BAMOS Vol 31 No.4 December 2018 | Page 8

8 BAMOS Dec 2018 Obituary Vale Dr. Angus McEwan FAA FTSE Prepared by Trevor McDougall, John Church and John Zillman Dr Angus McEwan FAA FTSE who died on 5 September 2018, at the age of 81, was President of AMOS in 1998–99. A detailed summary of his career is available on the AMOS website. Both the detailed summary and that presented below are based on tributes presented at a celebration of his life held in Hobart on 27 October 2018. Angus was born in Alloa, a small town on the Forth River in Scotland in July 1937. After migrating to Australia at age nine, he left school at age 15 to assist with the family’s finances, and enrolled at Caulfield Technical College to complete a diploma in engineering. After six months of national service with the Air Force, Angus took a laboratory assistant job at the Commonwealth Aeronautical Research Laboratories (ARL) and was soon promoted to Experimental Officer. At ARL, he was working in a research environment with research scientists and it was here that he first decided he’d like a career in science, and to do that he needed more qualifications. Angus completed a degree in mechanical engineering at Melbourne University, graduating with first class honours in 1961. While at Melbourne University Angus’ interest in aerodynamics and boundary layers was inspired by Peter Joubert, a lecturer in fluid dynamics and later professor. Angus then went on to do a PhD at the University of Cambridge at the Cavendish Laboratory under Alan Townsend. It was in that laboratory that he developed a very close and fruitful working association with G. I. Taylor, a legendary figure who was credited with the origins of much of modern fluid mechanics, solid dynamics, meteorology and oceanography. Angus at the CSIRO Aspendale laboratory, around 1980. Image: CSIRO Returning to Australia from Cambridge in late 1965, Angus returned to ARL for 3 years as a Research Scientist working on a variety of experiments on super-sonic flow and the shape of ablating objects in a hypersonic airstream. His interests changed to wave experiments, which were a diversion from the core interests of ARL and, with a Queen Elizabeth II Fellowship, he moved in 1971 to CSIRO Division of Meteorological Physics at Aspendale in Melbourne. When his fellowship ended, he was offered a job there as a research scientist with responsibility for setting up a Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. In some ways Angus did not have the normal background for a career in ocean and atmospheric research, but his background in engineering, together with his experience during his PhD seemed to align perfectly with his natural talents, because he became the pre-eminent experimentalist in Geophysical Fluid Dynamics of his generation. Angus was known around the world for the sheer cleverness of how he set up his scientific experiments. Angus made fundamental research advances in several areas, including non-linear wave interactions, turbulent mixing at both the 1 m and 1000 km scales, and cloud dynamics. Details of specific experiments Angus devised are included in the more detailed summary of his career and contributions. In particular, as a result of Angus’ brilliance in experimental Geophysical Fluid Dynamics, his name will forever be associated with the Parametric Sub-harmonic Instability (PSI) and Quasi-biennial Oscillation (QBO) processes, and with “mixing efficiency”. Angus at an Open Day at the CSIRO Marine Labs in 1991.