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HTTP/1.1 200 OKServer: nginxDate: Thu, 22 Jan 2026 10:35:07 GMTContent-Type: text/htmlContent-Length: 69673Last-Modified: Tue, 29 Aug 2023 00:14:05 GMTConnection: keep-aliveETag: 64ed384d-11029X-Powered-By: PleskLinAccept-Ranges: bytes !DOCTYPE doctype PUBLIC -//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en>html> head> meta http-equivContent-Type contenttext/html; charsetwindows-1252> meta nameGENERATOR contentMozilla/4.73 en (Win98; I) Netscape> meta nameAuthor contentBruce L. Gary> title>Resume/title> !-- URL for this page is http://greenheart.com/bgary/ --> meta nameauthor contentBruce L. Gary> meta namedescription contentResuma> /head> body nosave vlink#551a8b text#000000 link#0000ee bgcolor#3333ff backgroundbackgrnd1.jpg alink#0000ee> center>img srcS_blg2.JPG width174 height200> p>b>font size+2>BRUCE L. GARYbr> /font>/b>B L G A R Y @ u m i c h . e d u b>font size+2>br> /font>/b> /p> /center> div alignjustify> blockquote> p>i>font size+0>I was born in Ann Arbor, MI in 1939. After receiving a B. S. degree in Astronomy from the University of Michigan in 1961 I joined the U. S. Naval Research Laboratorys Radio Astronomy Branch (Washington, D.C.) and conducted studies of Jupiter. In 1963 I joined Caltechs Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and for two years conducted microwave investigations of the moon. I worked briefly at Cornell Universitys Arecibo Ionospheric Observatory, in Puerto Rico. /font>font size+0>After returning to JPLs Space Sciences Division, I resumed planetary radio astronomy investigations of the moon and planets. During the remaining 33 years of my employment by Caltech, and assignment to JPL, my career underwent transitions from radio astronomy to boundary layer meteorology, then aviation safety, and finally atmospheric science of the stratosphere (with contributions to understanding the ozone hole). I retired from JPL in 1998, continued to work part-time for two years, then transitioned to a consulting arrangement that lasted 10 years. Additional consulting included Rockwell International (2 years), Dryden Flight Research Center (2 years), Caltech (2 years), Vanderbilt University (3 years) and Planetary Science Institute (Tucson, 1 year). /font>font size+0>With my private observatory in /font>font size+0>Hereford, AZ (pictured below)/font>font size+0> I became one of the first amateurs to observe exoplanet transits, and created the Amateur Exoplanet Archive (AXA) to accept and preserve transit observations by amateurs throughout the world (with ~640 transit entries). I continue to initiate and coordinate international teams of amateur astronomers for specific observations that support professional astronomy goals. br> /font>/i>/p> /blockquote> /div> p>font color#000099 size+0>big>b>WORK EXPERIENCE/b>/big>/font> /p> p>font size+0>u>big>Planetary Radio Astronomy/big>/u>br> /font>/p> p>font size+0>From 1964 to 1972 I used radio telescopes throughout the world to construct b>radiometric maps of the moon at a variety of wavelengths and lunar phases. This work remains unsurpassed in quality and comprehensiveness to this day/b>. Analysis of these maps showed that the thermophysical and electrical properties of the uppermost few centimeters of the lunar regolith are very similar over the entire near-side of the moon (with the one exception of greater ilmenite content in Mare Tranquilitatis). These results still provide the strongest argument for generalizing Apollo i>in situ/i> findings./font> /p> p>In 1968 I accepted leadership of JPLs Radio Astronomy Group. I wrote the software for controlling the 18-foot radio telescope at Table Mountain Radio Observatory, performed pointing and antenna property calibrations and assisted in development of a 36 GHz two-element radio interferometer at TMO. One fateful day a lightning strike of the antenna destroyed the computer and other equipment that was needed for a long-planned monitoring program of Venus, and by coincidence this signaled a shift in my interests toward the use of portable ground-based systems for studying the atmosphere. br> br> u>big>Ground-Based Atmospheric Science (Boundary Layer)/big>/u>br> /p> p>font size+0>In 1975 I joined JPLs Observational Systems Division and began applying radio astronomy remote sensing techniques to the study of atmospheric science problems. This transition away from radio astronomy led to b>principal investigator leadership for 41 field experiments/b> using ground-based and airborne microwave remote sensor systems./font> /p> p>font size+0>I supervised the development of ground-based instruments for use in the study of spatial and temporal properties of line-of-sight contents of atmospheric water vapor and cloud liquid water. Ground-based passive microwave systems were also developed for obtaining air temperature profiles. I b>pioneered in developing calibration techniques (including tip curves) for water vapor radiometers as well as in the optimum use of combined mulit-frequency / multi-angle temperature profilers/b>. These radiometer systems were used in a variety of studies, including pollution dispersion (mixing layer depth), stratus cloud formation and evolution (in collaboration with UCLA), demonstration of aviation icing hazard warnings near airports (Buffalo, NY), and numerous performance demonstrations that used radiosondes for validation./font> /p> p>u>big>Airborne Atmospheric Science (Microwave Temperature Profiler)/big>/u>br> /p> p>font size+0>I b>led the development and flight of the first airborne Microwave Temperature Profiler, MTP, /b>in support of a 1978 study of clear air turbulence, CAT. Additional CAT studies were conducted using an improved temperature profiler installed in NASAs C-141 aircraft (Kuiper Airborne Observatory). An instrument with further improvements was installed in NASAs ER-2 aircraft and was used in the 1987 Stratospheric-Tropospheric Exchange Project, STEP. Six months later, the b>ER-2 Microwave Temperature Profiler was one of 25 instruments participating in the first NASA-coordinated international airborne investigation of stratospheric ozone depletion/b>, the Airborne Antarctic Ozone Experiment, AAOE (Punta Arenas, Chile, 1987). The MTP instrument, in addition to providing mesoscale meteorology context for i>in situ/i> measurements during this mission, also b>discovered that Antarctic mountain waves extend above the tropopause and throughout the region of ozone destruction, and provide a mechanism to enhance polar stratospheric cloud (PSC) formation/b>, which is a crucial step in the process for the destruction of stratospheric ozone./font> /p> p>font size+0>The same MTP was used during the 1989 Airborne Arctic Science Experiment, AASE I, based in Norway, during which I b>discovered that air parcel trajectories exhibit vertical wrinkles and therefore air parcels experience fluctuations in temperature. This discovery has implications for the understanding of PSC formation and evolution/b>. During AASE II (Norway, Alaska, Maine 1991/92), MTP instruments were flown aboard both participating NASA aircraft, the DC-8 and an ER-2. The MTP flew on 49 ER-2 flights during the Airborne Southern Hemisphere Ozone Experiment/Measurements for Assessing the Effects of Stratospheric Aircraft, ASHOE/MAESA, based in New Zealand and Hawaii, throughout 1994, which led to studies of tracer filament temperature signature anomalies. The MTP also flew during the ER-2 Stratospheric Tracers of Atmospheric Transport, STRAT flights of 1995 and 1996, which were based in California and Hawaii. The DC-8 MTP flew during the 1995 and 1996 Tropical Ozone Transport Experiment/Vortex Ozone Transport Experiment, TOTE/VOTE, based in Hawaii, Alaska, Iceland and California. These flights have provided intriguing new information on meridional circulation./font> /p> p>font size+0>An improved DC-8 MTP flew during the 1996 Subsonic Aircraft Contrail and Cloud Effects Study, SUCCESS, flights based in Kansas. These data were used to derive the b>first-ever 2-D isentrope topography for a mountain wave event/b> over Colorado, allowing for quantification of cooling and heating histories of air parcels associated with lee wave clouds. During 1997 the ER-2 MTP participated in each of the 3 Photochemistry of Ozone Loss in the Arctic Region in Summer, POLARIS, campaigns, based in Fairbanks, AK. Isentrope surfaces were found to be surprisingly smooth for this season and latitude, which inspired a comprehensive study showing that the amplitude of mesoscale vertical motions in the stratosphere can be predicted from four independent variables: latitude, season, altitude and underlying topography (two article links below). /font> /p> p>font size+0>The DC-8 MTP was used in the Fall of 1997 for the SASS Ozone and Nitrogen Oxides Experiment, SONEX, based in Ireland and Bangor, ME, for the study of atmospheric chemistry impacts of subsonic aircraft. The ER-2 MTP was flown in an Air Force WB-57F during the Spring of 1998 for the Water Aerosol Mission, WAM, based in Texas. Dr. Mahoney was co-investigator for the last two experiments./font> I discontinued full-time employment font size+0>from JPL on September 25, 1998, and for two years was employed by Caltechs JPL as an on-call employee for the purpose of providing occasional assistance to Dr. Mahoney, who is now the MTP Principal Investigator. From 2000 - 2010 I was a consultant for JPL in continued support of airborne MTP projects.br> /font>/p> p>font size+0>After I retired Dr. M. J. Mahoney took over as PI, and with Richard Denning continued to develop improved MTP models that were flown on various NASA atmospheric research aircraft. Heres a video made shortly before M.J. died, in which he and Richard explain how MTP works and its role in the NASA ATTREX mission: a hrefhttps://drive.google.com/file/d/0B-J8PzammBjJUlRVcW1ybUgweHM/view>link/a>.br> /font>/p> font color#000099>big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>/span>/big>/font>big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>font color#000099>POST-RETIREMENT ACTIVITIES/font>br> /span>/big>br> Retirement has afforded me the opportunity to return to a childhood hobby of amateur astronomy, starting in 1999. In 2004 I became a member of a professional/amateur astronomy collaboration that has so far discovered five exoplanets (XO-1b to XO-5b). As far as I know Im the only amateur doing all-sky photometry (transferring calibration from a standard star field in one part of the sky to a distant one needing calibration). This capability has been helpful on numerous collaborations with professionals (6 times for my role in supporting exoplanet discoveries). Some of my radio astronomy experience and various remote sensing projects before retirement have been useful with the astronomy hobby, and my rate of publications after retirement is similar to before: 25 publications since retirement (19 peer-reviewed in astronomy, 3 peer-reviewed in the atmospheric sciences and 5 non-peer reviewed books on miscellaneous topics). Im 2007 I created the Amateur Exoplanet Archive, a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/AXA/x.htm>AXA/a>, which was the only public domain site for archiving amateur observations of exoplanet transits until the Czech Republic created a similar site in 2009 modeled on the AXA (the AXA was discontinued 2009 December). br> br> Writing is another of my hobbies. I enjoy creating tutorial web pages for other amateurs wanting to improve their observing and data analysis techniques. Ive self-published two editions of a book on this subject, a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/book_EOA/x.htm>i>Exoplanet Observing for Amateurs/i>/a> (the first edition was accepted for publication by Springer, which I declined due to concerns I had with their business model). Each person at my age must have an opinion about their most important lifetime achievement, and few people would guess mine: its not my development of the Microwave Temperature Profiler, or my 4 patents, or my 60 peer-reviewed publications (153 according to Google Scholar), or my participation in the high-profile international stratospheric ozone hole campaigns, or my definitive characterization of mesoscale stratospheric temperature fluctuations, or my role in supporting the discovery of transiting exoplanets - its my book i>Genetic Enslavement: A Call to Arms for Individual Liberation/i> (five editions: 2004, 2006, 2008, 2011, 2014). This book is a product of sociobiology speculations that began in 1963, before the field had a name. It is my proudest achievement, and the only one that may have lasting value, whether or not it achieves any public recognition. Since it is a critical look at the evolutionary origins of human nature, and portrays human foibles from the perspective of a reluctant misanthrope, it has no commercial prospects. br> br> big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>img src20100724-HAO1&2-89c-rsz.jpg alt width800 height539> br> /span>/big>i>Retirement private observatory, Hereford Arizona Observatory (HAO), used for observations of exoplanets (for XO and AXA projects) br> and dwarf eclipsing binaries (for Vanderbilt University)./i> i>Wikipedia description of HAO at /i>i>a hrefhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hereford_Arizona_Observatory>link/a>/i>i> (my web page for HAO/i> i>at a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/HAO/>link/a>)./i>big>span stylefont-weight: bold;> br> br> font color#333399>CURRENT OBSERVING PROJECTSbr> /font>/span>/big>br> J0328 (white dwarf with dust clouds orbiting in front). Last season (2022/23): a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/J0328-3>http://www.brucegary.net/J0328-3/a>, this season (2023/24): a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/J0328-4>http://www.brucegary.net/J0328-4/a>br> KIC 8462852 (star with mysterious dust clouds orbiting in front. Last season (2022): a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/ts13/>http://www.brucegary.net/ts13//a>, this season (2023): a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/ts14/>http://www.brucegary.net/ts14//a> br> WD145+017, white dwarf with orbiting asteroids that are producing dust clouds that cause star fades. Last season (2022/23): a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/zombie10/>http://www.brucegary.net/zombie10//a>big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>br> /span>/big>font faceTimes New Roman, Times, serif> a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/galaxylife/>font size+1>Life in our Galaxy/font>/a> /font>font size+1>font faceTimes New Roman, Times, serif>Concept demonstration leading to the conclusion that humans are probably the only intelligent life in our galaxy /font>/font>big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>br> /span>/big>br> big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>br> /span>/big>big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>font color#000099>OLD OBSERVING PROGRAMS br> /font>/span>/big>br> a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttp://brucegary.net/Didymos/>Didymos/a>/Dimorphos post-impact observations br> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/V3370/>MGAB-V1130/a>, WD with dips at 1.4-days (probably WD/BD binary) br> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/J0139/>J0139/a>, white dwarf with planetesimal in eccentric orbit that sheds debris during periastron passage (when close to stars Roche distance) every 110 daysbr> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/BL86/>BL86/a>, 6-observer coordinated observations of Near-Earth Asteroid 2004 BL86 during close approach on January 26, 2015. br> b> /b>big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>small> /small>/span>/big>a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/kafo/>KAFO/a>, Kepler Amateur Follow-up Observations; search for new TTV features of long period candidates; 2013 big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>small>br> /small>/span>/big>a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/pawm2/>PAWM2/a>, Pro-Am White Dwarf Monitoring (2nd project), search for transit of Earth-size exoplanets in habitable zone; 2012+br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/A-SETI/>A-SETI/a>, Amateur search for optical flashes from directions along ecliptic; 2013.br> big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>small> /small>/span>/big>a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/yygem/>YYGem/a>, YY Geminorum (eclipsing M dwarf pair) photometry support of professional spectropolarimetry observations (Dr. Hebb); 2012.br> 9 observers, 8 countries, 127 light curves, 8 filter bands, 21 flares. Recently resumed observations.br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/WDE/>PAWM/a>, Pro-Am White Dwarf Monitoring, search for transit of Earth-size exoplanets in habitable zone (P 3 - 30 hrs); 2011.br> 38 observers, 13 countries, ~280 light curves, 1644 observing hrs, 40 white dwarfs had no transits, discovered two variables.br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/AXA/x.htm>AXA/a>, Amateur Exoplanet Archive, preservation of amateur observations of first 74 exoplanets; now incorporated in Caltechs IPAC; 2007 - 2009.br> 52 observers, 19 countries, ~640 light curves, ~3000 observing hours. (AXA was precursor & model for a hrefhttp://var2.astro.cz/ETD/>ETD/a>)big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>br> /span>/big> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/wd1202/>WD1202/a>, White dwarf and brown dwarf in 71-minute orbit; shortest period pre-cataclysmic a hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/1705.05863>arXiv/a> br> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/UW158/>2011 UW158/a>, one of fastest Near Earth Asteroid rotaters br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/Vesta/>Vesta/a> and a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/Dawn/>Ceres/a>, 7-band spectrum & rotation photometry br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/ISON/>Comet ISON/a>, monitoring activity level br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/WDE/WD2359-434/WD2359-434.htm>WD2359-434/a>, white dwarf with starspot, 2.69-hr rotation br> XO, exoplanet search using transit method, led by Peter McCullough, 2013 - 2015 br> big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>br> font color#000099> CONSULTING/font>/span>/big>br> br> Planetary Science Institute (Reddy & Le Corre), asteroid observing, 2014 to 2015.br> Vanderbilt University, 2009 to 2012, Visiting Scholar, observations of VU targets (dwarf eclipsing binaries, exoplanet candidates)br> Caltech, 2008 July to 2009 December, transferring my Amateur Exoplanet Archive to Caltechs IPAC computer (NStED section)br> JPL, 2000 to 2010, MTP calibration idiosyncracies, mesoscale temperature fluctuation analysis & publicationbr> NASA Dryden Flight Research Center, 2000 - 2002, evaluation of Reciprocal Richardson Number warning algorithm for CATbr> Rockwell International, 1991-1992, commercial Microwave Temperature Profiler (MTP) for Clear Air Turbulence (CAT) warningsbr> br> font color#000099>big>b>POST-RETIREMENT LINKS/b>/big>/font> (small subset of hundreds)br> br> a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/collisions/>Collisions/a>: a model accounting for WD1145 & J0328 fade events (dips) with a a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/collisions/#5_-_Specific_Case_Study>specific case study model/a> for WD1145 br> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/wd1856/>WD 1856+054/a>, a white dwarf with a Jupiter-size planet transiting ever 1.4 days br> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/zombie6/>WD 1145+017/a>, a white dwarf with a disintegrating asteroid producing dust clouds that transit the star and produce fades, up to 65%, at quasi-random times.br> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/J0139/>J0139/a>, a white dwarf with large dust clouds that produce week-long fades every 110 days br> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/UW158/>2011 UW158/a> a fast rotator NEA yet large (only 3rd in its size range above spin barrier - i.e., a rock?) br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/ISON/>Comet ISON/a> (goal of rotation LC)br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/kafo/>KAFO/a> (search for new multiple exoplanet systems using TTV)br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/WDE/>PAWM/a> & a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/pawm2/>PAWM2/a> (search for exoplanets orbiting a white dwarf) br> Asteroid/NEO a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/285263/index.html>1998 QE2/a> (a binary) phase-folded light curves exhibiting several mutual events (binary transits, eclipses, etc)br> Asteroid/NEO a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/2012DA14/>2012 DA14/a> rotation period 9.1 hrsbr> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/M67/>M67/a> (all-sky calibration of 47 stars in 6 bands); also a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/NGC1342/>NGC 1342/a> calibrated field (40 stars)br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/yygem/>YY Gem/a> (M dwarf eclipsing binary photometry pro/am support; ahrefhttp://www.skyandtelescope.com/community/skyblog/newsblog/Pro-Am-Teamwork-on-the-Rise-153714035.html>S&T blog/a>) br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/WDE/>PAWM/a> (white dwarf exoplanet transit search)br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/AXA/x.htm>Amateur Exoplanet Archive/a> (~640 amateur transit light curves)br> Asteroid (NEO) a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/MN4/>Apophis/a> (1st rotation light curve yielding rotation period)br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/AstroPhotos/x.htm>Bruces Astrophotos/a> home pagebr> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/bgary.mtp2/cat.htm>Clear Air Turbulence/a> home pagebr> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/bgary.mtp2/index_ozone.html>Ozone Hole Mission Support/a> home pagebr> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/bgary.mtp2/met_genl.html>General Meteorology Studies/a> home page br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/DFRC/>CAT Warning Performance Statistics/a> br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/MASTER.html>Master List/a> of links to most of my observing projects br> font color#000099>br> /font> font color#000099 size+0>b>big>PATENTS/big>/b>/font> (1st page of each a hrefpatents/index.html moz-do-not-sendtrue>link/a>)br> font size+0>br> Preventing SST Unstart Using a Microwave Radiometer, i>U. S. Patent #6,209,821, /i>Apr 3, 2001br> Microwave Temperature Profiler for Clear Air Turbulence Prediction, i>U. S. Patent #5,117,689/i>, June 2, 1992/font>font size+0>br> System for Indicating Fuel-Efficient Aircraft Altitude, i>U. S. Patent #4,474,062/i>, Oct. 2, 1984/font>font size+0>br> CAT Altitude Avoidance System, i>U. S. Patent #4,346,595/i>, Aug. 31, 1982 /font> p> /p> big>span stylefont-weight: bold;>/span>/big>b>font size+0>big>font color#000099>AWARDS AND RELATED HONORSbr> /font>small>br> /small>/big>/font>/b>font size+0> Asteroid a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/A86279/x.htm>86279 Brucegary/a> was named for me by discoverer Jeff Medkeff and Junk Bond Observatory director David Healy (discovered 1999.10.17). br> NASA Achievement Awards (~10 Group Achievement for participation in international ozone hole missions, ~6 Individual Achievement awards).br> i>Whos Who in America/i>, 57th Edition (2003)br> i>New York Times/i>, page 2, picture related to ozone hole mission based in Norway, 1989.br> Article in i>Spaceflight/i> magazine (1989), featuring the origins of my invention of the MTP instrument and its use for ozone hole studies. /font>br> p>font color#000099>b>font size+0>big>BOOK PUBLICATIONS br> /big>/font>/b>/font>/p> i>i> Eusociality and Psychopathy, Second Edition, /i>/i>2020i> (very /i>short description a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttp://brucegary.net/ep.html>link/a>, Amazon paperback a hrefhttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B083XVFBPQ?ref_pe_3052080_397514860>link/a>, free PDF downloadi>i> /i>/i>a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/e&p/>link/a>)i>br> Eusociality and Psychopathy, First Edition, /i>2019 (Amazon eBook a hrefhttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B07WK973DY#reader_B07WK973DY>link/a>, paperback a hrefhttps://www.amazon.com/dp/1686799713?ref_pe_3052080_397514860>link/a>i>)br> Civility and its Discontents, /i>2019 (Amazon ahrefhttps://www.amazon.com/Civility-its-Discontents-Bruce-Gary/dp/171735260X/refsr_1_3?sbooks&ieUTF8&qid1526262188&sr1-3>link/a>, a hrefCivilityDiscontents3.pdf>PDF/a>) i>br> /i>i> i>Midnight Thoughts/i>, Fourth Edition, /i>2014 - 2018 (Amazoni> /i>ahrefhttps://www.amazon.com/Midnight-Thoughts-Bruce-L-Gary/dp/1495435709/refsr_1_1?sbooks&ieUTF8&qid1393082534&sr1-1&keywordsMidnight+Thoughts>link/a>i>)br> i>Exoplanet Observing for Amateurs, Second Edition/i>, /i>2017 (Farsi translation info and availability a hrefFarsiVersion.html>link/a>)i>br> Exoplanet Observing for Amateurs, Second Edition/i>, 2014 (Amazon paperback ahrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Exoplanet-Observing-Amateurs-Bruce-Gary/dp/1500554243/refsr_1_1?sbooks&ieUTF8&qid1408809484&sr1-1&keywordsexoplanet+observing+for+amateurs>link/a>) br> i>Exoplanet Observing for Amateurs, First Edition/i>, 2008 (not in print)br> i>Quotes for Misanthropes: Mocking Homo Hypocritus/i>, 2007, 2014 (Amazon ahrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Quotes-Misanthropes-Bruce-Ladd-Gary/dp/0979844622/refsr_1_1?sbooks&ieUTF8&qid1393082599&sr1-1&keywordsQuotes+for+Misanthropes>link/a>)br> i>A Misanthropes Holiday: Vignettes and Stories/i>, 2007 (Google Books ahrefhttp://books.google.com/books?idyJr7zM3V4Z8C&pgPR1&dqinauthor:%22Bruce+L+Gary%22&ei6On7S6ajDYXclQT1qpWnDw&cd1#vonepage&q&ffalse>link/a>)br> i>Genetic Enslavement: A Call to Arms for Individual Liberation/i>, i>Fifth Edition,/i> 2004 - 2014 (Amazon ahrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Genetic-Enslavement-Call-Individual-Liberation/dp/0979844606/refsr_1_2?sbooks&ieUTF8&qid1393082379&sr1-2&keywordsGenetic+enslavement>link/a>)br> i>Essays From Another Paradigm/i>, 1992, 1993 (not in print)br> br> font color#3333ff size+2>b>font color#000099>b>font size+0>big>RANTS/big>/font>/b>/font>/b>/font>br> br> Short essay describing problematic evolution of human nature and its mismatch for living in a civilized setting: a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/HumanNature/>link/a> br> a moz-do-not-sendtrue href23.08.27.010%20Aliens.pdf>A Conversation with Aliens/a> br> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/twinevils/>The Twin Evils of Human Nature/a> (a very brief version of my latest 260-page book, i>Eusociality and Psychopathy/i>) br> a href17.10.29%2021%20Psychopaths&Cancer.pdf>Humanities journal submission/a> (a joke article submission) br> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/futility/>Futility/a> (the futility of trying to save humanity) br> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/eusociality/>Psychopaths Doom Civilization/a> (psychopaths : society of individuals :: cancer cells : multi-cellular organism)br> a hrefhttp://www.brucegary.net/sociopathology/>Sociopaths Doom Civilization/a> (sociopaths threaten civilization) br> font size+0> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/he/>The Holocene Experiment and Global Terrorism/a> (a sociobiology-based rant) /font>br> The a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/roob/>Roobification of America/a> (prospects for Americas next election debacle) br> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/democracy/>Democracy is Fragile/a> (prospects for losing it to Roob voters) br> br> table width889 height779 cellspacing2 cellpadding2 border1> tbody> tr> td valigntop>img src19.07.28.182%20WorldPop_1700-2500.jpg alt width858 height635>br> meta http-equivContent-Type contenttext/html; charsetwindows-1252> i>span stylefont-size:11.0pt;mso-bidi-font-size: 12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman";mso-ansi-language:EN-US;mso-fareast-language:EN-US;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA>Thecase for connecting fossil fuel burning with global warming is as strong as the case for connecting smoking with lung cancer. Each belongs to a category of small present reward versus the risk of possible far-future calamity. But why are humans like this? It has to do with the genes, which assemble us for serving their purposes. We are designed to act like unthinking robots! If the genes allowed “why thinking” some of us would begin to act in ways that serve individual welfare, at the expense of serving the genes with their apparent goal of genetic immortality. It’s because people are born with blinders that “reason” has no sway in averting future catastrophe. This underlies my feeling of futility as I glean more insight into the coming darkness. /span>/i>i>This graph of possible scenarios for future world population is based on the assumption that the entirety of humanity can be considered to be a finite sequence, thus allowing use of sampling theory to estimate the end of the sequence./i>/td> /tr> /tbody> /table> font color#000099>b>font size+0>big>br> JOURNAL PUBLICATIONS/big>/font>/b>/font> br> br> 2023: Kubiak, SArah, Andrew Vandenburg, Luliette Becker, Bruce Gary, Saul A. Rappaport, Siyi Xu Zoe de Beurs, TTV Constraints on Additional Planets in the WD 1856+534 System. accepted by i>MNRAS/i>, a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/2303.06157>arXiv/a> br> br> 2022: Claret, A., E. Mullen & B. L. Gary, Limb-Darkening Coefficients for the filter CBB, i>Research Notes of the American Astronomical Society/i>, a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttps://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/2515-5172/ac8c3f>link/a> br> br> 2021: Borkovits, T, T. Mitnyan, S. A. Rappaport & 23 others, Triply Eclipsing Triple Stars in the Northern TESS Fields: TICs 193993801, 388459317 and 52041148, i>MNRAS/i>, a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/2111.10074>arXiv/a>br> br> 2021 Powell, Brian P., Veselin Kostov, Saul Rappaport & 24 others, Mysterious Dust-Emitting Object Orbiting TIC 400799224, i>AJ/i>, a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttps://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-3881/ac2c81>AJ_link/a> a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/2110.01019>arXiv/a> br> br> 2021: Vanderbosch, Zachary P., Saul Rappaport, Joseph A Guidry, Bruce L. Gary and 13 others, Recurring Planetary Debris Transits and Circumstellar Gas around White Dwarf ZTF J0328-1219, i>MNRAS/i>, a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/2106.02659>arXiv/a> br> br> 2020: Vanderburg, A., Rappaport, S.A., Xu, S., Crossfield, I., Becker, J.C., Gary, B. (and 58 others), A Giant Planet Candidate Transiting a White Dwarf, i>Nature/i>, b>585/b>, 363-367, 2020 September 17, a hrefhttps://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-2713-y>https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-2713-y/a> br> br> 2018: Borkovits, T., S. Albrecht, S. Rappaport, L. Nelson, A. Vanderburg, B. L. Gary, T. G. Tan, A. B. Justesen, M. H. Kristiansen, T. L. Jacobs, D. LaCourse, H. Ngo, N. Wallack, G. Ruane, D. Mawet, S. B. Howell, R. Tronsgaard, EPIC 219217635: A Doubly Eclipsing Quadruple System Containing an Evolved Binay, i>MNRAS/i>, a hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/1805.09693>arXiv/a>. br> br> 2018: Zhou, G. & 30 others, Occultations from an active accretion disk in a 72 day detached post-Algol system detected by K2, accepted for publication by i>ApJ/i>, a hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/1801.06188>arXiv/a>br> br> 2018: Bourne, R., B. L. Gary and A. Plakhov, Recent Photometric Monitoring of KIC 8462852, the Detection of a Potential Repeat of the Kepler Day 1540 Dip and a Plausible Model, published by i>MNRAS/i> (2017.11.19), preprint at a hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/1711.10612>https://arxiv.org/abs/1711.10612/a>. br> br> 2017: Bourne, Rafik and Bruce Gary, KIC 8462852: Potential repeat of the Kepler day 1540 dip in August 2017, i>AAS Research Notes/i>, a hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/1711.07472>arXiv:1711.07472/a> br> br> 2017: Gary, Bruce and Rafik Bourne, KIC 8462852 Brightness Pattern Repeating Every 1600 Days, i>Research Notes of the AAS/i> at ahrefhttp://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/2515-5172/aa9bdd/meta>link/a> and preprint at a hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/1711.04205>arXiv:1711.04205/a> br> br> 2017: Rappaport, S., B. L. Gary, A. Vanderdurg, S. Xu, D. Pooley and K. Mukai, WD 1145+017: Optical Activity During 2016-2017 and Limits on the X-Ray Flux, a hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/1709.08195>arXiv/a>, i>Mon. Not. Royal Astron. Soc/i>.br> br> 2017: Xu, S., S. Rappaport, R. van Lieshout, A. Vanderburg, B. Gary and 25 others, A Dearth of Small Particles in the Transiting Material Around the White Dwarf WD 1145+017, accepted by i>Mon. Not. Royal Astron. Soc/i>., preprint a hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/1711.06960>arXiv:1711.06960/a> br> br> 2017: Carbognani, A., B. L. Gary, J. Oey, G. Baj and P. Bacci, Physical Characterization of NEA Large Super-Fast Rotator (436724) 2011 UW158, i>Eur. Phys. J. Plus/i>, b>132:/b> 347 (ahrefhttps://epjplus.epj.org/articles/epjplus/abs/2017/08/13360_2017_Article_1783/13360_2017_Article_1783.html>link/a>). br> br> 2017: Rappaport, A., A. Vanderburg, L. Nelson, B. L. Gary, T. G. Kaye, B. Kalomeni, S. B. Howell, J. R. Thorstensen, F. -R. Lachapelle, M. Lundy, J. St-Antoine, WD 1202-024: The Shortest-Period Pre-Cataclysmic Variable, accepted by MNRAS, a hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/1705.05863>arXiv/a> br> br> 2017: Gary, B. L., S. Rappaport, T. G. Kaye, R. Alonso, J.-F. Hambsch, WD 1145+017 Photometric Observations During Eight Months of High Activity, i>MNRAS/i>, 2017, b>465/b>, 3267-3280; a hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/1608.00026>arXiv/a> br> br> 2016: Rappaport, S., B. L. Gary, T. Kaye, A. Vanderburg, B. Croll, P. Benni, J. Foote, Drifting Asteroid Fragments Around WD 1145+017, i>MNRAS/i>, arXiv (1602.00740) a hrefhttp://arxiv.org/abs/1602.00740>link/a>. br> br> 2016: Gary, Bruce L., Unusual Properties of 2011 UW158, i>Minor Planet Bulletin, /i>b>43/b>, #1, pg. 33-38, 2016 Jan, a hrefhttp://www.minorplanet.info/MPB/MPB_43-1.pdf>MPB link/a>, a href20151002b%202011UW158%20MPB.pdf>link/a> br> br> 2016: Carbognani, Albino, Bruce L. Gary, Julian Oye, Giogio Baj and Paolo Bacci, Pole and Shape for the NEA (436724) 2011 UW158, i>Minor Planet Bulletin, 43,, #1, pg 38-41, /i>2016 Jan, a hrefhttp://www.minorplanet.info/MPB/MPB_43-1.pdf>MPB link/a> br> br> 2015: Crouzet, N., P.R. McCullough, G. Hebrard, I. Ribas, P.M. Rodrigez, E. Garcia, E. Herrero, F. Vilardell, J. Foote, B. Gary, P. Benni, M. Conjat, J. Garlitz, D. Long, M. Deleuil and V. Bourrier, XO-6b: A Transiting Hot Jupiter Around a Fast Rotating Star, for presentation at Extreme Solar Systems III conference, Hawaii, 2015 Nov-Dec; article accepted for publication by i>AJ/i>. a hrefhttps://arxiv.org/abs/1612.02776>arXiv/a> br> br> 2015: Gary, Bruce L., Photometric Properties of 12753 Povenmire, i>Minor Planet Bulletin/i>, b>42/b>, #3, 2015 July-September.br> br> 2015: Reddy, Vishnu, Bruce L. Gary, Driss Tskir, Yenal Ogmen, Paul Benni, Thomas G. Kaye, Joao Gregorio, Joe Garlitz, Christina A. Thomas, David Polishook, Paul S. Hardersen, Andreas Nathues and Lucille Le Corre, Physical Characterization of Near-Earth Asteroid 2004 BL86: A Fragment of Asteroid (4) Vesta i>Astrophys. J./i> 811 (1), 65, arXiv (1509.07122) a hrefhttp://lanl.arxiv.org/abs/1509.07122>link/a>. Also presented as a poster at the LPSC, 2015 March. br> br> 2015: Reddy, Vishnu, Jian-Yang Li, Bruce L. Gary, Juan A. Sanches, Robert D. Stephens, Ralph Megna, Andreas Nathues and Licille Le Corre, Photometric Properties of Ceres from Telescopic Observations using Dawn Framing Camera Color Filters i>Icarus/i>, 260, 332-345. arXiv (1510.00387) a hrefhttp://lanl.arxiv.org/abs/1510.00387>link/a> br> br> 2015: Reddy, Vishnu, David Vokrouhlicky, William F. Bottke, Peter Pravec, Juan A. Sanchez, Bruce L. Gary, Rachel Klima, Edward A. Cloutis, Adrian Galad, Tan Thiam Guan, Kamil Homoch, Mathew R. M. Izwawa, Peter Kusnirak, Lucille Le Corre, Paul Mann, Nicholas Moskovitz, Brian Skiff and Jan Vrastil, Link Between the Potentially Hazardous Asteroid (86039) 1999 NC43 and the Chelyabinsk Meteoroid i>Icarus/i>, 2015, b>252/b>, 129-143. arXiv (1502.05006) a hrefhttp://lanl.arxiv.org/abs/1502.05006>link/a> br> br> 2013: Gary, B. L., 2012 DA14 Rotation Lightcurve i>The Minor Planet Bulletin, /i>b>40/b>i>, #3, p 122,/i> 2013 Jul-Sep. a hrefGary%20DA14.pdf>PDF link/a> & web page a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/2012DA14/>link/a> br> br> 2013: Gary, Bruce L., T. G. Tan, Ivan Curtis, Paul J. Tristram and Akihhiko Fukui, Searching for White Dwarf Exoplanets: WD 2359-434 Case Study, i>Society for Astronomical Sciences 2013 Conference Proceedings/i>, a hrefWD2359%20SAS%202003%20v3306.pdf>PDF link/a> a hrefWD2354%20PP%20v3429b.pptx>PPT link/a> br> br> 2012: Beatty, Thomas G. i>et al/i> (30 others), KELT-2Ab: A Hot Jupiter Transiting the Bright (V8.77) Primary Star of a Binary System, i>Earth & Planetary Astrophysics/i>, 2012, a hrefhttp://arxiv.org/abs/1206.1592>link/a>. (In spite of my contribution of all-sky calibrated magnitudes in 5 bands, used for SED, I declined co-authorship)br> br> 2012: Siverd, Robert J. i>et al/i> (31 others), KELT-1b: A Strongly Irradiated, Highly Inflated, Short Period, 27 Jupiter-mass Companion Transiting a mid-F Star, i>Earth & Planetary Astrophysics/i>, a hrefhttp://lanl.arxiv.org/find/all/1/all:+KELT-1/0/1/0/all/0/1>link/a>. (In spite of my contribution of 6 light curves in 5 bands to this discovery, I declined co-authorship.)br> br> 2012: Gary, Bruce L., Leslie H. Hebb, Jerry L. Foote, Cindy N. Foote, Roberto Zambelli, Joao Gregorio, F. Joseph Garlitz, Gregor Srdoc, Takeshi Yada, Anthony I. Ayiomamitis, Photometric Monitoring by Amateurs in Support of a YY Gem Professional Observing Project, i>Society for Astronomical Sciences/i>, 2012 Conference Proceedings (a hrefhttp://www.socastrosci.org/publications.html>http://www.socastrosci.org/publications.html/a> & ahrefhttp://www.skyandtelescope.com/community/skyblog/newsblog/Pro-Am-Teamwork-on-the-Rise-153714035.html>S&T blog/a> & a hrefGary%20SAS%202012.04.12.doc>PDF download/a>).br> br> 2011: Fleming, Scott W. et al, Eclipsing Binary Science Via the Merging of Transit and Doppler Exoplanet Survey Data - A Case Study With the MARVELS Pilot Project and SuperWASPi>, Astonom. J., 2011, /i>a hrefhttp://arxiv.org/abs/1105.2027>http://arxiv.org/abs/1105.2027/a>br> br> 2010: Fleming, Scott W., i>et al/i>, Discovery of a Low-Mass Companion to a Metal-Rich F Star with MARVELS Pilot Projecti>, /i>a hrefhttp://arxiv.org/abs/1006.1627>http://arxiv.org/abs/1006.1627/a>br> br> 2010: Lee, Brian L. i>et al/i>, MARVELS-1b: A Short-Period, Brown Dwarf Desert Candidate from the SDSS-III MARVELS Planet Search, accepted for publication in i>ApJ/i>. a hrefhttp://arxiv.org/abs/1011.5170>http://arxiv.org/abs/1011.5170/a> br> br> 2009: Gary, Bruce L., i>Exoplanet Observing for Amateurs: Second Edition/i> (book), Hereford, AZ: Reductionist Publications, a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/book_EOA/x.htm>link/a>.br> br> 2008: Gary, Bruce L., Mesoscale Temperature Fluctuations in the Southern Hemisphere Stratosphere i>Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, /i>2008 August 14, a hrefhttp://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/8/4677/2008/acp-8-4677-2008.html>link/a>.br> br> 2008: McCullough, P. R., Christopher J. Burke, Jeff A. Valenti, Doug Long, Christopher M. Johns-Krull, P. Machalek, K. A. Janes, B. Taylor, J. Gregorio, C. N. Foote, Bruce L. Gary, M. Fleenor, Enrique García-Melendo, T. Vanmunster, XO-4b: An Extrasolar Planet Transiting an F5V Star, a hrefhttp://fr.arxiv.org/abs/0805.2921>http://fr.arxiv.org/abs/0805.2921/a> br> br> 2008: Burke, Christopher J., P. R. McCullough, Jeff A. Valenti, Doug Long, Christopher M. Johns-Krull, P. Machalek, Kenneth A. Janes, B. Taylor, Michael L. Fleenor, Cindy N. Foote, Bruce L. Gary, Enrique Garcia-Melendo, J. Gregorio, T. Vanmunster, XO-5b: A Transiting Jupiter-sized Planet with a Four Day Period, 2008: a hrefhttp://fr.arxiv.org/abs/0805.2399>http://fr.arxiv.org/abs/0805.2399/a> div>br> /div> 2007: Gary, Bruce L.,big> /big>font size+0>big>small>i>Quotes for Misanthropes/i>:i> Mocking Homo Hypocritus/i>,/small> small>Reductionist Publications/small>:small> a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/book_QM/x.htm>link/a>/small>/big>/font>br> br> 2007: Johns-Krull, C. M., McCullough, P.R., Burke, C. J., Valenti, J.A., Janes, K.A., Heasley, J.N., Prato, L., Bissinger, R., Fleenor, M., Foote, C.N., Garcia-Melendo, E., Gary, B.L., Howell, P.J., Mallia, F., Masi, G., Vanmunster, T., XO-3b: A Massive Planet in an Eccentric Orbit Transiting an F5V Star, 2007, i>ApJ/i>.br> br> 2007: Price, A. plus 22 others, A Search for SS Cyg Outburst Predictability, i>PASP/i>, Decemberbr> br> 2007: Gary, Bruce L., a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/book_EOA/x.htm>i>Exoplanet Observing for Amateurs/i>/a> (book), Hereford, AZ: Reductionist Publicationsbr> br> 2007: Healy, D. and B. Gary, MaxCam Gets Imagers Started, i>Astronomy/i> (magazine), pg. 70-72, July, 2007.br> br> 2007: Burke, Christopher J., P. R. McCullough, Jeff A. Valenti, Christopher M. Johns-Krull, Kenneth A. Janes, J. N. Heasley, F. J. Summers, J. E. Stys, R. Bissinger, Michael L. Fleenor, Cindy N. Foote, Enrique Garcia-Melendo, Bruce L. Gary, P. J. Howell, F. Mallia, G. Masi, B. Taylor, T. Vanmunster, XO-2b: Transiting Hot Jupiter in a Metal-rich Common Proper Motion Binary, submitted to i>Astrophysical Journal/i>, May 1, 2007: a hrefhttp://arxiv.org/abs/0705.0003>http://arxiv.org/abs/0705.0003/a>br> br> 2007: Gary, Bruce L., i>A Misanthropes Holiday: Vignettes and Stories/i>, Reductionist Publications (Second Edition): a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/book_MH/x.htm>link/a>br> p>2006: Shankland, P. D., E. J. Rivera, G. Laughlin, D. L. Blank, A. Price, B. Gary, R. Bissinger, F. Ringwald, G. White, G. Henry, P. McGee, A. S. Wolf, B. Carter, S. Lee, J. Biggs, B. Monard, On the Search for Transits of the Planets Orbiting GL 876, i>Ap J/i>, Part 1, ms65295, 2006: a hrefhttp://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0608489 eudoraAUTOURL>http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0608489/a> /p> p>2006: Gary, B. L., Mesoscale Temperature Fluctuations in the Stratosphere i>Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics/i>, 2006: ahrefhttp://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/6/4577/2006/acp-6-4577-2006.html>http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/6/4577/2006/acp-6-4577-2006.html/a> a hrefhttp://www.copernicus.org/EGU/acp/acp/6/4577/acp-6-4577.htm>br> /a>/p> p>2006: McCullough, P.R., Stys, J. E., Valenti, J. A., Johns-Krull, C. M., Janes, K. A., Heasley, J. N., Bye, B. A., Dodd, C., Fleming, S. W., Pinnick, A., Bissinger, R., Gary, B. L., Howell, P. J., Vanmunster, T., A Transiting Planet of a Sun-like Star, i>Astrophys. J/i>., b>648/b>, 2, 1228-1238, September, 2006. /p> p>2006: Gary, Bruce L. and David Healy, Image Subtraction Procedure for Observing Faint Asteroids, i>The Minor Planet Bulletin/i>, b>33/b>, 1, January-March 2006: a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/ist/MPB_46053.htm>link/a>br> /p> p>2005: Price, A, and 16 others, Planetary Transits of the Trans-Atlantic Exoplanet Survey Candidate TrES-1b, i>J. Amer. Assoc. Var. Star Obs./i>, b>34/b>, 17, 2005./p> p>2005: Gary, Bruce L., i>The Making of a Misanthrope: Book 1/i>, Hereford, AZ: BLG Publishing, August, 2005.br> /p> p>2004: Pan, L. L., W. J. Randel, B. L. Gary, M. J. Mahoney and E. J. Hintsa, Definitions and Sharpness of the Extratropical Tropopause: A Trace Gas Perspective, i>J. Geophys. Review/i>, b>109/b>, D23103, 2004.br> /p> p>2004: Price, A. and 32 others, A New Cataclysmic Variable in Hercules, i>PASP/i>, December 2004.br> /p> p>2004: Price, A. T. Vanmunster, D. Starkey, D. Boyd, R. Zissell, B. Gary, K. Graham, W. Macdonald II, B. Aquino, D. West, J. Blackwell, G. Walker, M. Simonsen, A. Henden, M. R. Templeton, J. A. Mattei, Flickering and Periodic Activity in the 2004 Outburst of BZ UMa, i>Information Bulletin on Variable Stars (IBVS)/i>, # 5526, 2004: a hrefhttp://www.konkoly.hu/cgi-bin/IBVS?5526>linkbr> /a>/p> p>2004: Gary, B. L., CCD Photometry of Asteroid 12753 Povenmire, i>Minor Planet Bulletin/i>, b>31/b>, #3, 2004: a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/POVENMIRE/x.htm>link/a>br> /p> p>2004: Gary, B. L., i>Genetic Enslavement: A Call to Arms for Individual Liberation/i>, Hereford, AZ: BLG Publishing: a hrefhttp://brucegary.net/book_GE/x.htm>link/a>br> /p> 2004: Price, A. et al (& 15 co-authors incl B. Gary), Superhumps in the 2003 UV PER Superoutburst, submitted to i>Commission 27 and 42 of the IAU Information Bulletin on Variable Stars/i> in 2004.br> br> div aligncenter> _____________________________ retired 1998 September _________________________________________br> /div> p> /p> p>font size+0>Jensen, E. J., O. B. Toon, A. Tabazadeh, G. W. Sachse, B. E. Anderson, K. R. Chan, C. W. Twohy, B. Gandrud, S. M. Aulenbach, A. Heymsfield, J. Hallett, B. Gary, Ice Nucleation Processes in Upper Tropospheric Wave-Clouds Observed During SUCCESS, i>Geophys. Res. Lett/i>., b>25/b>, 1363-1366, May 1, 1998./font> /p> p>font size+0>Dean-Day, J., K. R. Chan, S. W. Bowen, T. P. Bui, B. L. Gary, M. J. Mahoney, Dynamics of Rocky-Mountain Lee Waves Observed During SUCCESS, i>Geophys. Res. Lett./i>, b>25/b>, 1351-1354, May 1, 1998./font> /p> p>Burris, J., W. Heaps, B. Gary, W. Hoegy, L. Lait, T. McGee, M. Gross, U. Singh, Lidar Temperature Measurements During the TOTE/VOTE Mission, i>J. Geophys. Res./i>, b>103/b>, 3505-3510, 1998. /p> p>font size+0>Hintsa, E. J., K. A. Boering, E. M. Weinstock, J. G. Anderson, B. L. Gary, L. Pfister, B. C. Daube, S. C. Wofsy, M. Lowenstein, J. R. Podolske, J. J. Margitan, T. P. Bui, Troposphere-to-Stratosphere Transport in the Lowermost Stratosphere from Measurements of H2O, CO2, N2O and O3, i>Geophys. Res. Lett./i>, b>25/b>, 2655-2658, July 15, 1998./font> /p> p>font size+0>Tabazadeh, A., O. B. Toon, B. L. Gary, J. T. Bacmeister, M. R. Schoeberl, Observational Constraints on the Formation of Type Ia Polar Stratospheric Clouds, i>Geophys. Res. Lett./i>, b>23/b>, 2109-2112, Aug. 1, 1996./font> /p> p>font size+0>Bacmeister, Julio T., Stephen D. Eckermann, Paul A. Newman, Leslie Lait, K. Roland Chan, Max Lowenstein, Michael H. Proffitt, Bruce L. Gary, Stratospheric Horizontal Wavenumber Spectra of Winds, Potential Temperature, and Atmospheric Tracers Observed by High-Altitude Aircraft, i>J. Geophys. Res/i>., 101, b>D5/b>, 9441-9470, Apr. 27, 1996./font> /p> p>font size+0>Murphy, D. M., B. L. Gary, Mesoscale Temperature Fluctuations and Polar Stratospheric Clouds, i>J. Atmos. Sci/i>., b>52/b>, 1753-1760, May 15, 1995./font> /p> p>font size+0>Weinheimer, A. J., J. G. Walega, B. A. Ridley, B. L. Gary, D. R. Blake, N. J. Blake, F. S. Rowland, G. W. Sachse, B. E. Anderson, J. E. Collins, Meridional Distribution of NOx, NOy, and Other Species in the Lower Stratosphere and Upper Troposphere During AASE II, i>Geophys. Res. Lett./i>, b>21/b>, 2583-2586, Nov. 15, 1994./font> /p> p>font size+0>Bacmeister, J. T., P. A. Newman, B. L. Gary, K. R. Chan, An Algorithm for Forecasting Wave-Related Turbulence in the Stratosphere, i>Weather and Forecasting/i>, b>9/b>, 2, June 1994./font> /p> p>font size+0>Pueschel, R. F., G. V. Ferry, S. Verma, S. D. Howard, B. Gary, J. M. Livingston, P. Newman, J. E. Dye, D. Baumgardner, Northern Polar Vortex Aerosol Variability, submitted to i>Geophys. Res. Letters/i>, June 1993./font> /p> p>font size+0>Chan, K. R., L. Pfister, T. P. Bui, S. W. Bowen, J. Dean-Day, B. L. Gary, D. W. Fahey, K. K. Kelly, C. R. Webster, and R. D. May, A Case Study of the Mountain Lee Wave Event of January 6, 1992, i>Geophys. Res. Lett/i>, b>20/b>, 2551-2554, Nov. 19, 1993./font> /p> p>font size+0>Toon, O. B., E. V. Browell, B. Gary, R. Pueschel, P. Russell, M. Schoeberl, G. C. Toon, F. Valero, H. Selkirk, J. Jordan, Heterogeneous Reaction Probabilities, Solubilities, and Physical State of Cold Sulfuric Acid Aerosols, i>Science/i>, August 27, 1993./font> /p> p>font size+0>Pfister, L., K. R. Chan, T. P. Bui, S. Bowen, M. Legg, B. Gary, K. Kelly, M. Proffitt, W. Starr, Gravity Waves Generated by a Tropical Cyclone During the STEP Tropical Field Program: A Case Study, i>J. Geophys. Res/i>., 98, b>D5/b>, 8611-8638, May 20, 1993.br> /font>/p> p>font size+0>Russell, P. B., O. B. Toon, E. V. Browell, G. C. Toon, B. Gary, M. Schoeberl, F. P. J. Valero, R. Pueschel, Combined Use of Microwave and Optical Measurements on the NASA DC-8 to Determine Aerosol and Gas Properties Related to Ozone Depletion, Proceedings of IEEE Topical Symposium on Earth and Atmosphsere Sensing, 1993 March 22-25, ISBN 0-7803-0969-3.br> /font> /p> p>font size+0>Dye, J. E., B. W. Gandrud, S. R. Kawa, K. K. Kelly, M. Lowenstein, G. V. Ferry, K. R. Chan, and B. L. Gary, Particle Size Distributions in Arctic Polar Stratospheric Clouds: Growth and Nucleation of Sulfuric Acid Droplets and Implications for Cloud Formation, i>J. Geophys. Res./i>, b>97/b>, 8015-8034, May 30, 1992./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B. L. and S. J. Keihm, Microwave Sounding Units and Global Warming, i>Science/i>, b>251/b>, 316, 1991 Jan 18, a moz-do-not-sendtrue hrefhttps://www.science.org/lookup/doi/10.1126/science.251.4991.316>link/a>./font> /p> p>font size+0>Bacmeister, J. T., M. R. Schoeberl, L. R. Lait, P. A. Newman and B. Gary, Small-Scale Waves Encountered During AASE, i>Geophys. Res. Lett/i>., b>17/b>, 349-352, 1990./font> /p> p>font size+0>Bacmeister, J. T. and B. Gary, ER-2 Mountain Wave Encounter Over Antarctica: Evidence for Blocking, i>Geophys. Res. Lett/i>., b>17/b>, 81-84, 1990./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gandrud, R. W., J. E. Dye, D. Baumgardner, G. V. Ferry, M. Lowenstein, K. R. Chan, L. Sanford, B. Gary and K. Kelly, The January 30, 1989 Arctic Polar Stratospheric Cloud (PSC) Event: Evidence for a Mechanism of Dehydration, i>Geophys. Res. Lett./i>, b>17/b>, 457-460, 1990./font> /p> p>font size+0>Lait, R. L., M. R. Schoeberl, P. A. Newman, M. H. Proffitt, M. Lowenstein, J. R. Podolske, S. E. Strahan, K. R. Chan, B. Gary, J.J. Margitan, E. Browell, M. P. McCormick and A. Torres, Reconstruction of O3 and N2O Fields from ER-2, DC-8, and Balloon Observations, i>Geophys. Res. Lett./i>, b>17/b>, 521-524, 1990./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B. L, Observational Results Using the Microwave Temperature Profiler During the Airborne Antarctic Ozone Experiment, i>J. Geophys. Res/i>., b>94/b>, 11,223-11,231, 1989./font> /p> p>font size+0>Denning, R. F., S. L. Guidero, G. S. Parks and B. L. Gary, Instrument Description of the Airborne Microwave Temperature Profiler, i>J. Geophys. Res/i>., b>94/b>, 16,757-16,765, 1989./font> /p> p>font size+0>Hartmann, D. L., K. R. Chan, B. L. Gary, M. R. Schoeberl, P. A. Newman, R. L. Martin, M. Lowenstein, J. R. Podolske and S. E. Strahan, Potential Vorticity and Mixing in the South Polar Vortex During Spring, i>J. Geophys. Res/i>., b>94/b>, 11,625-11,640, 1989./font> /p> p>font size+0>Proffitt, M. H., K. K. Kelly, J. A. Powell and B. L. Gary, Evidence for Diabatic Cooling and Poleward Transport Within and Around the 1987 Antarctic Ozone Hole, i>J. Geophys. Res/i>., b>94/b>, D14, 16,797-16,813, 1989./font> /p> p>font size+0>Proffitt, M. H., J. A. Powell, A. F. Tuck, D. W. Fahey, K. K. Kelly, A. J. Krueger, M. R. Schoeberl, B. L. Gary, J. J. Margitan, K. R. Chan, M. Lowenstein and J. R. Podolske, A Chemical Definition of the Boundary of the Antarctic Ozone Hole, i>J. Geophys. Res/i>., b>94/b>, D9, 11,437-11,448, 1989./font> /p> p>font size+0>Wilson, J. C., M. Lowenstein, D. W. Fahey, B. Gary, S. D. Smith, K. K. Kelly, G. V. Ferry and K. R. Chan, Observations of Condensation Nuclei in the Airborne Antarctic Ozone Experiment: Implications for New Particle Formation and Polar Stratospheric Cloud Formation, i>J. Geophys. Res/i>., b>94/b>, D14, 16,437-16,448, 1989./font> /p> p>font size+0>Schoeberl, M. R., L. R. Lait, P. A. Newman, R. L. Martin, M. H. Proffitt, D. L. Hartmann, M. Lowenstein, J. Podolske, S. E. Strahan, J. Anderson, K. R. Chan and B. Gary, Reconstruction of the Constituent Distribution and Trends in the Antarctic Polar Vortex From ER-2 Flight Observations, i>J. Geophys. Res/i>., b>94/b>, D14, 16,815-16,845, 1989./font> /p> p>Conel, James E., Robert O. Green, Veronique Carrere, Jack S. Margolis, Ronald E. Alley, Gregg Vane, Carol L. Bruegge, and Bruce L. Gary, Atmospheric Water Mapping with the Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (AVIRIS), Conference Procedings, JPL Publication 87-38, 1987. /p> p>font size+0>Treuhaft, R. N., C. D. Edwards, B. L. Gary, G. E. Lanyi, S. E. Robinson, Temporal Water Vapor Fluctuations for Phase-Delay Interferometric Geodesy, i>EOS/i>, b>67/b>, 914, 1986./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B. L., S. J. Keihm and M. A. Janssen, Optimum Strategies and Performance for the Remote Sensing of Path-Delay Using Ground-Based Microwave Radiometers, i>IEEE Trans. Geosci. Remote Sensing/i>, b>GE-23/b>, 479-484, 1985./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B. L., Clear Air Turbulence Avoidance Using an Airborne Microwave Radiometer, i>AIAA Pap., AIAA-84-0273/i>, 1984./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B. L., An Airborne Remote Sensor for the Avoidance of Clear Air Turbulence, i>AIAA Pap., AIAA-81-0297/i>, 1981./font> /p> p>font size+0>Janssen, M. A., B. L. Gary, S. Gulkis, E. T. Olsen, F. S. Soltis and N. I. Yamane, The Table Mountain 8-mm Wavelength Interferometer, i>IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagation/i>, b>AP-27/b>, 759-763, 1979./font> /p> p>font size+0>Keihm, S. J. and B. L. Gary, Comparison of Theoretical and Observed 3.55 cm Wavelength Brightness Temperature Maps of the Full Moon, i>Proc. Lunar Sci. Conf. 10th/i>, 2311-2319, 1979./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B. L. and S. J. Keihm, Interpretation of Ground-Based Microwave Measurements of the Moon Using a Detailed Regolith Properties Model, i>Proc. Lunar Planet. Sci. Conf. 9th/i>, 2885-2900, 1978./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B. L., Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus Disk Temperature Measurements at 2.07 and 3.56 cm, i>Atronom. J./i>, b>79/b>, 318-320, 1974./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gulkis, S., B. Gary, M. Klein and C. Stelzried, Observations of Jupiter at 13-cm Wavelength During 1969 and 1971, i>Icarus/i>, b>18/b>, 181-191, 1973./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B. L., E. T. Olsen and P. W. Rosenkranz, Radio Observations of Cygnus X-3 and the Surrounding Region, i>Nature/i>, b>95/b>, 128-130, 1972./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gulkis, S. and B. Gary, Circular Polarization and Total Flux Measurements of Jupiter at 13.1 cm Wavelength, i>Astronom. J/i>., b>76/b>, 12-16, 1971 (a hrefhttp://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1971AJ.....76...12G>link/a>)./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B. and S. Gulkis, New Circular Polarization Measurements of Jupiters Decimeter Radiation, i>Astronom. J./i>, b>158/b>, L193-195, 1969 (a hrefhttp://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1969ApJ...158L.193G>link/a>)./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B., Results of a Radiometric Moon-Mapping Investigation at 3 Millimeters Wavelength, i>Astrophys. J/i>., b>147/b>, 245-254, 1967 (a hrefhttp://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1967ApJ...147..245G>link/a>)./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B., Mercurys Microwave Phase Effect, i>Astronom. J/i>., b>149/b>, L141-145., 1967 (a hrefhttp://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1967ApJ...149L.141G>link/a>)./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B., J. Stacey and F. D. Drake, Radiometric Mapping of the Moon at 3 Millimeters Wavelength, i>Astrophys. J., Supp. 108, XII/i>, 239-262, 1965 (a hrefhttp://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1965ApJS...12..239G>link/a>)./font> /p> p>font size+0>Gary, B., An Investigation of Jupiters 1400 Mc/sec Radiation, i>Astronom. J/i>., b>68/b>, 568-572, 1963. (using Bayesian Estimation Theory without realizing it, a hrefhttp://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1963AJ.....68..568G>link/a>)/font> /p> p>font size+0>Miller, A. C. and B. L. Gary, Measurements of the Decimeter Radiation from Jupiter, i>Astronom. J/i>., b>67/b>, 727-731, 1962 (a hrefhttp://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1962AJ.....67..727M>link/a>)./font> br> font size+0> ________________________________________________________________/font> /p> p>i>font color#3333ff>This site opened: /font>font color#000000>1998.08.25/font>font color#3333ff>./font>font size-1> /font>font color#3333ff>Last Update:/font>font size-1> /font>font color#000000>2023.08.21 br> /font>/i>/p> p>br> /p> script src//nht-2.extreme-dm.com/t.js ideX-bgary137-2 async deferdefer>/script> /body>/html>
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