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Contact: Cynthia
O'Carroll
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March 5, 2003
- RELEASE:
03-23 NASA SCIENTIST AWARDED DISTINCTION OF AGU 2003 FELLOW Dr. Michael Mishchenko, an atmospheric scientist at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York City, N.Y., has been awarded the distinction of Fellow of the American Geophysical Union (AGU). New Fellows will be presented with an official certificate during the Honors Ceremony at the Joint EGS-EUG-AGU Meeting in Nice, France, on Wednesday, April 10. Mishchenko is one of 41 new AGU Fellows elected by scientific peers in recognition of their acknowledged eminence in one or more branches of geophysics. The number of Fellows elected each year is limited to no more than 0.1% of the total membership of AGU. A senior researcher at GISS, Mishchenko was cited for his pioneering work in electromagnetic scattering and radiative transfer and their applications to remote sensing and climate research. Mishchenko was born and raised in Simferopol, a small town located in the center of the Crimean peninsula in the southern Ukraine. He received an MS degree in physics from the renowned Moscow Institute of Science and Technology (generally considered to be the Soviet counterpart of MIT) and a PhD degree in astrophysics from the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine in Kyiv. This was followed by five productive years as a research scientist at the Main Astronomical Observatory in Kyiv. Since 1992 Mishchenko has been affiliated with GISS, and has been a senior member of the research staff since 1997. Mishchenko is a distinguished scientist working in the areas of light scattering by aerosol and cloud particles, radiative transfer in planetary atmospheres and surfaces, and terrestrial and planetary remote sensing. His most significant scientific achievement has been the development of a highly efficient so-called T-matrix method for computing radiative and scattering properties of nonspherical particulates such as dust-like aerosols and crystals forming cirrus and polar stratospheric clouds and aircraft condensation trails. The computer programs that he developed are publicly available and have been used worldwide by many dozens of research groups. Through
his solution of the equation describing the transport of electromagnetic
radiation in particulate surfaces, Mishchenko developed a physical theory
accurately explaining the phenomenon of coherent backscattering. This
phenomenon manifests itself in the form of a narrow peak of intensity
scattered by a surface towards the source of light and plays an important
role in remote-sensing studies of ice, snow, and regolith surfaces of
many solar system objects including the Earth. Based on his theory, Mishchenko
predicted the existence of the so-called polarization opposition effect
in the form of a sharp polarization feature accompanying the backward
intensity peak. He then demonstrated that this effect can explain unusual
polarization of sunlight scattered by Saturns rings, Galilean satellites
of Jupiter, and E-type asteroids. Also, his theory quantitatively explained
peculiar radar returns from ice-covered surfaces of Mercury and the Jovian
satellites Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. Mishchenkos professional honors and awards include the AMS Henry Houghton Award, four NASA GSFC awards, and the NASU Barabashov Award. Mishchenko is a Topical Editor of the journal Applied Optics published by the Optical Society of America and has been an Editorial Board Member of three other leading scientific journals. Mishchenko has authored two books, 12 book chapters, and more than 100 articles published in peer-reviewed scientific journals. Also he edited three topical issues in leading scientific journals. Mishchenko
lives in Manhattans Upper West Side with his wife Nadia and their
three children, Andrew, Natasha, and Sergei. In addition to his work at
GISS, Mishchenko enjoys various family activities, reading, and music.
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