Office of Polar Programs

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Karl A. Erb, Office Director, Office of Polar Programs

Physicist Karl A. Erb, who has served as Senior Science Advisor at NSF since 1993, became Head of the Office of Polar Programs on 2 November 1998. As part of the senior NSF management team, he gained considerable familiarity with the management of polar programs. His experience has included representing NSF in the National Science and Technology Council review of the U.S. Antarctic Program, that resulted in the 1996 White House affirmation of the importance of the program to the nation. He also coordinated preparations for the subsequent review by the U.S. Antarctic Program External Panel (known as the Augustine Panel after its chair, Norman Augustine). In addition, he has assisted in developing an agency-wide approach to supporting research in the Arctic. He is also the senior federal science official in the Federal Demonstration Partnership, as designated by the Assistant to the President for Science and Technology.

In 1986, Erb joined NSF as a program manager in the physics division after a 16-year career in research and education at Yale University, Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the University of Pittsburgh. From 1989 to1993, under two presidential science advisors, he oversaw the area of basic research in science and engineering at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.

Erb is recognized for his research in experimental nuclear physics, particularly in the areas of heavy-ion science and nuclear molecular phenomena. He received his masters and doctoral degrees from the University of Michigan, and his Bachelor of Arts degree from New York University. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He was recently recognized for his work in the public sector with the Presidential Meritorious Rank award.

 

 

 

2000 Office of Polar Programs