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Pat Langhorne is a 65-year-old Scottish professor and Antarctic sea ice researcher. She was born in 1955 in Glasgow, United Kingdom. She is a professor of physical oceanography at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England. Langhorne has been researching Antarctic sea ice since the early 1980s. She has published numerous papers on the subject, including a paper in Nature in 2003 that was the first to show that Antarctic sea ice was decreasing. She has also been involved in several research projects, including the Antarctic Sea Ice Processes and Climate (ASPeCt) project, which studied the effects of climate change on Antarctic sea ice. Langhorne has received numerous awards for her work, including the Polar Medal in 2004 and the Royal Society's Polar Medal in 2008. She was also awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of East Anglia in 2011. Langhorne is married and has two children. She is an avid sailor and enjoys skiing and hiking in her spare time.

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Age 68 years old
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Pat Langhorne Height, Weight & Measurements

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Pat Langhorne Net Worth

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2019

In the 2019 New Year Honours, Langhorne was awarded the New Zealand Antarctic Medal, for services to Antarctic science.

1985

In 1985 she was invited to take part in an Antarctic experiment which brought her to New Zealand for the first time. The resulted in collaboration on examining the strength of sea ice with Bill Robinson, Vernon Squire and Tim Haskell. The work was published in Nature and underpinned the use of sea ice runways for large aircraft. Since 1988 her work has focused on teaching physics and researching sea ice physical processes at the University Otago. Langhorne was Head of the Department of Physics at the University of Otago from 2012-2015. Her work has involved over 20 twenty research visits to Antarctica, mostly to the Ross Sea region. She has published extensively on the mechanical properties of sea ice under cyclic loading and its break-up by ocean waves, on the accretion and properties of frazil ice beneath the McMurdo fast ice, and other aspects of sea ice and ice shelves.

1955

Patricia Jean Langhorne NZAM (born 1955) is an Antarctic sea ice researcher. She is a Professor in the physics department at the University of Otago, New Zealand. She was previously head of department (2012–2015). She now leads the sea ice observation component of one of New Zealand’s National Science Challenges – the Deep South.

Langhorne was born in 1955 in Glasgow, Scotland. Her early life was spent in Torrance, near Kirkintilloch and she completed her schooling at Kilsyth Academy. She gained a degree in Physics from the University of Aberdeen. From there she moved to Clare Hall at the University of Cambridge, UK, where she completed her PhD in 1982, under the supervision of Peter Wadhams, on crystal alignment in sea ice. She then held a fellowship with Newnham College, supported by Rolls Royce, at the Whittle Laboratory, Cambridge.