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Wm. Robert Johnston
M.S. (Physics), B.A. (Astronomy)

At the National Atomic Museum in 2000--with a Snark intercontinental cruise missile.

I am a doctoral student in physics at the University of Texas (UT) at Dallas (in Richardson). My work is in space physics, the study of the space environment, encompassing realms from the ionosphere to the magnetosphere to interplanetary space.

Specifically, I am currently analyzing data taken in the Earth's ionosphere by DMSP satellites for various purposes, including to address questions about dynamics of the Earth's plasmasphere and the relationship of this to the Earth's radiation belts. My advisor is Phil Anderson.

My M.S. is in physics from UT-El Paso in cooperation with UT-Brownsville. My work there in the relativity group was concerned with data analysis for gravitational wave detection. While there I worked on data analysis methods for triggered burst searches, on stochastic searches, and made two summer research visits to the LIGO-Livingston site.

My B.A. is in astronomy from UT-Austin. For three years I participated in the Dean's Scholars Program in the College of Natural Sciences.

Contact information:

Wm. Robert Johnston
William B. Hanson Center for Space Sciences, University of Texas at Dallas
WT15, Box 830688
Richardson, TX 78083-0688
wrjohnston@prodigy.net or bobjohnston@utdallas.edu


Publications

  • P. C. Anderson, W. R. Johnston, J. Goldstein, and T. P. O'Brien, 2007, Observations of the ionospheric projection of the plasmapause and comparisons with relativistic electron measurements, submitted to GRL.

Thesis and other documents

Conference/workshop presentations

Conference/workshop posters

Other publications

Unpublished material (selected)


© 2002-2006, 2007 by Wm. Robert Johnston.
Last modified 26 September 2007.
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