Tor Bergeron
Tor Bergeron is a Meteorologist Swedish (1891 - 1977). It is above all known for the studies which it led to Oslo, in the Années 1930, on the Physique of the Nuage S and the Précipitation S.
In the Years 1920, within the Geophysical Institute of , it made party of the Norwegian school which was to work out the first coherent theory of the masses of air and the faces to apply it to the forecast of time to the synoptic scale. He also attended some time the school of Chicago founded by Carl-Gustaf Rossby with the the United States of America.
Become professor of Meteorology to the University of Uppsala after the Second world war, Bergeron off publishes in 1935 One the physics clouds and precipitations after long observations of the condensed medium where coexist under the point of Congélation of the crystals of ice and the water droplets in a state of Surfusion. These last vaporize, then are recondensent in a solid state in contact with the crystals, because the Pression of vapor saturated with the steam is less low compared to the Glace than compared to liquid water. This effect Bergeron constitutes still today, in a vast majority of case, the most valid explanation in the way in which the process of precipitation can start inside a Nuage.
See too
Related articles
- Meteorologist
- Meteorology
- Effect Bergeron
External bonds
- Biography of Tor Bergeron by David Mr. Schultz and Robert Marc Friedman on Internet site of the Co-operative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies (NOAA and the University off Oklahoma)
| Random links: | The Great Changing | Delme (the Moselle) | Gjógv | Nereus (press) | Program of Hilbert | Fluyt |