WAGNER TEAM DOWNS NEW YORK AGGIES, 20-0; Staten Island Collegians Realize Five-Year Ambition as Massa Leads the Way to Victory.
Date: 25 October 1931
Klaus Ferdinand Hasselmann (German pronunciation: [klaʊs ˈhasl̩man] ; born 25 October 1931) is a German oceanographer and climate modeller. He is Professor Emeritus at the University of Hamburg and former Director of the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology. He was awarded the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physics jointly with Syukuro Manabe and Giorgio Parisi.
Hasselmann grew up in Welwyn Garden City, England and returned to Hamburg in 1949 to attend university. Throughout his career he has mainly been affiliated with the University of Hamburg and the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, which he founded. He also spent five years in the United States as a professor at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and a year as a visiting professor at the University of Cambridge.
He is best known for developing the Hasselmann model of climate variability, where a system with a long memory (the ocean) integrates stochastic forcing, thereby transforming a white-noise signal into a red-noise one, thus explaining (without special assumptions) the ubiquitous red-noise signals seen in the climate (see, for example, the development of swell waves).
Læs mere...25. oktober 1931 var en søndag under stjernetegnet for ♏. Det var 297 dag på året. Præsident for USA var Herbert Hoover.
Hvis du blev født på denne dag, er du 93 år gammel. Din sidste fødselsdag var den fredag den 25. oktober 2024, 350 dage siden. Din næste fødselsdag er lørdag den 25. oktober 2025, om 14 dage. Du har levet i 34.319 dage, eller omkring 823.679 timer, eller omkring 49.420.792 minutter eller omkring 2.965.247.520 sekunder.
Date: 25 October 1931
Date: 25 October 1931
Date: 25 October 1931
Special to The New York Times
Date: 26 October 1931
Special to The New York Times
Date: 25 October 1931
23d St Assn opposes cutting through to connect Lexington Av and Irving Place
Date: 25 October 1931