Dan Blumberg
Dan Blumberg | |
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Scientific career | |
Fields | Geography |
Institutions | Ben-Gurion University of the Negev |
Doctoral advisors | Ronald Greeley and Anthony Brazel |
Website | in |
Dan G. Blumberg is a professor in the Department of Geography and Environmental Development at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and currently serves as Vice-President and Dean for Research and Development and Director of the Homeland Security Institute. He is also director of the Earth and Planetary Image Facility, a remote sensing research laboratory.[1][2]
Education
Blumberg earned a Ph.D. from Arizona State University (1993) where he studied and worked in the Planetary Geology Group, a NASA sponsored research group, where he focused on studying aeolian processes (wind-blown sand transport and deposition) on Earth, Mars, and Venus comparatively and the use of microwave radar remote sensing to image terrestrial surfaces. The title of His Ph.D. thesis was "Prediction of Aeolian Processes using Radar Remote Sensing and Numerical Models". In his thesis he used AIRSAR data in preparation for NASA's upcoming Spaceborne Radar Laboratory Missions (SRL-1 and 2) to study geological morphologies. Blumberg's Ph.D. Advisors were Ronald Greeley and Anthony Brazel and on his committee served Phil Christensen and Mel Marcus. Blumberg continued to do a postdoctoral term in the group working on the shuttle radar missions and became an Associate Research Faculty member at Arizona State University in the Geological Sciences department.
Career
Blumberg joined BGU in 1996 as a lecturer in the Department of Geography and Environmental Development. He developed the field of remote sensing within the Department of Geography and Environmental Development and has been a key player together with scientists from the Faculty of Engineering and The Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research in turning BGU into a world-renowned research institute in the field.
He has gone on to be one of the leading scientists in Aeolian research with a strong focus on the use of remote sensing to map windblown and windswept terrains.
In 2004 Blumberg was promoted to Associate Professor. Between 2006 and 2010 he served as Chair of the Department of Geography and Environmental Development before being appointed to Deputy VP and Dean for R&D. In 2008 Blumberg was promoted to the level of full Professor. In 2014 Blumberg Vice President for Research of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. Since 2016, Prof. Blumberg is taking part on the advisory board of Utilis, a satellite-based leak detection company
Research and students
Blumberg has published numerous scientific papers and has supervised more than 30 Ph.D. and masters students. His research spans a wide arena of remote sensing applications. His primary scientific research interest has been in Planetary geology with a focus on aeolian bedforms and the use of remote sensing to study arid zone environments but in the process has also impacted upon other applications such homeland security,[3] rapid response,[4] target and anomaly detection and situational awareness. Within these studies Blumberg has been developing novel methods to analyze multi dimensional image cubes including polarimetric synthetic aperture radar and hyperspectral data. Blumberg was a Co-Investigator on the SRL (SIR-C mission) through Prof. Ronald Greeley of Arizona State University who was a PI on the mission. Blumberg has served as a P.I. on many research projects for the Israel Space Agency ,on the TerraSar-x mission of the German Space Agency and more. In his research he has combined field studies with the use of space and airborne images. Blumberg has always promoted the philosophy that understanding satellite images requires scientists to have a strong field background. In his own research he has conducted field work in the North American Deserts, the Central Asian Deserts and in the Middle East. Blumberg has also promoted the involvement of students in community outreach as a way to spread scientific knowledge gathered within academia and increase equal opportunity to reach academic education.