Summary
Kyle Murray is a research scientist and geophysicist/geodesist with 11 years of experience applying remote sensing and geophysical methods to study tectonics, volcanism, groundwater, sea level rise, and coastal resilience. Based at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, he develops end-to-end research projects—especially advances in SAR interferometry—that bridge Earth observations and climate resilience efforts. His background spans academia and government labs, including Cornell, JPL, New Mexico Tech, and the USGS, giving him a rare combination of field seismology, quantitative geodesy, and algorithm development. Kyle is skilled at turning complex geospatial datasets into actionable science and policy-relevant insights, often fostering interdisciplinary collaborations across oceanography and climate initiatives. Notably, he pairs deep technical expertise with a track record of publishing impactful research from project inception through peer review. Based in Golden, Colorado, he brings practical experience in both high-latency field settings and cutting-edge computational workflows.
11 years of coding experience
8 years of employment as a software developer
Master of Science (MS), Geophysics, Master of Science (MS), Geophysics at New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology
BS, Earth Science, BS, Earth Science at Montana State University-Bozeman
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Geophysics, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Geophysics at Cornell University
Universidad Politecnica De Valencia
Spanish, Japanese