European Geosciences Union
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Home / Awards & medals / Fridtjof Nansen Medal / 2005 / Doron Nof
Doron Nof The 2005 Fridtjof Nansen Medal is awarded to Doron Nof in recognition of his fundamental contributions to the understanding of the movement of fluids within the ocean and its relationship to the interaction with the atmosphere above. Professor Doron Nof is awarded the 2005 Nansen Medal in recognition of his fundamental contributions to the understanding of the movement of fluids within the ocean and its relationship to the interaction with the atmosphere above.
Home / News / EGU news / Artists: apply for a residency at Europe’s largest geoscience conference
In addition, we encourage the EGU artist(s) in residence to organise a short course on how their art form can be used to communicate science. Examples of past courses organised by artists in residence include Rhyme your research and Get creative! Sketching and drawing (your) science .
Home / Education / Planet Press / Translating an EGU Planet Press release
Even if you can’t quite stay within 300 words in your translation, please try to keep the same number of paragraphs as in the original Planet Press. Translate (almost) everything Since we create a print-friendly PDF file for each translation that retains the format of the original PDF, we will need you to translate most of the information in the document.
Examples of the work produced by last year’s artists in residence are available on the EGU blog . As was the case in 2018, all art produced by the 2019 artist(s) in residence should focus on the science presented at the meeting.
Home / Awards & medals / Hannes Alfvén Medal / 2026 / Zdeněk Němeček
This insight enabled deeper exploration of energy transfer processes, spectral breaks, and turbulence evolution in solar wind features, including interplanetary shocks. In dusty plasma research, they developed a unique lab facility capable of measuring electrostatic charges on individual dust grains.
Home / Awards & medals / Hannes Alfvén Medal / 2026 / Jana Šafránková
Home / Awards & medals / Fridtjof Nansen Medal / 1996 / Anders Stigebrandt
His models are used in Scandinavia institutions both for teaching and research. His production reflects a good balance between descriptive, theoretical and applied oceanography. His current production addresses several interdisciplinary issues, all of which are in the spirit of the pioneering work of Fridtjof Nansen.
Home / Awards & medals / Augustus Love Medal / 2020 / Harro Schmeling
Subsequently, Schmeling focused on the physics of diapirism and produced a range of classic papers that have been influential in understanding the patterns and internal dynamics of salt structures, as well as that of diapiric structures in general. His models were performed on a scale that allowed them to be directly compared to geological observations, a topic that has always been relevant in his work.
https://www.egu.eu/egs/medalists/milan01.htm
Milan for the following paper published: S. E. Milan, M. Lester, S. W. H. Cowley, and M. Brittnacher, Dayside convection and auroral morphology during an interval of northward interplanetary magnetic field, Ann. Geophysicae, 18, 436-444, 2000. . Steve Milan graduated in Physics with Astrophysics from the University of Leicester, UK, in 1990, and went on to study for a PhD in the Radio and Space Plasma Physics Group, which he gained in 1995.
Home / Profile / Chloe Hill
You can read more about the EGU’s policy activities by visiting https://www.egu.eu/policy/ . Chloe has a Masters in Environmental Governance from the University of Freiburg and a Bachelors in Environmental Science from the University of Tasmania. Prior to starting with the EGU, Chloe worked in the renewable energy sector for the African EU Energy Partnership, and as a research assistant for the Indo-German Centre for Sustainability, the Institute of Climate and Sustainable Cities, and Forestry Tasmania.