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Professor Ernst K. Zinner Ph.D., Washington University, 1972 ![]() (314) 935-6240 453 Compton Hall |
| Research Interest: |
The present
research interests of Professor Zinner are centered on the study of
primitive meteorites, particularly their record of the nucleosynthesis
of elements in stars and the formation of the solar system. The most
important information is contained in presolar grains that condensed
in the expanding atmospheres and the explosions of stars and survived
the formation of the solar system and in refractory solids that formed
in the solar system but carry a presolar isotopic signature. In the
study of these objects, ion microprobe analysis has played an exceedingly
important role. |
| Dr. Zinner's Research Group Website |
| Publications: |
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| Professional History: |
Ernst Zinner
obtained his undergraduate degree in physics at the Technical University
of Vienna, Austria and his Ph.D. in physics at Washington University.
He is Research Professor of Physics and Earth and Planetary Sciences
of Washington University. He had visiting appointments at the Max-Planck-Institut
für Kernphysik, Heidelberg, Germany, (1980), Technical University
of Vienna (1980-1982), University of Pavia, Italy (1989), University
of Bern, Switzerland (1994), and the Australian National University,
Canberra, (1995),
the Max-Planck-Institut für Kosmochemie, Mainz, Germany (2001, 2003, 2004) and the Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France (2006).
Zinner is a Fellow of the American Physical Society
and the Meteoritical Society and a member of AAAS, AGU and Sigma Xi
and has served on many committees, among them the Lunar and Planetary
Geoscience Review Panel (twice). He received the Antarctic Service
Medal of the National Science Foundation (1987), the J. Lawrence Smith
Medal of the National Academy of Sciences (1997), the Leonard Medal
of the Meteoritical Society (1997) and was elected Geochemistry Fellow
of the Geochemical Society and the European Association for Geochemistry
( 1998) and corresponding member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (2002).. Zinner did his dissertation research in high energy physics on the decay |
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