Robert M. (Bob) Cunningham (July 1, 1919 – April 15, 2008) was an American cloud physicist. He specialized in the study of fog, running a weather research station on Kent Island in the Bay of Fundy for over 60 years.[1]
Cunningham was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He attended Shady Hill School and the Cambridge School of Weston, where he built his first weather station.[2] He first went to Bowdoin College's Scientific Research Station on Kent Island as a high school student in the summer of 1937. He set up a weather station and began collecting samples of fog water which were later subjected to chemical analysis.[3] His first scientific paper on the subject was published in 1941.[4]
Cunningham attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) from 1938 to 1942 and worked on an aircraft icing research team in the university's meteorology department during World War Two.[3] He joined MIT's Weather Radar Research project as a graduate student when it was founded in 1946. He acted as the airborne observer in a program that involved comparing radar observations with those taken from airplanes during storms. His findings helped to establish that the "bright band" observed on radar displays was an artifact of melting snowflakes.[5]
Cunningham earned a PhD from MIT in 1952 and in 1953 became head of airborne cloud physics research at the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories.[6] After retiring in 1979 Cunningham spent several years with the World Meteorological Organization as field director of an international research project on precipitation enhancement.[3]
Throughout his career and until his death in 2008 Cunningham retained responsibility for the Kent Island weather station he had first set up in 1937. Observations were taken during the summer by staff and students of the Bowdoin College scientific station, and during the rest of the year by the station's resident warden.[7] Cunningham contributed his analysis of decades of daily fog samples from Kent Island to research published in the 1980s on the effect of acid rain on forests.[8][9]
Cunningham lived in Lincoln, Massachusetts from 1948 until his death. He married Claire Steinhardt, an Austrian-born chemist and high school teacher, in 1945. They had three sons, one of whom is the photographer Peter Cunningham.[2]
References
edit- ^ Daley, Beth (5 August 2001). "A patient breed: For 64 years, scientist watches fog roll in". Boston Globe. p. A1. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
- ^ a b "Robert M. Cunningham Obituary". Concord Funeral Home. 15 April 2008. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
- ^ a b c Stickgold, Emma (1 May 2008). "Robert Cunningham: strived to clear mystery enveloping fog". The Boston Globe. p. 56. Retrieved 18 March 2024.
- ^ Cunningham, Robert M. (1941). "Chloride content of fog water in relation to air trajectory". Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 22: 17–20. doi:10.1175/1520-0477-22.1.17.
- ^ Austin, Pauline M.; Geotis, Spiros G. (1990). "Weather radar at MIT". In David Atlas (ed.). Radar in Meteorology: Battan Memorial and 40th Anniversary Radar Meteorology Conference. Boston, Massachusetts: American Meteorological Society. pp. 22–31. ISBN 978-1-935704-15-7.
- ^ Metcalf, James J.; Glover, Kenneth M. (1990). "A history of weather radar research in the U.S. Air Force". In David Atlas (ed.). Radar in Meteorology: Battan Memorial and 40th Anniversary Radar Meteorology Conference. Boston, Massachusetts: American Meteorological Society. pp. 32–43. ISBN 978-1-935704-15-7.
- ^ Stewart, Emily Ruth (23 June 2014). "Fog Heaven". Kent Island Journal. Retrieved 8 June 2016.
- ^ Dalzell, Brian (22 August 2008). "Kent Island seeker of Fog Heaven remembered". The Quoddy Tides. Eastport, Maine. Retrieved 8 June 2016.
- ^ Jagels, R.; Carlisle, J.; Cunningham, R.; Serreze, S.; Tsai, P. (November 1989). "Impact of acid fog and ozone on coastal red spruce". Water, Air, and Soil Pollution. 48 (1–2): 193–208. Bibcode:1989WASP...48..193J. doi:10.1007/BF00282378. S2CID 95283105.