David Blair (physicist)

David Blair giving a seminar about gravitational waves search in ICRANet, Pescara, 22-04-2014

David G. Blair (born 1946) is an Australian physicist and professor at the University of Western Australia and Director of the Australian International Gravitational Research Centre (AIGRC). Blair works on methods for the detection of gravitational waves.[1] He developed the niobium bar gravitational wave detector NIOBE,[2] which achieved the lowest observed noise temperature participated in worldwide collaboration that set the best limit on the burst events in 2001. He has been responsible for numerous innovations including the 1984 invention of the first sapphire clock - a super precise timepiece designed for space as well as underpinning the research of the Frequency Stability Group at The University of Western Australia.

In 2013 Blair was elected Fellow of the American Physical Society; 2007 Western Australian (WA) Premier's Science Award for Scientist of the Year; 2005 World Year of Physics, Blair was awarded the ANZAAS Medal [3] as well as a WA Government Centre of Excellence Grant to develop the Australian International Gravitational Research Centre (AIGRC); 2004 Learning Links Certificate, Minister for Education and Training; 2003 National Medal for Community Service; 2003 Centenary Medal (for Promotion of Science); 2003 Clunies Ross Medal for Science and Technology and in 1995 Blair won the Walter Boas Medal of the Australian Institute of Physics.[4]

In 2003, together with Prof. John de Laeter, Blair founded the Gravity Discovery Centre - a major Centre for the promotion of science [5] in Western Australia. In 2010 Blair and collaboration partners developed an education research program called the Science Education Enrichment Project [6] to research the benefits of specialist exhibition centres such as the Gravity Discovery Centre. In 2014 Blair leads the Einstein-First Project which aims to introduce Einsteinian Physics at an early age. The project partners include Curtin University, Edith Cowan University, Graham (Polly) Farmer, U.S. Air Force Academy (USAFA) and the Gravity Discovery Centre.

Publications

Professor Blair is the co-author of Ripples on a Cosmic Sea: The Search for Gravitational Waves,[7] and the editor of the book The Detection of Gravitational Waves.[8]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to David Blair.
  1. "Researchers in new gravity measurement breakthrough". University of Western Australia. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  2. http://journals.aps.org/prl/pdf/10.1103/PhysRevLett.74.1908
  3. http://www.anzaas.org.au/?s=ANZAAS+Medal
  4. "Walter Boas Medal". Australian Institute of Physics. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  5. http://www.gravitycentre.com.au/nggallery/thumbnails
  6. http://www.seeproject.org.au/
  7. Ripples on a Cosmic Sea: The Search for Gravitational Waves. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  8. "The Detection of Gravitational Waves" (PDF). Retrieved 11 May 2012.


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