RD
Member Since 2010
Roelf Du Toit Strauss
Professor, North-West University
Professional Experience
North-West University
Professor
2008 - Present
Education
Doctorate
2013
Honors & Awards
Africa Award for Research Excellence in Space Sciences
Received December 2021
Citation
Professor Dr. Du Toit Strauss became A prominent international figure in space research during his early years of undergraduate and graduate studies. During his first conference participations at AGU and Committee on Space Research assemblies he presented his graduate work on the stochastic differential equation method for the solution of Fokker-Planck equations for energetic particle transport. Already then, he assumed a leadership role by paving the way for subsequent research in this and related areas of study. He completed his Ph.D. in 2013 and subsequently became an assistant and, more recently, associate professor at the North-West University in South Africa, where he is now a central figure in student education and inspires the next generation of space researchers from Africa. Internationally, he is widely acknowledged for his excellent research contributions to the propagation of solar energetic particles and cosmic rays and his community work and leadership. His community service includes the organization of several scientific sessions at international conferences and his active participation as a peer reviewer for funding panels and paper reviews in high-impact international journals. He is very active in student supervision, and a number of his students have already successfully completed their B.Sc.’s, M.Sc.’s and Ph.D.’s. For his research, he received funding through national funding agencies, and he is active in international collaboration projects. He is also the principal investigator for the South African Neutron Monitor program, thus continuing this longstanding tradition of space research through the younger generations. His research excellence is documented by his impressive publication record and his numerous invitations to give presentations at international conferences. To date, he has authored or co-authored nearly 50 peer reviewed scientific publications, including in AGU journals, and he has already received over 1,000 citations to his work. His research focuses on the physics of the heliosphere, in particular the acceleration and transport of energetic particles from the Sun, the Jovian magnetosphere and the outer heliosphere, including cosmic rays. He has made important contributions to the methodology of particle transport simulations and the interpretation of particle observations, which are of renewed interest with the recently launched Parker Solar Probe and Solar Orbiter missions. In summary, Dr. Strauss is an internationally acknowledged researcher of the highest merit, and he will surely extend his leadership role in space research even more in the future. He is awarded the AGU Africa Award for Research Excellence in Space Science for his outstanding contributions to the understanding of cosmic rays and energetic particle transport in the heliosphere.
— Frederic Effenberger Ruhr-University Bochum Bochum, Germany
Response
It is a great honor and privilege to accept the 2021 AGU Africa Award for Research Excellence in Space Science. I would like to thank Sunanda Basu and AGU for making this award possible and Frederic Effenberger for his nomination. Through this award, I hope that I can showcase a small fraction of the excellent research being conducted on the African continent. I would like to thank my family, friends and colleagues for their continual support. I’m especially grateful to my wife for her continual love and encouragement.
— R. Du Toit Strauss
North-West University
Potchefstroom, South Africa
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Current Roles
Member
Africa Award for Research Excellence in Earth and Ocean Sciences Committee
Member
Africa Award for Research Excellence in Space Sciences Committee
Publications
Measurements of Cosmic Rays by a Mini‐Neutron Monitor at Neumayer III From 2014 to 2017
A mini‐neutron monitor (MNM) was installed at the German Antarctic Neumayer III station, measuring the variation of galactic cosmic rays and ...
June 10, 2024
Living With Cosmic Radiation
October 21, 2022
A Multi‐Purpose Heliophysics L4 Mission
September 09, 2021
AGU Abstracts
Diffusion-induced Drift of Solar Energetic Particles
ACCELERATION AND TRANSPORT OF SUPRATHERMAL AND ENERGETIC PARTICLES IN THE INNER HELIOSPHERE: OBSERVATIONS AND MODELING II ORAL
spa-solar and heliospheric physics | 14 december 2023
Roelf D. Strauss, Nicolas Wijsen, Ian G. Richardso...
Recent multi-spacecraft observations have shown how the spatial distribution of solar energetic particles (SEPs) evolves during an event. Especially i...
View Abstract
Solar Orbiter, STEREO-A and near-Earth spacecraft SEP observations during a quick succession of EUV jets in November 2022
ACCELERATION AND TRANSPORT OF SUPRATHERMAL AND ENERGETIC PARTICLES IN THE INNER HELIOSPHERE: OBSERVATIONS AND MODELING I ORAL
spa-solar and heliospheric physics | 14 december 2023
David Lario, Laura Balmaceda, Raul Gomez-Herrero, ...
A series of near-relativistic solar electron events was observed on November 9 to 15, 2022 by STEREO-A at 0.96 au, by near-Earth spacecraft such as AC...
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The Effect of Perpendicular Diffusion on Solar Energetic Particle Electron and Proton Onset Times; Evidence for a Common Accelerator
ENERGETIC PARTICLES FROM THE SUN TO THE HELIOSPHERE II ORAL
spa-solar and heliospheric physics | 15 december 2022
Roelf D. Strauss, Nina Dresing, Ian G. Richardson
In a turbulent magnetic field with transversal complexity, energetic particles will be scattered along (through pitch-angle diffusion) and perpendicul...
View Abstract
Volunteer Experience
2024 - 2025
Member
Africa Award for Research Excellence in Earth and Ocean Sciences Committee
2024 - 2025
Member
Africa Award for Research Excellence in Space Sciences Committee
Check out all of Roelf Du Toit Strauss’s AGU Research!
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