Mohammad Farzamian| [email protected] | IDL/ULISBOA
Mohamamd did his PhD on application of time-lapse ERT and EM methods in Hydrogeophysical studies at IDL/ULISBOA. His current research activities involve time-lapse ERT and EM methods for the near surface investigation and monitoring of soil moisture content, salinity, saline intrusion, permafrost and in hydrogeophysical approaches. |
Christian Hauck | [email protected] | Université de Fribourg
After the study of meteorology and oceanography at the Universities of Munich/Germany and Bergen/Norway, Christian Hauck did his PhD on the application of geophysical methods in mountain permafrost at ETH Zurich/Switzerland. Research interests focus on applied geophysics, permafrost, numerical modelling, soil moisture and soil-atmosphere interaction, mostly in mountainous terrain. Currently professor at the Department of Geosciences, University of Fribourg; co-editor-in-chief of the EGU journal The Cryosphere. |
Fenando Monteiro Santos | [email protected] | IDL/ULISBOA
Associate professor at University of Lisbon and researcher at IDL. He is interested in modeling and (joint/) inversion of ERT and EM data and its applications to characterize physical properties of deep and shallow structures. |
Gonçalo Vieira | [email protected] | IGOT/ULISBOA
PhD in Physical Geography at the University of Lisbon. Coordinator of the Portuguese Polar Program. Science Coordinator at the Estrela Geopark. Research interests focus on permafrost, geomorphodynamics and changes in terrestrial ecosystems of polar and mountain environments. National representative at the European Polar Board, national representative at the International Permafrost Association, Cryosphere Working Group of the International Arctic Science Committee, and International Association on Cryospheric Sciences. Gonçalo is science advisor at the FCT Polar Office. |
Miguel Angel de Pablo | [email protected] | Universidad de Alcalá, Spain
Miguel Ángel de Pablo has a BSc and a MSc degrees in Geology (2002), and he received his first PhD degree from the Rey Juan Carlos University (Spain) in 2009, and the second PhD degree from the Complutense University of Madrid (Spain) in 2015, both about Martian geology based on remote sensing. Since 2018 he is an Associate Professor in External Geodynamics of the Department in Geology, Geography and Environment of the Alcalá University (Madrid, Spain), where he has been working since 2006. His research interest includes permafrost thermal monitoring as well as glacial and periglacial geomorphology and mapping of planetary surfaces (Earth and Mars). He has been working about Antarctic Permafrost since 2008 and he is now responsible of the Spanish stations of Permafrost and active layer thermal monitoring stations in Livingston and Deception islands, Antarctica, in the scope of GTN-P and CALM international networks of the Internation Permaforst Association.
Miguel Ángel de Pablo has a BSc and a MSc degrees in Geology (2002), and he received his first PhD degree from the Rey Juan Carlos University (Spain) in 2009, and the second PhD degree from the Complutense University of Madrid (Spain) in 2015, both about Martian geology based on remote sensing. Since 2018 he is an Associate Professor in External Geodynamics of the Department in Geology, Geography and Environment of the Alcalá University (Madrid, Spain), where he has been working since 2006. His research interest includes permafrost thermal monitoring as well as glacial and periglacial geomorphology and mapping of planetary surfaces (Earth and Mars). He has been working about Antarctic Permafrost since 2008 and he is now responsible of the Spanish stations of Permafrost and active layer thermal monitoring stations in Livingston and Deception islands, Antarctica, in the scope of GTN-P and CALM international networks of the Internation Permaforst Association.
John Triantafilis | [email protected] | UNSW Sydney
Associate Professor John Triantafilis is a soil scientist from UNSW Sydney. He is interested in applying geophysical data to help develop an understanding of the spatial distribution of soil physical and chemical properties. He is particularly concerned with developing methods in and applications for proximal soil sensors for digital soil mapping. Namely, coupling the proximal sense data with soil data using mathematical models. He specialises in the use of electromagnetic induction instruments (e.g. DUALEM and Geonics) and gamma-ray spectrometry (e.g. Radiations solutions) data. |
Patrícia Valadares | [email protected] | IGOT/ULISBOA
Patricia has a degree in Geography from the University of Lisbon and is currently pursuing a Master's degree in Physical Geography and Spatial Planning. Her dissertation explores snowmelt dynamics in the South Shetland Islands (Antarctica) combining A-ERT and remote sensing.
Patricia has a degree in Geography from the University of Lisbon and is currently pursuing a Master's degree in Physical Geography and Spatial Planning. Her dissertation explores snowmelt dynamics in the South Shetland Islands (Antarctica) combining A-ERT and remote sensing.
Borhan Yaghoobi-Tabar | [email protected] | Shahrood University of Technology
MSc in Geophysics from Shahrood University of Technology, Iran. Work at Institute of Geophysics at University of Tehran. He is interested in modelling and inversion of geophysical data with the main focus on Geoelectrical methods.
MSc in Geophysics from Shahrood University of Technology, Iran. Work at Institute of Geophysics at University of Tehran. He is interested in modelling and inversion of geophysical data with the main focus on Geoelectrical methods.
Armin Rauen | [email protected] | Geophysics Dr Rauen, Germany
Armin studied geophysics at the university of Munich. He did his PhD on geoelectrical laboratory measurements on drill cores of the German Continental Deep Drilling Program (KTB). Now he does geophysical work as a freelancer, mainly geoelectrics and programming. He is the author of the software Geotest, which controls the geoelectrical ″4-point-light″ Lippmann apparatus.
Armin studied geophysics at the university of Munich. He did his PhD on geoelectrical laboratory measurements on drill cores of the German Continental Deep Drilling Program (KTB). Now he does geophysical work as a freelancer, mainly geoelectrics and programming. He is the author of the software Geotest, which controls the geoelectrical ″4-point-light″ Lippmann apparatus.
Miguel Ramos Sainz | [email protected] | Universidad de Alcalá, Spain
Currently Full Professor at the Department of physics in the University of Alcalá (Spain). He concluded his 5-year degree in fundamental physics in 1980, earned his MSc in 1981 and his PhD on 1984 on the thermal devices applied to the solar energy absorption. His research activities are currently developed through the University of Alcalá, the Spanish polar program and the Astrobiologycal Center (CAB-CSIC-INTA). His main scientific interests are currently related to the characterization polar and planetary permafrost, through the multidisciplinary use of: Physical and Mathematical Modeling; Data Analysis and Spatial Statistics methods.Presently, he is co-I of the Mars Science laboratory NASA mission and is co-I in the Mars 2020 project of NASA too. Finally, He is president of the Spanish Cryosferic Commission belonging to the International Association on Cryospheric Sciences (IASC-IUGG). |