|
|
NEWS RELEASE
Phone: 386-226-6525 Embry-Riddle Student Dan Halperin Named FAA Student Researcher of the Year in General Aviation
The Federal Aviation Administration established the COE for General Aviation in 2001, with Embry-Riddle as the lead institution. Halperin competed against students from the other COE for General Aviation member schools – Florida A&M University, University of Alaska, University of North Dakota, and Wichita State University – to win this FAA award that recognizes outstanding achievement in transportation research and education. The FAA program director of the COE for General Aviation, Dr. Pat Watts, honored Halperin at a recent ceremony on the University’s Daytona Beach campus. Halperin, a 20-year-old Honors Program senior who’s pursuing a B.S. in Applied Meteorology with a Research concentration, has been active at Embry-Riddle with the Center for General Aviation Research (CGAR), a research consortium of the Center of Excellence schools, industry, and government. For CGAR, and under the supervision of Dr. Massoud Bazargan, chair of the Management, Marketing, and Operations Department in the University’s College of Business, Halperin assisted an FAA-funded research project titled “Development of an Aviation Weather Database Highlighting Weather Encounters (Phase I).” This ongoing project meshes the talents of researchers from Embry-Riddle, Clemson University, and the FAA’s Civil Aerospace Medical Institute. “Although he’s an undergraduate, Dan performed first-rate graduate-level work, collecting and analyzing data on selected cases in which general aviation pilots encountered hazardous weather,” said Bazargan. “This consolidated data lays the groundwork for improving our understanding of how we can train pilots to keep a weather encounter from turning into an accident.” As a follow-up to his aviation weather research, Halperin co-authored a paper titled “Developing Proactive Methods for General Aviation Data Collection” that was submitted to the 80th annual Aerospace Medical Association conference. Halperin is a past president of the local American Meteorological Society /National Weather Association student chapter and led a contingent of 12 students to the recent eighth annual AMS Student Conference. There he presented a paper titled “Lagrangian Satellite Imagery,” detailing his proposal for a new kind of satellite image display that could more accurately analyze tropical weather systems. Dr. John Lanicci, an associate professor of Applied Meteorology at Embry-Riddle and Halperin’s advisor, nominated him for the FAA Student Researcher of the Year Award. “As president of Chi Epsilon Pi, the national meteorology honor society, Dan initiated some innovative changes to the club,” said Lanicci. “He got our students involved in the National Forecast Challenge for the first time ever and arranged for 25 students to receive SKYWARN training and certification from the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Melbourne, Fla. Our campus, which was struck by an F-2 tornado in December 2006, is now equipped with many newly certified storm spotters.” Halperin has a bright future ahead of him. “I’m planning to attend graduate school for further study and research in applied meteorology,” he said. “As for my career plans, I’d like to contribute to our knowledge of tropical storms, ideally as a hurricane hunter.” Halperin is a graduate of Spanish River Community High School in Boca Raton, Fla. His mother, Patrice Horn, lives in Boca Raton, and his father, Maury Halperin, lives in Ft. Lauderdale. Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, the world’s largest, fully accredited university specializing in aviation and aerospace, offers more than 30 degree programs in its colleges of Arts and Sciences, Aviation, Business, and Engineering, educating more than 34,000 students annually in undergraduate and graduate programs. Doctoral programs in aviation and in engineering physics are pending approval by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) for the University to offer programs at the doctoral level. Embry-Riddle educates students at residential campuses in Prescott, Ariz., and Daytona Beach, Fla., through the Worldwide Campus at more than 130 campus centers in the United States, Europe, Canada, and the Middle East, and through online learning. For more information, visit www.embryriddle.edu. |
|
Feedback |
About This Site |
Contact Embry-Riddle
© Copyright 2008 Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. All rights reserved. Administrative Offices: 600 South Clyde Morris Blvd., Daytona Beach, FL 32114 |