•
Francis Beaufort, inventor of the
wind scale that bears his name. •
Vilhelm Bjerknes, founder of modern meteorology who created the
Bergen School of Meteorology, where researchers defined the
frontal theory and
cyclogenesis of mid-latitudes storms. •
Jacob Bjerknes, son of the former, who attended the Norwegian school and who studied the
El Niño phenomenon. He linked the latter to the Southern Oscillation. •
Daniel Draper, inventor of a number of important weather measurement devices including a self-recording wind direction and velocity instruments, self-recording dry and wet bulb thermometers, a hygrograph, a self-recording rain gauge, a sun thermometer, and a weighing mercurial barograph. •
George Hadley, first to introduce the effect of the rotation of the Earth in the explanation of the trade winds and atmospheric circulation. •
Anna Mani, Indian physicist and meteorologist who made contributions to the field of meteorological instrumentation, conducted research, and published numerous papers on solar radiation, ozone, and wind energy measurements. •
Sverre Petterssen, member of the Norwegian School of Meteorology and later one of the three team leaders of
James Stagg for the
Normandy landings. •
James Stagg, RAF meteorologist who was responsible for three teams of meteorologists predicting a lull for June 6, 1944, which allowed the landings in Normandy. •
Carl-Gustaf Rossby, was a Swedish meteorologist foremost known for identifying and characterizing the waves seen in
jet streams as well as in the
westerlies in the earth's atmosphere, known as
Rossby waves, or planetary waves. Rossby was featured on the cover of
Time magazine on December 17, 1956, for his contributions to the field. The highest award of the
American Meteorological Society, of which Rossby was also a recipient in 1953, is named after him (
Carl-Gustaf Rossby Research Medal). •
Ted Fujita, a Japanese meteorologist well known for his studies on tornadoes and downburst, and the invention of the Fujita scale. He first studied the nuclear bomb dropped on
Nagasaki, which helped his future research on
downbursts. He did very detailed studies on multiple tornado events, giving detailed descriptions on how tornadoes form and become strong. •
Josh Wurman, is a researcher in meteorology, for instance as a lead scientist of the
VORTEX2 project. He is also a meteorologist on the Discovery Channel's
Storm Chasers series. ==See also==