Dr. Stephan Havemann
Senior Radiation Research Scientist at Met Office
SPIE Involvement:
Author
Area of Expertise:
Electromagnetic scattering theory , Atmospheric radiative transfer theory , Theoretical Physics , Computational Physics , Numerical Mathematics , Scientific Computing
Profile Summary

Stephan works on the development of new methods for fast radiative transfer. He is also involved in the development of fast variational retrieval codes.


Current activities

Stephan has been heavily involved in the development of the Havemann-Taylor Fast Radiative Transfer Code (HT-FRTC). The HT-FRTC uses Principal Components for the fast (significantly less than a MILLISECOND) simulation of highly resolved monochromatic (0.001 wavenumbers), hyperspectral and/or broadband transmittances, radiances and/or fluxes from satellite, airborne and ground-based sensors across the whole electromagnetic spectrum from the microwave to the ultraviolet.

Stephan has also worked on the development of a variational retrieval scheme in Principal Component Space. This can simultaneously retrieve atmospheric profiles of temperature and humidity as well as surface and cloud properties.


Career background

Stephan obtained a first class MSc (Diplom) degree in Physics with minors in Mathematics and Computer Science from the University of Kiel in Germany in 1995.

Since 1996 he worked at the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum fuer Luft- und Raumfahrt) in Neustrelitz, Germany on electromagnetic scattering by non-spherical atmospheric particles.

In 1999 he continued this kind of work at the Meteorological Research Flight, a part of the UK Met Office.

Stephan obtained a PhD in Meteorology with "magna cum laude" (with the distinction "opus eximium" for the thesis) from the University of Kiel in Germany in 2000.

Since then he has been a Research Scientist at the UK Met Office on a permanent basis still working at the Meteorological Research Flight which has since been renamed Observations Based Research.
Publications (13)

Proceedings Article | 9 October 2018 Presentation + Paper
Proceedings Volume 10786, 1078608 (2018) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2500516
KEYWORDS: Microwave radiation, Error analysis, Radiometry, Spectral resolution, Humidity, Atmospheric modeling, Satellites, Sensors, Spectrometers

Proceedings Article | 5 September 2017 Paper
Stephan Havemann, Gerald Wong, Warren Lewis
Proceedings Volume 10402, 1040212 (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2276937
KEYWORDS: Sensors, Fast radiative transfer, Radiative transfer, Transmittance, Infrared sensors, Infrared cameras, Remote sensing, Electromagnetism, Spectral resolution, Hyperspectral simulation

Proceedings Article | 5 May 2017 Paper
Gerald Wong, Francis Colledge, Stephan Havemann, Warren Lewis
Proceedings Volume 10197, 101970F (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2261950
KEYWORDS: Sensors, Environmental sensing, Neon, Oceanography, Atmospheric particles, Gases, Defense and security, Radiative transfer, Sensor performance, Fast radiative transfer, Driver's vision enhancers, Atmospheric modeling, Meteorology, Atmospheric monitoring, Atmospheric sensing

Proceedings Article | 21 October 2016 Paper
Stephan Havemann, Gerald Wong
Proceedings Volume 9987, 99870O (2016) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2241966
KEYWORDS: Atmospheric modeling, Sensors, Reflectivity, Airglow, Target detection, Scattering, Neon, Light, Light scattering, Aluminum

Proceedings Article | 19 September 2016 Presentation + Paper
Jean-Claude Thelen, Stephan Havemann, Warren Lewis
Proceedings Volume 9976, 99760F (2016) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2235377
KEYWORDS: Fast radiative transfer, Scattering, Sensors, Rayleigh scattering, Radiative transfer, Hyperspectral simulation, Spectral resolution, Gases, Infrared imaging, Infrared radiation

Showing 5 of 13 publications
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