Jaime Gómez-Hernández
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Carlos Ruiz Celaá Lifetime Achievement Prize
Technical University of Valencia Lifetime Achievement Research Prize in Civil Engineering
Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz International Prize for Water
EWRI Pioneers in Groundwater
William Christian Krumbein Medal
Technical University of Valencia Social Council Prize for Improving University Outreach
Prize for Research and Technology of Wastes
J. Jaime Gómez-Hernández (born 1960) is a Spanish civil engineer specialized in geostatistics and hydrogeology. He is a full professor of hydraulic engineering at the School of Civil Engineering of the Technical University of Valencia. He was conferred the William Christian Krumbein Medal in 2020 from the International Association for Mathematical Geosciences.[1] He also received the 2020 Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz International Prize for Water in the field of groundwater.[2] In 2026, he got the InterPore Lifetime Achievement Medal[3].
- BS in Civil Engineering from Technical University of Valencia in 1983
- MS in Applied Hydrogeology from Stanford University in 1987
- PhD in Geostatistics for Natural Resources Evaluation from Stanford University in 1990
Biography
Born on 28 October 1960, in Requena, Spain, Gómez-Hérnandez earned his Civil Engineering Bachelor's degree from the Technical University of Valencia in 1983. After a year working for the Valencian delegation of the Spanish company EPTISA, where he implemented the first aquifer numerical models using just his ZX Spectrum connected to a portable TV, he moved to Stanford University in 1984 to pursue an MS in Applied Hydrogeology under the supervision of Irwin Remson of the Applied Earth Sciences Department. This was followed by a PhD at Stanford in Geostatistics for Natural Resources Characterization under the supervision of Andre Journel. Upon his return to Spain in 1990, he worked for the Spanish company EVREN as a civil engineer, and in 1994, he joined the School of Civil Engineering at the Technical University of Valencia as an associate professor. He became a full professor in 2000, the position at which he remains active.