Ron has worked in the marine
field for the last 40 years where
he developed, planned, and
installed undersea
telecommunications cables,
cabled sensor systems, towed
sonars, cable burial plows, ROV
telemetry systems, and umbilical and tow cables. His earlier research was in the field of deep-water wave breaking and the momentum flux across the air-sea interface.
He holds a BS degree in Mechanical Engineering from the Pennsylvania State University and a Ph.D. in Ocean Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Dr. Rapp is recently retired as Director of Industry and Marine Liaison at SubCom LLC in Eatontown, NJ (USA) where he managed a group of engineers, geologists and other specialists. The group focused on liaising with the global fishing community and worked to minimize impacts of telecom cables on fishing and impacts to the marine environment. He has worked extensively in the New York Bight and continental shelf including the Hudson Canyon. He was a board member of the International Cable Protection Committee (ICPC).
Dr. Rapp has published and presented in several marine forums on the topics of undersea cable breaks, undersea cable route planning and hazards, cable installation, cable maintenance, and cable protection, use of Automatic Identification System (AIS) for cable protection, impacts of global fishing to undersea cable installations, undersea sensors, law of the sea, maritime shipping laws, and cable security. At MIT he published on marine hydrodynamics, fluid mechanics, dynamics of wave breaking, and air-sea interface mixing. This work is published in Nature, Journal of Fluid Mechanics, and the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London and other journals.