Vijay Prasad Dimri is an Indian geophysical scientist, known for his contributions in opening up a new research area in Earth sciences by establishing a parallelism between deconvolution and inversion, the two vital geophysical signal processing tools deployed in minerals and oil and gas exploration. The Government of India honoured him, in 2010, with the award of Padma Shri, the fourth highest civilian award, for his contributions to the fields of science and technology.
One of the first scientific achievements of Dimri related to the mineral and oil and gas explorations. He is reported to have developed a redesigned Wiener filter, a common equipment used seismic deconvolution procedure, for application in magnetic and inversion of gravity measurements for mapping susceptibility and subsurface density. Thus, he was successful in establishing a parallelism between deconvolution and inversion, two vital signal processing tools. He demonstrated experimentally that single channel and multi channel time varying filters are equivalent and algorithms for stationary data could be applied to stationary geophysical data processing as well. He also propounded the usage of maximum entropy method to nonstationary and complex geophysical data analysis. His book, Deconvolution and Inverse Theory, published by Elsevier in 1992, contained these findings and was reported to be accepted by other scientists such as Professor M. Koch, who called it a didactical masterpiece and is considered as a reference book on the subject.
Dimitri is credited with the first quantification of gravity interpretation. He also hypothesized a covariance gravity model for the Bay of Bengal. He argued that the earthquakes in Koyna and Warna areas were triggered by the self organized fractal seismicity of the neighbourhood reservoir. He has also contributed to the geophysical data analysis, interpretation of earthquakes and exploration of hydrocarbons and groundwater. His current projects relate to the development of a Tsunami Wave Propagation model in the aftermath of the Tsunami of 2004 that originated from the sea earthquake of Sumatra region and setting up of a pilot project for enhanced oil recovery from India oil wells, a Norwegian collaborative project. During his tenure at the National Geophysical Research Institute, Dimri formulated two programs, Gas+Hydrates and Legal Continental Shelf and organised a fluoride free water project in Nalgonda, Andhra Pradesh, for assessment, management and exploration of groundwater in hardrock terrains. During this time, NGRI emerged as a premier institute of geophysics, with NISCAIR, New Delhi rating it as the no. 1 in geophysical outputs among Indian institutes in 2006 and SCOPUS 2007 placing NGRI among the top 1 per cent in the world in terms of citations. It was during his period, NGRI commercialised its first patent. Vijay Prasad Dimri is credited with over 125 research papers published in peer reviewed journals and six books, two authored and four edited works, brought out by publishers such as Elsevier, Springer and Balkema He also holds three patents of which one is accepted by the US.
Dimri featured in the President's honors list in 2010 when he was selected for the civilian award of Padma Shri, by the Government of India. He is the first Asian to receive the Lorenz Lecture Award of the American Geophysical Union and has delivered the Sir Axford Award Lecture at the Asia Oceania Geosciences Society. He is also a recipient of Prof. G. P. Chatterjee Award of the Indian Science Congress, Outstanding Scientist Award by The Federation of Andhra Pradesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry, Department of Ocean Development Award and the National Mineral Award. Dimri was also invited to chair the proceedings of the 2nd edition of Geoconfluence, ISM Dhanbad's annual Geo-Technical fest. Dimri has been honored with fellowships by several scientific organizations such as The World Academy of Sciences, Italy, Indian National Science Academy, New Delhi, National Academy of Sciences, Allahabad, Indian Society of Applied Geochemists and AP Akademy of Sciences, Andhra Pradesh. He has been recognised as the CSIR-Distinguished Scientist by the CSIR-National Geophysical Research Institute, Hyderabad.