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    • Jacob Aall Bonnevie Bjerknes ( YAH-kəb BYURK-niss, Norwegian: [ˈjɑ̀ːkɔb ˈbjæ̂rkneːs]; 2 November 1897 – 7 July 1975) was a meteorologist. He is known for his key paper in which he pointed the dynamics of the polar front, mechanism for north-south heat transport and for which he was also awarded a doctorate from the University of Oslo.
      Born in Stockholm, Sweden, he was the son of the Norwegian meteorologist Vilhelm Bjerknes, one of the pioneers of modern weather forecasting. He helped develop the Norwegian cyclone model. He earned a Ph.D. from the University of Oslo in 1924. Bjerknes was part of the team that made the first crossing of the Arctic in the airship Norge. During WWII, he helped the US with the planning of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings. He also helped gain an understanding of the weather phenomenon El Niño.


      Background


      Jacob Aall Bonnevie Bjerknes was born in Stockholm, Sweden. His father was the Norwegian meteorologist Vilhelm Bjerknes, one of the pioneers of modern weather forecasting. His paternal grandfather was Norwegian mathematician and physicist Carl Anton Bjerknes. His maternal grandfather was Norwegian politician Jacob Aall Bonnevie, after whom he was named.


      Professional career


      Bjerknes was part of a group of meteorologists led by his father, Vilhelm Bjerknes, at the University of Leipzig. Together they developed the model that explains the generation, intensification and ultimate decay (the life cycle) of mid-latitude cyclones, introducing the idea of fronts, that is, sharply defined boundaries between air masses. This concept is known as the Norwegian cyclone model.
      Bjerknes returned to Norway in 1917, where his father founded the Geophysical Institute, University of Bergen in Bergen. They organized an analysis and forecasting branch which would evolve into a weather bureau by 1919. The scientific team at Bergen also included the Swedish meteorologists Carl-Gustaf Rossby and Tor Bergeron. As pointed out in a key paper by Jacob Bjerknes and Halvor Solberg (1895-1974) in 1922, the dynamics of the polar front, integrated with the cyclone model, provided the major mechanism for north-south heat transport in the atmosphere. For this and other research, Jacob Bjerknes was awarded the Ph.D. from the University of Oslo in 1924.
      In 1926, Jacob Bjerknes was a support meteorologist when Roald Amundsen made the first crossing of the Arctic in the airship Norge. In 1931, he left his position as head of the National weather service at Bergen to become professor of meteorology at the Geophysical Institute at the University of Bergen. Jacob Bjerknes lectured at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology during the 1933-1934 school year.
      In 1940, he emigrated to the United States, where he headed a government-sponsored meteorology annex for weather forecasting, at the department of physics of the University of California, Los Angeles. During the Second World War Bjerknes was in the US armed forces, and serving as a colonel in the US Air Force he helped determine the best dates for the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
      Bjerknes founded the UCLA Department of Meteorology (now the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences). As a professor at the University of California, he was the first to see a connection between unusually warm sea-surface temperatures and the weak easterlies and heavy rainfall that accompany low-index conditions. At UCLA, Bjerknes and fellow Norwegian-American meteorologist, Jorgen Holmboe, further developed the pressure tendency and the extratropical cyclone theories.
      In 1969, Jacob Bjerknes helped toward an understanding of El Niño Southern Oscillation, by suggesting that an anomalously warm spot in the eastern Pacific can weaken the east-west temperature difference, disrupting trade winds, which push warm water to the west. The result is increasingly warm water toward the east.


      Personal life


      In 1928, he married Hedvig Borthen (1904–1998). They were the parents of two children. He died on 7 July 1975 in Los Angeles, California.


      Honors and awards


      He was made an Honorary Member of the Royal Meteorological Society in 1932 and a member of both the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters and the Royal Swedish Academy of Science in 1933.

      Royal Meteorological Society - Symons Gold Medal (1940)
      American Geophysical Union - William Bowie Medal (1945)
      Knight 1st Class of the Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav (1947).
      Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography - Vega medal (1958)
      World Meteorological Organization - International Meteorological Organization Prize (1959).
      American Meteorological Society - Carl-Gustaf Rossby Research Medal (1960)
      National Medal of Science (1966)
      American Academy of Achievement - Golden Plate Award (1967)


      References




      External links


      Biographie de Jacob Bjerknes by Arnt Eliassen
      Tribute to J. Bjerknes on the 100th anniversary of his birth
      Jacob Bjerknes photograph
      National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoir

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    Jacob Bjerknes - Wikipedia

    Jacob Aall Bonnevie Bjerknes (/ ˈ j ɑː k ə b ˈ b j ɜːr k n ɪ s / YAH-kəb BYURK-niss, Norwegian: [ˈjɑ̀ːkɔb ˈbjæ̂rkneːs]; 2 November 1897 – 7 July 1975) was a meteorologist. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He is known for his key paper in which he pointed the dynamics of the polar front, mechanism for north-south heat transport and for which he ...

    Jacob Bjerknes | Atmospheric Dynamics, Weather Prediction ...

    Jacob Bjerknes was a Norwegian American meteorologist whose discovery that cyclones (low-pressure centres) originate as waves associated with sloping weather fronts that separate different air masses proved to be a major contribution to modern weather forecasting.

    Pioneers in Modern Meteorology and Climatology: Vilhelm …

    The son of Vilhelm Frimann Koren Bjerknes, Jacob Aall Bonnevie Bjerknes was born in Stockholm and, during World War I, helped his father organize the network of weather stations that supplied the data they used to develop their theories of air masses and polar fronts. Jacob also discovered that depressions originate as waves on fronts. In

    How a Father And Son Helped Create Weather Forecasting as …

    22 Nov 2016 · Jacob Bjerknes and the future of weather forecasting were born in same year. That year, 1897, Jacob’s father Vilhelm had a breakthrough: he figured out a theorem that describes the motion of a...

    Meteorologist who unlocked secret of El Nino – The Irish Times

    07 Jul 2000 · Jacob Bjerknes and his colleagues introduced to meteorology the now familiar concept of warm and cold fronts - rain-bearing boundaries between masses of air with widely differing...

    Bjerknes: Linking the Southern Oscillation with El Niño

    Son of the world renowned meteorologist Vilhelm Bjerknes, Jacob Bjerknes is primarily recognized for his work in developing the theoretical cyclone model as part of the "Bergen School" during the 1920's.

    Jacob Bjerknes Lecture - AGU

    Established in 1993, the Bjerknes Lecture honors the life of Jacob Aall Bonnevie Bjerknes (1897-1975) and his work in developing the basic theory of fronts, cyclogenesis, weather prediction, and creating quantitative models for forecasting.