Tuija Pulkkinen

Tuija I. Pulkkinen (born 1962) is a Finnish space physicist. Her primary research foci are studying the energy flow from the solar wind to the near-Earth space environment and the energy dissipation processes in the magnetosphere.

Tuija I. Pulkkinen
Alma materUniversity of Helsinki (MS, PHD)
AwardsMacelwane Medal (1998)
Julius Bartels Medal (2017)
Scientific career
Fields
  • Space Physics
Institutions
Websiteclasp.engin.umich.edu/people/pulkkinen-tuija/

Early life and education

Pulkkinen was born in 1962. She received M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in theoretical physics from theUniversity of Helsinki in 1987 and 1992.[1]

Research and career

Pulkkinen's main research contributions are related to modelling current in the magnetotail during the growth of storms and understanding its importance for magnetotail instabilities. She has broad experience in both modeling and data analysis.

Pulkkinen received the American Geophysical Union Macelwane Medal in 1998 for outstanding research by a young scientist.[2]

Pulkkinen was affiliated with the Finnish Meteorological Institute from 1998 to 2010. In 2011 she became Dean of the School of Electrical Engineering at Aalto University; she was vice president for Research at the same institution for 2014–2018. She became chair of the Department of Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering at the University of Michigan in 2018.[3]

Awards and honors

References