Remembering John Brown

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[http://www.astro.gla.ac.uk/?p=5149 John Brown]'s unexpected passing is a great sadness to all who knew him. It prompted us to think about some of the big themes of his research career, in particular the business of inverse problems.
[http://www.astro.gla.ac.uk/?p=5149 John Brown]'s unexpected passing is a great sadness to all who knew him. It prompted us to think about some of the big themes of his research career, in particular the business of inverse problems.
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John's first paper was published in 1971. According to ADS it has been cited
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[https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1971SoPh...18..489B/abstract John's first paper] was published in 1971. As of 22 November 2019, ADS says it has been cited 889 times. It introduced several ideas that became key to the study of solar flares and their X-radiation.

Revision as of 12:04, 22 November 2019

John Brown's unexpected passing is a great sadness to all who knew him. It prompted us to think about some of the big themes of his research career, in particular the business of inverse problems.

John's first paper was published in 1971. As of 22 November 2019, ADS says it has been cited 889 times. It introduced several ideas that became key to the study of solar flares and their X-radiation.

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