyevich Golitsyn (Russian: Георгий Сергеевич Голицын) (born January 23, 1935, in Moscow) is a prominent Russian scientist in the field of Atmospheric Physics, full member of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR (later of Russia) since 1987, Editor-in-Chief of Izvestiya, Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics,, member of the Academia Europaea since 2000.[1] 1990-2009 - Director of the A.M. Obukhov Institute of Atmospheric Physics, RAS, Moscow, Russia. He is a member of the princely house of Golitsyn. His father is the Russian writer Sergei Mikhailovich Golitsyn.

In the 1960s studied atmospheric circulation on other planets. In 1969 he predicted the small difference between nighttime and daytime temperature on Venus and its high wind velocities. He also developed a model for study of dust storms on Mars. He was also able to show that severe forest fires in Siberia in 1915 had caused global cooling.

Golitsyn is regarded by some in Russia as the author of the nuclear winter theory,[2] which was also developed by Vladimir Alexandrov and G.I.Stenchikov[3] and by the authors of the so-called TTAPS study.[4] In 1982 he became aware of the work of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences on the subject and attended the TTAPS review meeting with Alexandrov and Nikolai Moiseev in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in April 1983.[5] He applied his model of dust storms to the situation that might follow a nuclear catastrophe[6] [7] and reported his findings at the first Meeting of the Committee of Soviet Scientists in Defence of Peace Against the Nuclear Threat in May 1983, of which he became a vice-chairman. In 1984 he participated in an expert group under the World Climate Research Programme to prepare the United Nations report “Climatic and other consequences of large-scale nuclear war”.

G.S. Golitsyn is the recipient of the Russian Academy of Sciences Friedmann Prize (1990) for his works on “Study of the General Circulation of Atmosphere and Convection.” In 1997 he was named Honorary Scholar of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. In 1996 he was awarded the Demidov Prize for his geostudies. In 2005 he was awarded Alfred Wegener Medal of the European Union of Geosciences. In 2011 he was named Honorary Fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society. Academician Golitsyn is founding member of Sigma Xi Moscow.

See also

Vladimir Alexandrov

External links

Books

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Academy of Europe: Golitsyn Georgui.
  2. http://www.ng.ru/style/2004-02-06/24_golitsyn.html Popular account of Golitsyn's contribution
  3. Alexandrov, V. V. and G. I. Stenchikov, "On the modeling of the climatic consequences of the nuclear war", The Proceeding of Appl. Mathematics, 21 p., The Computing Center of the AS USSR, Moscow, 1983
  4. R. P. Turco, O. B. Toon, T. P. Ackerman, J. B. Pollack, and C.Sagan, "Nuclear Winter: Global Consequences of Multiple Nuclear Explosions", Science, 23 December 1983: Vol. 222. no. 4630, pp. 1283–1292
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=y8M5vx-Lrk0C&q=badash+a+nuclear+winter%27s+tale Laurence Badash, A Nuclear Winter's Tale, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2009
  6. http://www.nkj.ru/archive/articles/5755/ Vladimir Gubarev, "Tea Drinking in The Academy. Academician G. S. Golitsyn: Agitations of the Sea and Earth", Nauka i Zhizn, No.3, 2001 (in Russian)
  7. Web site: Golitsyn on nuclear winter (in Russian). https://web.archive.org/web/20120210174825/http://zveroboy.narod.ru/test/FalseScience/10032004/source/2-4.htm. February 10, 2012. dead.