Craig Edward DeForest

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Craig Edward DeForest
San Diego, California, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
Alma materReed College (B.A.), Stanford University (Ph.D.)
OccupationAstrophysicist
Known forSolar Physicist

Craig Edward DeForest (born August 13, 1968) is an American solar physicist and the Vice-Chair of the

solar corona in 1998;[2] standardization of computer vision techniques that are used to measure and track magnetic fields on the solar surface;[3] co-invention with colleague Charles Kankelborg of the fluxon semi-Lagrangian approach to numerical MHD modeling;[4] and pioneering work on quantitative remote sensing of the solar wind via Thomson scattered light.[5]

DeForest is noted outside the heliophysics science community for his contributions to open-source software, in particular PDL and Audacity; and for his extensive work on science outreach to the public.

DeForest is the

Principal Investigator of the planned PUNCH mission launching in 2025 to study the solar corona and the origin of the solar wind.[6]

References

  1. ^ "AAS/SPD Officers & Committees". Retrieved October 20, 2020.
  2. ^ Observation of Quasi-Periodic Compressive Waves in Solar Polar Plumes, Astrophys. J. 501, 217
  3. ^ Solar Magnetic Tracking. I. Software Comparison and Recommended Practices, Astrophys. J. 666, 576.
  4. ^ Fluxon Modeling of Low-Beta Plasmas, J. Atmospheric & Solar-Terrestrial Physics, 69, 116.
  5. ^ NASA press release on CME tracking, 2011
  6. ^ NASA selects PUNCH, a new mission to study the Sun. Korey Haynes, Astronomy. 21 June 2019.