A Pioneering Leader in Radar Remote Sensing and Geospatial Education
Associated with :
University of Alaska FairbanksFranz J. Meyer serves as Professor of Remote Sensing at the University of Alaska Fairbanks and Chief Scientist of NASA's Alaska Satellite Facility, where he has revolutionized radar remote sensing applications and education. After spending nearly two decades developing processing techniques for synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data with space agencies worldwide, he has established himself as a leading authority in radar remote sensing applications for natural hazard monitoring. His research spans surface deformation analysis, including earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, with significant contributions to ionospheric correction methods for SAR data and flood mapping using multi-temporal satellite imagery. As an educator, he has led transformative initiatives including the NASA-funded SAR Capacity Building Center at UAF, developing training materials and workshops focused on communities in Central and South America. His commitment to education earned him the prestigious IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Society Education Award in 2024 for significant contributions to geoscience and remote sensing education. Known in the community as the "SAR evangelist," he has trained thousands of students globally through his edX courses in synthetic aperture radar, with nearly 8,000 students completing his three-course SAR series. His work has garnered over 4,300 citations, establishing him as a influential figure in remote sensing research and education while maintaining active collaborations with organizations in Niger, Nepal, Ecuador, Colombia, Costa Rica, India, Germany, and France.