Nils Jerlov
Nils Gunnar Jerlov was a Swedish oceanographer, physicist, scientist, and researcher who studied how light interacts with water. He was a scientist in the field of ocean optics, and his water types are used to define the color and characteristics of natural water bodies.
Biography
Nils Jerlov was born October 12, 1909, in Bosjokloster parish in what was then Malmöhus County, Sweden. Nils Jerlov was the son of David Johnson and Hilma Henriksson. He was the nephew of Sigbert and Emil Jerlov.Jerlov attended the University of Lund, Sweden. He received a Master of Philosophy in 1932 and graduated with a Ph.D. in 1939. During that time, he became an assistant at the Swedish Hydrographic-Biological Commission in 1935 and worked in a laboratory there. In 1949 he married Elwi Galeen, the daughter of German director Henrik Galeen and his Swedish wife Elvira Adler.
Jerlov became an associate professor of oceanography at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden in 1953. He worked at the Swedish Fisheries Board from 1948 to 1958, at the Oceanographic Institute from 1957 to 1961, and managed a laboratory in oceanography in Gothenburg in 1961. In 1963 he was appointed professor of physical oceanography in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Jerlov participated in the Swedish deep-sea Albatross expedition in 1947–1948, a joint Italian-Swedish oceanographic expedition in 1955, Auguste Piccard's diving expedition with the Bathyscaphe deep-sea submersible in the Mediterranean in 1957, and the international oceanographic expedition with RRS Discovery II in 1959. He became a member of the Royal Society of Arts and Sciences in Gothenburg in 1954, a Fellow of International Oceanographic Foundation and Member of Corporation of Bermuda Biological Station in 1958, and Chairman of the Commission on Radiant Energy in the Sea in 1960. Beyond ocean optics, Jerlov also researched nuclear physics, environmental pollution, and the ocean heat budget. He was a knight of the Order of the North Star.
Aboard the Albatross expedition in the 1940s, Jerlov began to observe the variability in the color and light-absorbing properties of ocean waters. He proposed a water mass classification scheme for different water bodies based on their optical properties. After becoming a professor at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark in 1963, he wrote a book called Optical Oceanography, later renamed Marine Optics, a fundamental text to the field of oceanography. He served on the International Association for Physical Oceanography, the Scientific Committee on Oceanic Research, the Nordic Committee on Physical Oceanography, and the Danish National Board for Oceanography. Jerlov retired in 1978.
Jerlov died May 29, 1990, in Haga, Gothenburg, Sweden. He is buried in the memorial grove at Kviberg Cemetery in Gothenburg.
Published works
- 1939: Effect of Chemical Combination on X-Ray Emission Spectra
- 1951: Optical Studies of Ocean Water. Reports of the Swedish Deep-Sea Expedition
- 1953: Particle Distribution in the Ocean
- 1956: The Equatorial Currents in the Pacific
- 1958: Maxima in the vertical Distribution of Particles in the Sea
- 1961: Optical Measurements in the eastern North Atlantic. Discovery II exp. of August and September 1959, Medd. Oceanogr. Inst. Goteborg
- 1964: Factors influencing the colour of the oceans, in: Studies on Oceanography
- 1968: Optical Oceanography
- 1964: Optical classification of ocean water, in: Physical Aspects of Light in the Sea: A Symposium, J. E. Tyler, Ed.
- 1976: ''Marine Optics''
Jerlov Water Types