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  1. John Hersh Seinfeld (born August 3, 1942) is an American chemical engineer and pioneering expert in atmospheric science. His research on air pollution has influenced public policy, and he developed the first mathematical model of air quality, which has influenced air pollution tracking and research across the United States.

  2. Assistant Professor, Caltech, 1967-70; Associate Professor, 1970-74; Professor, 1974-; Nohl Professor, 1979-. Executive Officer for Chemical Engineering, 1974-90; Chair, Division of Engineering and Applied Science, 1990-2000. Profile. Publications.

  3. Professor of Chemical Engineering, 1974-1979. Executive Officer for Chemical Engineering, 1973-1990. Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering, 1970-1974. Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering, 1967-1970. HONORS AND AWARDS. Wallace Memorial Fellow, Princeton University, 1966-1967.

  4. Professor Seinfeld focuses on atmospheric chemistry, secondary organic aerosol formation, and aerosol-cloud relationships in climate. His research group addresses these areas through laboratory chamber and flow tube experiments, large-scale atmospheric modeling, and aircraft measurements.

  5. John H. Seinfeld was born in Elmira, New York and received a BS from the University of Rochester in 1964 and a PhD from Princeton University in 1967. Both degrees are in Chemical Engineering. He joined the faculty of the California Institute of Technology in 1967.

  6. Seinfeld is the Louis E. Nohl Professor and Professor of Chemical Engineering at the California Institute of Technology. He received his Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from Princeton University and joined the faculty at Caltech in 1967.

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  8. Professor Seinfeld focuses on atmospheric chemistry, secondary organic aerosol formation, and aerosol-cloud relationships in climate. His research group addresses these areas through laboratory chamber and flow tube experiments, large-scale atmospheric modeling, and aircraft measurements.

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