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Ebru Bozdağ

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hatice Ebru Bozdağ (born 1979) is a Turkish computational seismologist and planetary scientist whose research involves the use of adjoint tomography to reconstruct the global structure of the Earth and Mars from seismic recordings.[1][2] She is an associate professor at the Colorado School of Mines, with a joint appointment in the Department Applied Mathematics & Statistics and the Department of Geophysics.[3]

Education and career

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Bozdağ was born in 1979 in Artvin.[4] She studied geophysics at Istanbul Technical University, earning a bachelor's degree in 2000 and a master's degree in 2002. She completed a Ph.D. in geophysics in 2009 at Utrecht University in the Netherlands.[3] Her doctoral dissertation, Assessing and improving seismic tomography models using 3-D numerical simulations, was supervised by Jeannot Trampert.[5][4]

After postdoctoral research at Princeton University she took a position as chaire d’excellence and tenured associate professor at Côte d'Azur University in France in 2013, continuing to hold the position until 2023. Meanwhile, in 2017, she moved to the Colorado School of Mines as an assistant professor and in 2022 was promoted to associate professor.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Dubrow, Aaron (March 30, 2022), "Planet-scale MRI: Mines professor uses Frontera supercomputer to help image Earth's interior", Mines Newsroom, Colorado School of Mines, retrieved 2023-09-11
  2. ^ Clabby, Catherine (March–April 2015), "Seismic Visions of Middle Earth", American Scientist, vol. 103, no. 2, p. 102, doi:10.1511/2015.113.102
  3. ^ a b "Ebru Bozdağ", Applied Mathematics & Statistics faculty, Colorado School of Mines, retrieved 2023-09-11
  4. ^ a b Bozdağ, Ebru (2009), Assessing and improving seismic tomography models using 3-D numerical wave simulations (Doctoral dissertation), Utrecht University, hdl:1874/33743
  5. ^ a b Curriculum vitae, June 23, 2023, retrieved 2023-09-11
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