Robert Schmieder

Robert William Schmieder
Born (1941-07-10) July 10, 1941
Phoenix, Arizona, United States
Alma materOccidental College, Caltech, Columbia
Known forNanoLogic, Underwater Islands
SpouseKathleen (Deal) Schmieder
AwardsSchmieder Bank, 4 named species, NAUI Environmental Award, Amateur Radio Hall of Fame
Scientific career
FieldsPhysical and Natural Science
InstitutionsSandia National Labs, Cordell Expeditions
Thesis (1968)

Robert William Schmieder (born July 10, 1941) is an American scientist and explorer. Schmieder has had a multidisciplinary career, broadly divided between physics and related physical sciences, and natural science and exploration. In most of his projects, he created and led teams of both professional scientists and volunteers. His work is documented in about 100 technical publications and 10 books. Among his most significant work was the invention of laser spark spectroscopy (now commercialized), the formulation of nanologic (the use of nanoscale devices in computers), and the concept of underwater islands (which led to designation of the Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary).