Soviet physicist
Isaak Konstantinovich (Kushelevich) Kikoin (Russian : Исаак Константинович (Кушелевич) Кикоин ; 28 March 1908 – 28 December 1984), D.N. , was a Soviet physicist and an author of physics textbooks in Russian language who played an important role in the Soviet nuclear weapons program .: 27 [ 1]
Biography
Kikoin was born in the town of Novye Zhagory (now Žagarė in Lithuania ), Russian Empire ,[ 2] in a Lithuanian Jewish family; his parents, Kushel Isaakovich and Bunya Israilevna, were school teachers.[ 3] [ 4] During the World War I , his family was relocated from Latvia to Russia where he entered in gymnazium in Pskov , and upon graduation, he went to study physics at the Leningrad Polytechnic Institute in 1925.[ 3]
In 1930-31, he earned his specialist degree in physics and successfully defended his thesis on Photomagnetism for his Doktor Nauk in 1936.[ 3] He taught physics at the Leningrad Polytechnic Institute, and his early work investigated the electrical conductivity and magnetic attractions in metals until 1938.[ 3] From 1938 till 1944, he taught physics at the Ural Polytechnic Institute and found a landmine project with the Red Army that would demagnetize, and detonate the German army's tanks.: 412 [ 5] It was Kurchatov who brought Kikoin in Soviet program of nuclear weapons and assigned him the Uranium enrichment project at this Laboratory No. 2 using the gaseous diffusion method took place under Kikoin while Lev Artsimovich worked on electromagnetic isotope separation .: 78 [ 6] During the Russian Alsos , he went to Germany to locate German knowledge that would prove useful in Soviet programs.: 24 [ 7]
He remained associate with Soviet program of nuclear weapons, and was an academician of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union and was awarded the Stalin Prize a total of four times (1942, 1949, 1951, 1953), the Lenin Prize in 1959, and the USSR State Prize in 1967 and 1980. Kikoin was named a Hero of Socialist Labour (1951); he also won the Kurchatov Medal (1971).[ 8] [ 9] Kikoin was with Igor Kurchatov as one of the founders of the Kurchatov Atomic Energy Institute , which developed the first Soviet nuclear reactor in 1946. This was the lead-in to the Soviet atomic bomb project with the first atomic bomb test taking place in 1949.
In 1970, Kikoin (jointly with Andrey Kolmogorov ) started issuing Kvant magazine , a popular science magazine in physics and mathematics for school students and teachers.[ 9] He authored texts on molecular physics in 1978, and it has been translated in Persian language.[ 10]
See also
References
^ Josephson, Paul (20 October 2022). Nuclear Russia: The Atom in Russian Politics and Culture . Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-350-27257-6 . Retrieved 26 November 2022 .
^ "БиблиоМ » КИКОИН Исаак Константинович (Кушеэлевич)" . bibliom-ru.translate.goog . Retrieved 26 November 2022 .
^ a b c d "Кикоин Исаак Константинович | jewmil.com" . www.jewmil.com (in Russian). Retrieved 26 November 2022 .
^ "Памятные даты Пскова" . Archived from the original on 2019-02-14. Retrieved 2019-02-13 .
^ Pondrom, Lee G. (25 July 2018). Soviet Atomic Project, The: How The Soviet Union Obtained The Atomic Bomb . World Scientific. ISBN 978-981-323-557-1 . Retrieved 27 November 2022 .
^ Riehl, Nikolaus; Seitz, Frederick (1996). Stalin's Captive: Nikolaus Riehl and the Soviet Race for the Bomb . Chemical Heritage Foundation. ISBN 978-0-8412-3310-2 .
^ Hargittai, Istvan; Hargittai, Magdolna (20 August 2019). Science In Moscow: Memorials Of A Research Empire . World Scientific. ISBN 978-981-12-0346-6 . Retrieved 27 November 2022 .
^ Kikoin Isaac K. WarHeroes Biography. Accessed 2019-08-29.
^ a b Academician I.K. Kikoin: On the Centenary of His Birth. Herald of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 2008, Vol. 78, No. 1, pp. 91–98.
^ Física Molecular by Isaak Kikoin; Abram Kikoin: Good Hardcover (1971) 1st Edition. | Biblioteca de Babel . Retrieved 27 November 2022 .
External links
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