CV for Dr. John M. Goodman
(updated Dec 05, 2009)
John Goodman received his BS in Nuclear Engineering from N.C. State University in 1960 and his PhD in Physics from Catholic University of America in 1970. He has 44 years of government and industry experience in the RDT&E associated with radio and radar systems with emphasis on those categories that are influenced by the ionosphere. Specialties have included SATCOM and HF system impairment studies and the development of real-time-channel evaluation subsystems. He was with the Naval Research Laboratory from 1960-1991, and served a brief stint as Principal Scientific Consultant for Radio Communications at the SHAPE Technical Center at The Hague in the mid-80s. He was Program Manager for Radio Communications Technology at SRI International from 1991-1994, and he was Vice President for Applied Technology at TCI/BR Communications, headquartered in Sunnyvale California between 1994 and 1998. He is currently Vice President and Chief Technical Officer for Radio Propagation Services, Inc. (RPSI). Dr. Goodman has numerous publications, and he has been the Guest Editor for Special Issues of Radio Science issues on several occasions. He has organized a number of topical conferences, most notably the series of IES conferences held every three years since 1975. He is also author of the text: HF Communications: Science & Technology published by Van Nostrand Reinhold [1992], and a Chapter on "Meteor Burst Communications" in the Encyclopedia of Telecommunications published by Marcel Dekker. [1995]. He has been a guest author of an article entitled "Characteristics of the Ionosphere" appearing in the Wiley Encyclopedia of Electrical and Electronics Engineering [2002]. Dr. Goodman has lectured on a variety of space science issues, and has conducted specialized training courses under the aegis of the George Washington University. Dr. Goodman is president of a private consulting business, JMG Associates, in operation since 1985. This company has been the manager of the international series of Ionospheric Effects Symposia (IES) for several decades.
Early in his career at NRL, Dr. Goodman was involved in radar investigations of the atmosphere and relevant space objects. He developed an interest in space science, and began measurement of the ionospheric electron content using Faraday rotation of lunar echoes. He conducted studies of the ionosphere using incoherent scatter radar technology, eventually using this topic as inspiration for his PhD dissertation. He was one of the first investigators to observe positive phase excursions in TEC associated with geomagnetic storms. He was the Principal Investigator for GEMINI Experiment D14 designed to investigate ionospheric inhomogeneities, at a time when such measurements were either sparse or nonexistent. He also investigated UHF and L-Band scintillation phenomena associated with the Timation Satellite, an early prototype of the NAVSTAR/GPS system. He managed a team responsible for recovery and dissemination of SOLRAD 11A/B data, and. and he was the originator of a well-known method for updating climatological models based upon pseudo-sunspot numbers derived from sounders. Dr Goodman continued these model update studies at SRI International and TCI/BR Communications during the 1990s. With RPSI, he is the co-inventor of a real-time forecasting procedure, Dynacast®, that enables improved specification of the ionosphere by taking space weather data into account. He is the co-inventor of another patent dealing with HF broadcasting assessment, and a patent is pending on another invention dealing with communication performance prediction for mobile communication services.
Dr. Goodman has been actively involved in national and international bodies responsible for consideration of industry and government standards for radio communications. Specifically he has been engaged in ITU-R activities, and has represented the United States at various meetings of Study Groups and Working Parties both in the United States and abroad. He has been a member of Working Groups within URSI, and he is a member of the AGU. Dr Goodman has taken an active role in various bodies responsible for coordinating, developing, and evaluation of aeronautical communications standards and systems.
In recent years Dr. Goodman has lectured on Space Weather at the George Mason University, and various commercial venues and has written a book entitled Space Weather and Telecommunications, published by Springer [2005].