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  <front>
    <journal-meta><journal-id journal-id-type="publisher">HGSS</journal-id><journal-title-group>
    <journal-title>History of Geo- and Space Sciences</journal-title>
    <abbrev-journal-title abbrev-type="publisher">HGSS</abbrev-journal-title><abbrev-journal-title abbrev-type="nlm-ta">Hist. Geo Space. Sci.</abbrev-journal-title>
  </journal-title-group><issn pub-type="epub">2190-5029</issn><publisher>
    <publisher-name>Copernicus Publications</publisher-name>
    <publisher-loc>Göttingen, Germany</publisher-loc>
  </publisher></journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
      <article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.5194/hgss-9-105-2018</article-id><title-group><article-title>Obituary: Karl Rawer (1913–2018)</article-title><alt-title>Obituary: Karl Rawer (1913–2018)</alt-title>
      </title-group><?xmltex \runningtitle{Obituary: Karl Rawer (1913--2018)}?><?xmltex \runningauthor{B.~W. Reinisch and K.~Schlegel}?>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author" corresp="no" rid="aff1">
          <name><surname>Reinisch</surname><given-names>Bodo W.</given-names></name>
          
        </contrib>
        <contrib contrib-type="author" corresp="yes" rid="aff2">
          <name><surname>Schlegel</surname><given-names>Kristian</given-names></name>
          <email>kristian.schlegel@copernicus.org</email>
        </contrib>
        <aff id="aff1"><label>1</label><institution>Lowell Digisonde International &amp; University of Massachusetts Lowell, 175 Cabot Street, <?xmltex \hack{\break}?>Lowell, MA 01854, USA</institution>
        </aff>
        <aff id="aff2"><label>2</label><institution>Copernicus Gesellschaft, Bahnhofsallee 1e, 37081 Göttingen, Germany</institution>
        </aff>
      </contrib-group>
      <author-notes><corresp id="corr1">Kristian Schlegel (kristian.schlegel@copernicus.org)</corresp></author-notes><pub-date><day>19</day><month>June</month><year>2018</year></pub-date>
      
      <volume>9</volume>
      <issue>1</issue>
      <fpage>105</fpage><lpage>106</lpage>
      <history>
        <date date-type="received"><day>1</day><month>May</month><year>2018</year></date>
           <date date-type="accepted"><day>7</day><month>June</month><year>2018</year></date>
      </history>
      <permissions>
        
        
      <license license-type="open-access"><license-p>This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this licence, visit <ext-link ext-link-type="uri" xlink:href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/</ext-link></license-p></license></permissions><self-uri xlink:href="https://hgss.copernicus.org/articles/9/105/2018/hgss-9-105-2018.html">This article is available from https://hgss.copernicus.org/articles/9/105/2018/hgss-9-105-2018.html</self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="https://hgss.copernicus.org/articles/9/105/2018/hgss-9-105-2018.pdf">The full text article is available as a PDF file from https://hgss.copernicus.org/articles/9/105/2018/hgss-9-105-2018.pdf</self-uri>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
<body>
      

      <p id="d1e90">Karl Rawer passed away on 17 April 2018, two days before his 105th birthday.</p>
      <p id="d1e93">Karl Maria Alois Rawer was born on 19 April 1913 in Neunkirchen (Saarland),
Germany. He studied physics in Freiburg and Munich and was fortunate to have
well-known teachers such as Gustav Mie, Gustav Dötsch, Arnold Sommerfeld
and Jonathan Zenneck. Jonathan Zenneck, who had already started ionospheric echo sounding experiments
in Germany in 1930, had asked Karl Rawer to develop the theory for the
reflection of vertical incident radio waves in the ionosphere for his
doctoral dissertation. Being allowed access to the jewel of the mathematics
institute, an electrically driven mechanical calculator, he was able to solve
the problem of radio wave propagation in a stratified medium in a little more
than a year's time, using hyperbolic and Epstein functions; he published his
results in <italic>Annalen der Physik</italic> (Rawer, 1939). From then on he was
hooked in one way or other to ionospheric research and the computer as an
analysis tool. His quest to fully understand and describe the physical
processes that form the ionosphere and control its behaviour always included
experimental verifications of any theoretical model.</p>

      <?xmltex \floatpos{t}?><fig id="Ch1.F1"><caption><p id="d1e101">Karl Rawer in 2008.</p></caption>
      <?xmltex \igopts{width=241.848425pt}?><graphic xlink:href="https://hgss.copernicus.org/articles/9/105/2018/hgss-9-105-2018-f01.png"/>

    </fig>

      <p id="d1e110">During WWII, he was charged with the development of ionospheric radio wave
propagation predictions, working with Johannes Plendl and Walter Dieminger.
At the end of the war in 1945, Rawer's group accepted the invitation of Yves
Rocard in Paris to establish an ionospheric prediction service in Germany's
French Zone. In spite of the difficult post-war conditions, an
ionospheric vertical incidence sounding station came to life in 1946 at
Schloss Neuershausen near Freiburg under the auspices of the French Service
Prévision Ionosphérique de la Marine (SPIM). This was the beginning
of a long cooperation between French and German ionospheric prediction
studies. Rawer then managed to establish the Ionosphäreninstitut in
Breisach (close to Karl Rawer's academic origins in Freiburg and to his
native Saarland) under the administrative control of the German postal
service. This institute gained an international reputation in the field of
ionospheric radio wave propagation and forecasting, the development of
ionosondes in cooperation with research organizations in the USA and France,
and joint measuring campaigns in Italy, Greece, Norway and Africa.</p>
      <p id="d1e114">Karl Rawer recognized early on that ionosphere and space research in Germany
can only advance in cooperation with the world community and that
international science cooperation can build bridges between countries helping
to foster peace in the world. In the early 1960s he was the first<?pagebreak page106?> German
after the end of WWII to be invited to lecture at the Sorbonne University as
an associate professor in collaboration with his friend Étienne Vassy.
For many years he made weekly trips between Breisach and Paris.</p>
      <p id="d1e117">Rawer was very active in URSI (Union Radio Scientifique Internationale). His
activities in this international union began in 1954, when he represented
German ionospheric research in preparation for the International Geophysical
Year, 1957–1958. Ionospheric sounding was performed in many countries around
the world at that time, but common rules and algorithms for the scaling and
interpretation of ionograms had yet to be established in order to facilitate
global ionospheric research. Thus, within URSI, eight ionospheric experts
formed the Worldwide Sounding Committee under the leadership of
Allen Shapley. The results
of the committee's work was published by two of the members, Piggott and
Rawer (1961), as the <italic>Handbook for the Scaling of Ionograms</italic>. Later,
at the URSI General Assembly in Munich in 1966, Rawer was elected as
international vice-chair of Commission III (today Commission G) of URSI. He
served as vice-chair and subsequently as chair until 1972.</p>
      <p id="d1e123">Already in the early 1950s, he and his coworkers in his institute designed
and built scientific payloads for the newly developed French rocket
Véronique for its first successful launch in 1954 in the French
Sahara (Algeria). Due to his experience
in space research and his connections to international research groups, Rawer
then took a leading role in the West German National Committee of COSPAR. He
became its chairman after the death of Julius Bartels in 1964. He vigorously
exploited the opportunity that COSPAR (Committee on Space
Research) offered to establish
long-lasting relationships between scientists from West and East across the
Cold War borders, as well as with researchers in India and in hitherto
neglected countries in the Far East and Africa. By nature having an
inclination as an experimentalist, he was a master in describing and
documenting new results and in sorting existing knowledge. His first book
ever published entitled <italic>The Ionosphere</italic> appeared in 1953 in
German (Rawer, 1953: <italic>Die Ionosphäre</italic>), which was translated into English in 1956 (Rawer,
1956). In 1967 he published, jointly with Kurt Suchy, “Radio Observations of
the Ionosphere” as Volume III/II in the Geophysics Series of the
<italic>Handbuch der Physik</italic>. After Bartels's death in 1964, Karl Rawer
became the editor of the series and issued the next five volumes of the
series, III/III to III/VII.</p>
      <p id="d1e135">In the mid 1960s, the Space Science Committee in COSPAR decided to develop a
“standard ionosphere model”, similar to the COSPAR International Reference
Atmosphere for the thermosphere parameters. Karl Rawer took on the challenge
and chaired the COSPAR Task Force for the development of an empirical model
of the ionosphere, the International Reference Ionosphere (IRI). When URSI
joint the effort, the task force became an inter-union working group that
started its work in 1968. Karl Rawer has hatched and then tutored the IRI
working group for several decades.</p>
      <p id="d1e138">In 1961, in cooperation with the Fraunhofer Society, Karl Rawer founded a
separate research institute in Freiburg, the Arbeitsgruppe für
Physikalische Weltraumforschung (APW) with project funding from the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft, NASA, and the European Space Research Organisation (ESRO). The launch of two
successful satellite missions with APW instrumentation, AEROS-A in 1972 and
AEROS-B in 1974, led to in situ temperature and ion composition data that
became important input to the IRI. Soon the building in Freiburg became too
small to house the expanding space research activities, and the Fraunhofer
Society built an expansive institute in Freiburg-West; Karl Rawer was
appointed the director of this Institute for Space Research (later renamed
Institute for Measuring Techniques), leading it until his official retirement
in 1979.</p>
      <p id="d1e141">Karl Rawer was born to lead and he did so by inspiring his coworkers and
students, and by training young scientists from around the world. Even after
his <italic>official</italic> retirement he continued sharing his insight and vision
with colleagues in the scientific community. His comprehensive book
<italic>Wave Propagation in the Ionosphere</italic> was published in 1993 (Rawer,
1993).</p>

      
      </body>
    <back><ack><title>Acknowledgements</title><p id="d1e154">One of the authors, Bodo W. Reinisch became Rawer's student in 1960, and is
forever thankful having had such a wonderful teacher and friend. Kristian
Schlegel is thankful to Rawer for many fruitful discussions and advice. This
article is a modified version of a laudation previously published by Reinisch
(2014). <?xmltex \hack{\newline}?><?xmltex \hack{\newline}?>
Edited by: Kusumita Arora <?xmltex \hack{\newline}?>
Reviewed by: Sandro Maria Radicella</p></ack><ref-list>
    <title>References</title>

      <ref id="bib1.bib1"><label>1</label><mixed-citation>
Piggott, W. R. and Rawer, K.: URSI Handbook of Ionogram Interpretation and
Reduction, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1961.</mixed-citation></ref>
      <ref id="bib1.bib2"><label>2</label><mixed-citation>Rawer, K.: Elektrische Wellen in einem geschichteten Medium. Zur Frage der
partiellen Reflexion und zur Berechnung der scheinbaren Höhe von
Ionosphärenschichten, Ann. Phys., 427, 385–416,
<ext-link xlink:href="https://doi.org/10.1002/andp.19394270502" ext-link-type="DOI">10.1002/andp.19394270502</ext-link>, 1939.</mixed-citation></ref>
      <ref id="bib1.bib3"><label>3</label><mixed-citation>
Rawer, K.: Die Ionosphäre, ihre Bedeutung für Geophysik und
Radioverkehr, Noordhoff, Groningen, 1953.</mixed-citation></ref>
      <ref id="bib1.bib4"><label>4</label><mixed-citation>
Rawer, K.: The Ionosphere: Its Significance for Geophysics and Radio
Communications, Ungar, New York, 1956.</mixed-citation></ref>
      <ref id="bib1.bib5"><label>5</label><mixed-citation>
Rawer, K.: Wave Propagation in the Ionosphere, Springer Netherlands,
Dordrecht, 1993.</mixed-citation></ref>
      <ref id="bib1.bib6"><label>6</label><mixed-citation>Reinisch, B. W.: Karl Rawer: space research and international cooperation –
Laudation on the occasion of the 100<inline-formula><mml:math id="M1" display="inline"><mml:msup><mml:mi/><mml:mi mathvariant="normal">th</mml:mi></mml:msup></mml:math></inline-formula> birthday of Professor Karl
Rawer, Adv. Radio Sci., 12, 221–223, <ext-link xlink:href="https://doi.org/10.5194/ars-12-221-2014" ext-link-type="DOI">10.5194/ars-12-221-2014</ext-link>, 2014.</mixed-citation></ref>

  </ref-list></back>
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<ref-html id="bib1.bib1"><label>1</label><mixed-citation>
Piggott, W. R. and Rawer, K.: URSI Handbook of Ionogram Interpretation and
Reduction, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1961.
</mixed-citation></ref-html>
<ref-html id="bib1.bib2"><label>2</label><mixed-citation>
Rawer, K.: Elektrische Wellen in einem geschichteten Medium. Zur Frage der
partiellen Reflexion und zur Berechnung der scheinbaren Höhe von
Ionosphärenschichten, Ann. Phys., 427, 385–416,
<a href="https://doi.org/10.1002/andp.19394270502" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.1002/andp.19394270502</a>, 1939.
</mixed-citation></ref-html>
<ref-html id="bib1.bib3"><label>3</label><mixed-citation>
Rawer, K.: Die Ionosphäre, ihre Bedeutung für Geophysik und
Radioverkehr, Noordhoff, Groningen, 1953.
</mixed-citation></ref-html>
<ref-html id="bib1.bib4"><label>4</label><mixed-citation>
Rawer, K.: The Ionosphere: Its Significance for Geophysics and Radio
Communications, Ungar, New York, 1956.
</mixed-citation></ref-html>
<ref-html id="bib1.bib5"><label>5</label><mixed-citation>
Rawer, K.: Wave Propagation in the Ionosphere, Springer Netherlands,
Dordrecht, 1993.
</mixed-citation></ref-html>
<ref-html id="bib1.bib6"><label>6</label><mixed-citation>
Reinisch, B. W.: Karl Rawer: space research and international cooperation –
Laudation on the occasion of the 100<sup>th</sup> birthday of Professor Karl
Rawer, Adv. Radio Sci., 12, 221–223, <a href="https://doi.org/10.5194/ars-12-221-2014" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.5194/ars-12-221-2014</a>, 2014.
</mixed-citation></ref-html>--></article>
