Johannes Falnes Explained

Johannes Falnes
Birth Date:15 December 1931
Birth Place:Skudenes, Norway
Death Date:2 June 2024
Death Place:Trondheim, Norway
Citizenship:Norwegian
Nationality:Norwegian
Field:Experimental physics
Wave energy
Work Institution:Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Alma Mater:Norwegian Institute of Technology

Johannes Falnes (1931–2024) was a Professor Emeritus of Experimental Physics at the Department of Physics of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology noted for his contributions to wave energy research. He was one of the pioneers of modern wave energy research.

Education

Falnes received his master's and doctoral degrees both from the Norwegian Institute of Technology.[1]

Career

Falnes spent his career at the Norwegian Institute of Technology (1956–1959), CERN (1959–1961), the University of Bergen (1961–1964), the Norwegian Institute of Technology/Norwegian University of Science and Technology (1965–2001), and SINTEF (1966–1972), before retiring in 2002.

Falnes' main research interest has been ocean wave energy and its utilisation. Together with Kjell Budal, he initiated wave energy research in Norway in the 1970s. Falnes and Budal discovered the so-called antenna effect, where a floating point absorber could theoretically absorb far more wave energy from the sea than that which is directly incident upon its geometry, analogous to a radio antenna's ability to absorb radio waves.[2] They also developed the latching control strategy to maximize energy extraction.[3]

In December 2006, a seminar titled Challenges for Wave Energy Technology was dedicated in tribute to Falnes on his 75th anniversary. The seminar was held in Trondheim, Norway. Wave energy experts such as Stephen Salter (University of Edinburgh), António Falcão (Instituto Superior Técnico), Alain Clément (École centrale de Nantes), and Richard Yemm (Ocean Power Delivery) addressed various topics in the seminar.[4]

Falnes is a member of The Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters[5] and the Norwegian Academy of Technological Sciences.[6]

Personal life

Among his pastimes are hiking and cross-country skiing.[7]

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Peaks and troughs of wave energy: the dreams and the reality – speaker biographies . royalsociety.org . 24 October 2011 .
  2. Web site: The economics and technology of taming Atlantic waves . waveenergy.ie . 22 December 2009 .
  3. A review of wave energy converter technology . Drew . B. . Plummer . A. R. . Sahinkaya . M. N. . . 223 . 2009 . 8 . 887–902 . 10.1243/09576509JPE782 . 17186882 . 2009PIMEA.223..887D .
  4. Web site: Challenges for Wave Energy Technology . cesos.ntnu.no . 22 December 2009 .
  5. Web site: Akademimedlemmer, Fysikk. Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters. Norwegian. 20 July 2016. 9 October 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161009020402/http://www.dknvs.no/akademimedlemmer/medlemmer/gruppe-ii-fysikk/. dead.
  6. Web site: Medlemmer: FALNES, Johannes. Norwegian Academy of Technological Sciences. Norwegian. 4 December 2012.
  7. Web site: Johannes Falnes . 18 June 2024.