The first Russian medical scientist to receive the Nobel Prize. Nobel Prize laureates are our compatriots. Dossier. Chemistry Prize

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Russian state university oil and gas named after I.M. Gubkin

Faculty of Economics

Essay on Cultural Studies

Nobel laureates of Russia

Moscow 2007


The Nobel Prizes are awarded in accordance with A. Nobel's will, drawn up on November 27, 1895, which provided for the allocation of capital for the award of prizes in five areas: physics, chemistry, physiology and medicine, literature and contribution to world peace (since 1969, on the initiative of the Swedish Bank, they are also awarded Prize in Economics). For this purpose, the Nobel Foundation was created in 1900 - a private, independent, non-governmental organization with an initial capital of 31 million Swedish crowns.

The first prizes were awarded on December 10, 1901. Among the Nobel Prize laureates there are disproportionately few Russians (Russians, Soviet citizens), significantly fewer than representatives of the USA, Great Britain, France or Germany. However, given their nationality at the time of receiving the prize, some of these Nobel laureates may also be considered as representatives of other powers.

Nobel laureates in the field of physiology and medicine.

Ivan Petrovich Pavlov(September 27, 1849, Ryazan - February 27, 1936, Leningrad) - physiologist, creator of the science of higher nervous activity and ideas about the processes of regulation of digestion; founder of the largest Russian physiological school. He essentially created modern digestive physiology. In 1903, 54-year-old Pavlov made a report at the International Physiological Congress in Madrid. And the next year, 1904, the Nobel Prize for research into the functions of the main digestive glands was awarded to I.P. Pavlov - he became the first Russian Nobel laureate.

In the Madrid report, I. P. Pavlov first formulated the principles of the physiology of higher nervous activity, to which he devoted the next 35 years of his life. Concepts such as reinforcement, unconditional and conditioned reflexes have become fundamental concepts in behavioral science.

In 1919-1920, during the period of devastation, Pavlov, enduring poverty and lack of funding for scientific research, refused the invitation of the Swedish Academy of Sciences to move to Sweden, where he was promised to create the most favorable conditions for life and scientific research, and in the vicinity of Stockholm it was planned to build Pavlov wants such an institute as he wants. Pavlov replied that he would not leave Russia anywhere. Then a corresponding decree of the Soviet government followed, and Pavlov was built a magnificent institute in Koltushi, near Leningrad, where he worked until 1936.

Next Russian Nobel laureate in medicine Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov(May 3, 1845, Ivanovka, now Kupyansky district of the Kharkov region - July 2, 1916, Paris).

Mechnikov's scientific works relate to a number of areas of biology and medicine. In 1866-1886. Mechnikov developed issues of comparative and evolutionary embryology, being (together with Alexander Kovalevsky) one of the founders of this direction. Mechnikov’s numerous works on bacteriology are devoted to the epidemiology of cholera, typhoid fever, tuberculosis and other infectious diseases.

Mechnikov proposed an original theory of the origin of multicellular animals and developed a phagocytic theory of immunity. For his work “Immunity in infectious diseases” in 1908, together with P. Ehrlich, he received the Nobel Prize.

Issues of aging occupied a significant place in Mechnikov’s works. He believed that old age and death in humans occur prematurely, as a result of self-poisoning of the body with microbial and other poisons. Highest value Mechnikov attributed intestinal flora in this regard. Based on these ideas, Mechnikov proposed a number of preventive and hygienic means to combat self-poisoning of the body (sterilization of food, limiting meat consumption, eating lactic acid products). Mechnikov considered orthobiosis to be the ultimate goal of the fight against premature aging - the achievement of “a complete and happy cycle of life, ending in a calm natural death.” In a number of works, Mechnikov touched upon many general theoretical and philosophical problems. In early works devoted to the issues of Darwinism, Mechnikov expressed a number of ideas that anticipated the modern understanding of some issues of evolution. Considering himself a supporter of rationalism, Mechnikov criticized religious, idealistic and mystical views. Main role Mechnikov attributed human progress to science. Mechnikov created the first Russian school of microbiologists, immunologists and pathologists; actively participated in the creation of research institutions developing various forms of combating infectious diseases. Honorary member of many foreign Academy of Sciences, scientific societies and institutions. He died in Paris on July 15, 1916 at the age of 71 after several myocardial infarctions.

Nobel laureates in chemistry.

Nikolai Nikolaevich Semenov(April 3, 1896, Saratov - September 25, 1986, Moscow). Basic scientific achievements Scientists include the quantitative theory of chemical chain reactions, the theory of thermal explosion, and combustion of gas mixtures. In 1956 he received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry (together with Cyril Hinshelwood) for developing the theory of chain reactions.

Ilya Romanovich Prigozhin(January 25, 1917, Moscow, Russia - May 28, 2003 Austin, Texas). The bulk of his work is devoted to nonequilibrium thermodynamics and statistical mechanics of irreversible processes. One of the main achievements was that the existence of nonequilibrium thermodynamic systems, which under certain conditions, absorbing mass and energy from the surrounding space, can make a qualitative leap towards complexity (dissipative structures). Moreover, such a jump cannot be predicted based on the classical laws of statistics. Such systems were later named after him. The calculation of such systems became possible thanks to his work performed in 1947.

Prigogine proved one of the main theorems of thermodynamics of nonequilibrium processes - the minimum production of entropy in an open system. In 1977 he won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

In 1982, Prigozhin became a foreign member of the USSR Academy of Sciences. His works were widely translated into Russian. Many scientists turn to his works, not only physicists and chemists, but also biologists, paleontologists and mathematicians, historians, and philologists.

Nobel laureates in physics.

In 1958, three Soviet scientists became laureates of the Nobel Prize in Physics - P.A. Cherenkov, I.E. Tamm and I.M. Franc.

Pavel Alekseevich Cherenkov(28 July 1904, Voronezh region- January 6, 1990, Moscow). Cherenkov's main works are devoted to physical optics, nuclear physics, high energy particle physics. In 1934 discovered a specific blue glow of transparent liquids when irradiated with fast charged particles. Showed the difference between this type of radiation and fluorescence. In 1936, he established its main property - the directionality of radiation, the formation of a light cone, the axis of which coincides with the trajectory of the particle. The theory of Cherenkov radiation was developed in 1937 by I.E. Tamm and I.M. Franc. The Vavilov-Cherenkov effect underlies the operation of detectors of fast charged particles (Cherenkov counters). Cherenkov participated in the creation of synchrotrons. Performed a series of works on the photodecay of helium and other light nuclei.

Ilya Mikhailovich Frank(October 10, 1908, St. Petersburg - June 22, 1990, Moscow) and Igor Evgenievich Tamm(June 26, 1895, Vladivostok - April 12, 1971, Moscow) gave a theoretical description of this effect, which occurs when particles move in a medium at speeds exceeding the speed of light in this medium. This discovery led to the creation of a new method for detecting and measuring the speed of high-energy nuclear particles. This method is of great importance in modern experimental nuclear physics.

Academician Lev Davidovich Landau(January 22, 1908, Baku - April 1, 1968, Moscow) or Dau (that was the name of his close friends and colleagues), is considered a legendary figure in the history of domestic and world science. Quantum mechanics, solid state physics, magnetism, low temperature physics, cosmic ray physics, hydrodynamics, quantum field theory, nuclear physics and elementary particles, plasma physics - this is not a complete list of areas in different times that attracted Landau's attention. They said about him that in “the huge building of physics of the 20th century there were no locked doors for him.” Unusually gifted mathematically, Landau joked about himself: “I learned to integrate at the age of 13, but I always knew how to differentiate.”

For pioneering research in the field of condensed matter theory, in particular the theory of liquid helium, Landau was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1962.

Landau’s great merit is the creation of a national school of theoretical physicists, which included such scientists as, for example, I.Ya. Pomeranchuk, I.M. Lifshits, E.M. Lifshits, A.A. Abrikosov, A.B. Migdal, L.P. Pitaevsky, I.M. Khalatnikov, Yu.M. Kagan. The scientific seminar led by Landau, who had already become a legend, went down in the history of theoretical physics.

Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa(June 26 (July 9) 1894, Kronstadt - April 8, 1984, Moscow). In 1978, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics “for fundamental inventions and discoveries in the field of low-temperature physics” (for his studies of helium superfluidity, carried out back in 1938).

Kapitsa became most famous for his innovative experimental studies in the field of low temperature physics, creation of technology for producing pulsed ultra-strong magnetic fields, work on plasma physics. In 1924, he managed to obtain a magnetic field with a strength of 500 kG. In 1932, Kapitsa created a hydrogen liquefier, in 1934 - a helium liquefier, and in 1939 - a low-pressure installation for the industrial production of oxygen from air. In 1938, he discovered an unusual property of liquid helium - a sharp decrease in viscosity at temperatures below critical (2.19 K); this phenomenon is now called superfluidity. These studies stimulated the development quantum theory liquid helium, developed by L. Landau. In the post-war period, Kapitsa's attention was attracted to high-power electronics. He created continuous magnetron generators. In 1959, he experimentally discovered the formation of high-temperature plasma in a high-frequency discharge.

In 2000 he received the Nobel Prize in Physics Zhores Ivanovich Alferov(b. March 15, 1930, Vitebsk, Belarus). For the development of semiconductor heterostructures and the creation of fast opto- and microelectronic components. His research played a major role in computer science.

In 2003, the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to V. Ginzburg, A. Abrikosov and A. Leggett for their contribution to the development of the theory of superconductivity and superfluidity.

Vitaly Lazarevich Ginzburg(b. October 4, 1916, Moscow). Main works on the propagation of radio waves, astrophysics, the origin of cosmic rays, Vavilov-Cherenkov radiation, plasma physics, crystal optics, etc. Author about 400 scientific articles and about 10 monographs on theoretical physics, radio astronomy and cosmic ray physics. In 1940, Ginzburg developed the quantum theory of the Cherenkov-Vavilov effect and the theory of Cherenkov radiation in crystals. In 1946, together with Frank, he created the theory of transition radiation that occurs when a particle crosses the boundary of two media. In 1950 he created (together with L.D. Landau) a semi-phenomenological theory of superconductivity (Ginsburg-Landau theory). In 1958, V. L. Ginzburg created (together with L. P. Pitaevsky) a semi-phenomenological theory of superfluidity (Ginzburg-Pitaevsky theory). He developed the theory of magnetic bremsstrahlung cosmic radio emission and the radio-astronomical theory of the origin of cosmic rays.

Alexey Alekseevich Abrikosov(b. June 25, 1928, Moscow). Abrikosov, together with E. Zavaritsky, an experimental physicist from the Institute of Physical Problems, discovered when testing the Ginzburg-Landau theory new class superconductors - superconductors of the second type. This new type of superconductor, unlike superconductors of the first type, retains its properties even in the presence of a strong magnetic field (up to 25 Tesla). Abrikosov was able to explain such properties, developing the reasoning of his colleague V. Ginzburg, by the formation of a regular lattice magnetic lines, which are surrounded by ring currents. This structure is called the Abrikosov Vortex Lattice.

Abrikosov also worked on the problem of the transition of hydrogen into the metallic phase inside hydrogen planets, high-energy quantum electrodynamics, superconductivity in high-frequency fields and in the presence of magnetic inclusions (at the same time, he discovered the possibility of superconductivity without a stop band) and was able to explain the Knight shift at low temperatures by taking into account the spin- orbital interaction. Other works were devoted to the theory of non-superfluid helium and matter at high pressures, semimetals and metal-insulator transitions.

Nobel laureates in literature.

After physics, this is the most fruitful Nobel Prize for Russia. Over the years, the winners of this prize were Ivan Bunin (1933), Boris Pasternak (1958, “for significant achievements in modern lyric poetry, as well as for continuing the traditions of the great Russian epic novel.” Personal pressure was also put on Pasternak, which, ultimately account, forced him to refuse the award. In a telegram sent to the Swedish Academy, Pasternak wrote: “Due to the significance that the award awarded to me received in the society to which I belong, I must refuse it. Do not consider it an insult. voluntary refusal"), Mikhail Sholokhov (1965, for the novel "Quiet Don". This, by the way, was the only Soviet writer who received the Nobel Prize with the consent of the USSR authorities), Alexander Solzhenitsyn (1970, "for outstanding achievements in the field of humanitarian activities") and Joseph Brodsky (1987, "for comprehensive creativity, saturated with purity of thought and brightness of poetry").

Nobel laureates in economics. Leonid Vitalievich Kantorovich(January 6, 1912, St. Petersburg - April 7, 1986, Moscow), laureate of the 1975 Nobel Prize in Economics “for his contribution to the theory of optimal resource allocation” (together with T. Koopmans).

Kantorovich - representative of the St. Petersburg mathematics school P.L. Chebyshev, student of G.M. Fikhtengolts and V.I. Smirnova. The scientist shared and developed the views of P.L. Chebyshev on mathematics as a single discipline, all sections of which are interconnected, interdependent and play a special role in the development of science, technology, technology and production. L. Kantorovich put forward the thesis of the interpenetration of mathematics and economics and sought to synthesize humanitarian and exact technologies of knowledge. His work became a model of scientific service based on the universalization of mathematical thinking.

His first scientific results obtained in the descriptive theory of functions and sets and, in particular, on projective sets. In functional analysis, Kantorovich introduced and studied the class of semi-ordered spaces (K-spaces). He put forward a heuristic principle that the elements of K-spaces are generalized numbers. This principle was substantiated in the 1970s within the framework of mathematical logic. Boolean-valued analysis has established that Kantorovich spaces represent new non-standard models of the real line. He was also the first to apply functional analysis to computational mathematics.

Developed general theory approximate methods, built effective methods solving operator equations (including the steepest descent method and Newton's method for such equations). In 1939-40 he initiated linear programming and its generalizations.

Developed the idea of ​​optimality in economics. Established the interdependence of optimal prices and optimal production and management decisions. Each optimal solution is interconnected with an optimal price system.

And finally Nobel laureates in the field of peace.

Andrey Dmitrievich Sakharov(May 21, 1921 - December 14, 1989) - Soviet physicist, academician of the USSR Academy of Sciences and political activist, dissident and human rights activist. Since the late 1960s, he was one of the leaders of the human rights movement in the USSR. In 1968, he wrote a brochure “On Peaceful Coexistence, Progress and Intellectual Freedom,” which was published in many countries. In 1970, he became one of the three founding members of the Moscow Human Rights Committee (together with Andrei Tverdokhlebov and Valery Chalidze).

In 1971 he addressed the Soviet government with a “Memoir”. Three years later, he held a press conference at which he announced the Day of Political Prisoners in the USSR. In 1975 he wrote the book “About the Country and the World.” In the same year, Sakharov was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

In September 1977, he sent a letter to the organizing committee on the problem of the death penalty, in which he advocated its abolition in the USSR and throughout the world. In the winter of 1979-1980 he made a number of statements against the introduction Soviet troops to Afghanistan.

For all this, he was deprived of all government awards (three times Hero of Socialist Labor, laureate of the State and Lenin Prizes) and deported to the city of Gorky without trial. The articles “What the USA and the USSR must do to maintain peace” and, in 1983, “On the danger of thermonuclear war” were written there.

Mikhail Sergeevich Gorbachev(March 2, 1931, Privolnoe, Stavropol region) - Secretary General Central Committee of the CPSU (March 11, 1985 - August 23, 1991), President of the USSR (March 15, 1990 - December 25, 1991). President of the Gorbachev Foundation. Gorbachev’s activities as head of state are associated with a large-scale attempt at reform and democratization in the USSR - Perestroika, which ended with the collapse of Soviet Union, as well as the ending cold war. The period of Gorbachev's reign is assessed ambiguously.

“In recognition of his leading role in the peace process, which today characterizes the important component Life of the International Community", on October 15, 1990, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

The Nobel Prize, named after its founder Alfred Nobel, was first awarded in 1901. Citizens of the Soviet Union and Russia have received the Nobel Prize 16 times over the entire period of its existence. However, it is worth considering that in some cases the prize was awarded simultaneously to several scientists who took part in work on the same topic. Therefore, the number of citizens of the USSR and Russia who became laureates of the award is 21 people.

Physics Prize

Physics is that scientific field, in which the Russians, from the point of view of the Nobel Committee, turned out to be the strongest. Of the 16 prizes received by citizens of Russia and the USSR, 7 were awarded specifically for scientific discoveries in the field of physics.

This first happened in 1958, when a whole team of scientists, consisting of Pavel Cherenkov, Igor Tamm and Ilya Frank, received a prize for the discovery and explanation of a physical effect called the Cherenkov effect after one of the researchers. Since then, citizens of the USSR and Russia have received six more awards in this field:
- in 1962 - Lev Landau for research on condensed matter;
- in 1964 - Alexander Prokhorov and Nikolai Basov for studying the laser-maser principle of operation of amplifiers and emitters;
- in 1978 - Peter Kapitsa for achievements in the field of low temperature physics;
- in 2000 - Zhores Alferov for research in the field of semiconductors;
- in 2003 - Alexey Abrikosov and Vitaly Ginzburg, who created the theory of type II superconductivity;
- in 2010 - Konstantin Novoselov for his work on the study of graphene.

Awards in other areas

The remaining nine prizes were distributed among other areas of knowledge for which the Nobel Prize is awarded. Thus, two prizes in the field of physiology and medicine were received at the very beginning of the 20th century: in 1904, Ivan Pavlov, the author of famous experiments in the field of digestion, was recognized as the laureate, and in 1908, Ilya Mlechnikov, who studied the functioning of the immune system, was recognized as the laureate.

In the field of chemistry, only Nikolai Semenov managed to receive a prize: in 1956, for his study chemical reactions. Three prizes were received by citizens of the USSR and Russia for literary activity: In 1958 - Boris Pasternak, in 1965 - Mikhail Sholokhov, in 1970 - Alexander Solzhenitsyn. The only winner of the prize among citizens of the USSR and Russia was Leonid Kantorovich, who developed the theory of optimal resource allocation.

Peace Prize

For special achievements significant for the entire world community, the Nobel Committee awards the Peace Prize. Citizens of the USSR and Russia became its owners twice: the first time this happened in 1975, when Andrei Sakharov was awarded for his fight against the regime, and then in 1990, when the award was received by Mikhail Gorbachev, who contributed to the intensification of peaceful relations between countries.

Federal Agency for Science and Education

Russian State University of Oil and Gas named after I.M. Gubkin

Faculty of Economics

Essay on Cultural Studies

Nobel laureates of Russia

Moscow 2007


The Nobel Prizes are awarded in accordance with A. Nobel's will, drawn up on November 27, 1895, which provided for the allocation of capital for the award of prizes in five areas: physics, chemistry, physiology and medicine, literature and contribution to world peace (since 1969, on the initiative of the Swedish Bank, they are also awarded Prize in Economics). For this purpose, the Nobel Foundation was created in 1900 - a private, independent, non-governmental organization with an initial capital of 31 million Swedish crowns.

The first prizes were awarded on December 10, 1901. Among the Nobel Prize laureates there are disproportionately few Russians (Russians, Soviet citizens), significantly fewer than representatives of the USA, Great Britain, France or Germany. However, given their nationality at the time of receiving the prize, some of these Nobel laureates may also be considered as representatives of other powers.

Nobel laureates in the field of physiology and medicine.

Ivan Petrovich Pavlov(September 27, 1849, Ryazan - February 27, 1936, Leningrad) - physiologist, creator of the science of higher nervous activity and ideas about the processes of regulation of digestion; founder of the largest Russian physiological school. He essentially created modern digestive physiology. In 1903, 54-year-old Pavlov made a report at the International Physiological Congress in Madrid. And the next year, 1904, the Nobel Prize for research into the functions of the main digestive glands was awarded to I.P. Pavlov - he became the first Russian Nobel laureate.

In the Madrid report, I. P. Pavlov first formulated the principles of the physiology of higher nervous activity, to which he devoted the next 35 years of his life. Concepts such as reinforcement, unconditioned and conditioned reflexes have become the basic concepts of behavioral science.

In 1919-1920, during the period of devastation, Pavlov, enduring poverty and lack of funding for scientific research, refused the invitation of the Swedish Academy of Sciences to move to Sweden, where he was promised to create the most favorable conditions for life and scientific research, and in the vicinity of Stockholm it was planned to build Pavlov wants such an institute as he wants. Pavlov replied that he would not leave Russia anywhere. Then a corresponding decree of the Soviet government followed, and Pavlov was built a magnificent institute in Koltushi, near Leningrad, where he worked until 1936.

The next Russian Nobel laureate in medicine was Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov(May 3, 1845, Ivanovka, now Kupyansky district of the Kharkov region - July 2, 1916, Paris).

Mechnikov's scientific works relate to a number of areas of biology and medicine. In 1866-1886. Mechnikov developed issues of comparative and evolutionary embryology, being (together with Alexander Kovalevsky) one of the founders of this direction. Mechnikov’s numerous works on bacteriology are devoted to the epidemiology of cholera, typhoid fever, tuberculosis and other infectious diseases.

Mechnikov proposed an original theory of the origin of multicellular animals and developed a phagocytic theory of immunity. For his work “Immunity in infectious diseases” in 1908, together with P. Ehrlich, he received the Nobel Prize.

Issues of aging occupied a significant place in Mechnikov’s works. He believed that old age and death in humans occur prematurely, as a result of self-poisoning of the body with microbial and other poisons. Mechnikov attached the greatest importance in this regard to the intestinal flora. Based on these ideas, Mechnikov proposed a number of preventive and hygienic means to combat self-poisoning of the body (sterilization of food, limiting meat consumption, eating lactic acid products). Mechnikov considered orthobiosis to be the ultimate goal of the fight against premature aging - the achievement of “a complete and happy cycle of life, ending in a calm natural death.” In a number of works, Mechnikov touched upon many general theoretical and philosophical problems. In early works devoted to the issues of Darwinism, Mechnikov expressed a number of ideas that anticipated the modern understanding of some issues of evolution. Considering himself a supporter of rationalism, Mechnikov criticized religious, idealistic and mystical views. Mechnikov attributed the main role in human progress to science. Mechnikov created the first Russian school of microbiologists, immunologists and pathologists; actively participated in the creation of research institutions developing various forms of combating infectious diseases. Honorary member of many foreign Academy of Sciences, scientific societies and institutes. He died in Paris on July 15, 1916 at the age of 71 after several myocardial infarctions.

Nobel laureates in chemistry.

Nikolai Nikolaevich Semenov(April 3, 1896, Saratov - September 25, 1986, Moscow). The scientist's main scientific achievements include the quantitative theory of chemical chain reactions, the theory of thermal explosion, and combustion of gas mixtures. In 1956 he received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry (together with Cyril Hinshelwood) for developing the theory of chain reactions.

Ilya Romanovich Prigozhin(January 25, 1917, Moscow, Russia - May 28, 2003 Austin, Texas). The bulk of his work is devoted to nonequilibrium thermodynamics and statistical mechanics of irreversible processes. One of the main achievements was that the existence of nonequilibrium thermodynamic systems was shown, which under certain conditions, absorbing mass and energy from the surrounding space, can make a qualitative leap towards complexity (dissipative structures). Moreover, such a jump cannot be predicted based on the classical laws of statistics. Such systems were later named after him. The calculation of such systems became possible thanks to his work performed in 1947.

Prigogine proved one of the main theorems of thermodynamics of nonequilibrium processes - the minimum production of entropy in an open system. In 1977 he won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

In 1982, Prigozhin became a foreign member of the USSR Academy of Sciences. His works were widely translated into Russian. Many scientists turn to his works, not only physicists and chemists, but also biologists, paleontologists and mathematicians, historians, and philologists.

Nobel laureates in physics.

In 1958, three Soviet scientists became laureates of the Nobel Prize in Physics - P.A. Cherenkov, I.E. Tamm and I.M. Franc.

Pavel Alekseevich Cherenkov(July 28, 1904, Voronezh region - January 6, 1990, Moscow). Cherenkov's main works are devoted to physical optics, nuclear physics, and high-energy particle physics. In 1934 discovered a specific blue glow of transparent liquids when irradiated with fast charged particles. Showed the difference between this type of radiation and fluorescence. In 1936, he established its main property - the directionality of radiation, the formation of a light cone, the axis of which coincides with the trajectory of the particle. The theory of Cherenkov radiation was developed in 1937 by I.E. Tamm and I.M. Franc. The Vavilov-Cherenkov effect underlies the operation of detectors of fast charged particles (Cherenkov counters). Cherenkov participated in the creation of synchrotrons. Performed a series of works on the photodecay of helium and other light nuclei.

Ilya Mikhailovich Frank(October 10, 1908, St. Petersburg - June 22, 1990, Moscow) and Igor Evgenievich Tamm(June 26, 1895, Vladivostok - April 12, 1971, Moscow) gave a theoretical description of this effect, which occurs when particles move in a medium at speeds exceeding the speed of light in this medium. This discovery led to the creation of a new method for detecting and measuring the speed of high-energy nuclear particles. This method is of great importance in modern experimental nuclear physics.

Academician Lev Davidovich Landau(January 22, 1908, Baku - April 1, 1968, Moscow) or Dau (that was the name of his close friends and colleagues), is considered a legendary figure in the history of domestic and world science. Quantum mechanics, solid state physics, magnetism, low temperature physics, cosmic ray physics, hydrodynamics, quantum field theory, physics of the atomic nucleus and elementary particles, plasma physics - this is not a complete list of areas that attracted Landau’s attention at different times. They said about him that in “the huge building of physics of the 20th century there were no locked doors for him.” Unusually gifted mathematically, Landau joked about himself: “I learned to integrate at the age of 13, but I always knew how to differentiate.”

For pioneering research in the field of condensed matter theory, in particular the theory of liquid helium, Landau was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1962.

Landau’s great merit is the creation of a national school of theoretical physicists, which included such scientists as, for example, I.Ya. Pomeranchuk, I.M. Lifshits, E.M. Lifshits, A.A. Abrikosov, A.B. Migdal, L.P. Pitaevsky, I.M. Khalatnikov, Yu.M. Kagan. The scientific seminar led by Landau, who had already become a legend, went down in the history of theoretical physics.

Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa(June 26 (July 9) 1894, Kronstadt - April 8, 1984, Moscow). In 1978, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics “for fundamental inventions and discoveries in the field of low-temperature physics” (for his studies of helium superfluidity, carried out back in 1938).

Kapitsa's greatest fame came from his innovative experimental research in the field of low-temperature physics, the creation of equipment for producing pulsed superstrong magnetic fields, and his work on plasma physics. In 1924, he managed to obtain a magnetic field with a strength of 500 kG. In 1932, Kapitsa created a hydrogen liquefier, in 1934 - a helium liquefier, and in 1939 - a low-pressure installation for the industrial production of oxygen from air. In 1938, he discovered an unusual property of liquid helium - a sharp decrease in viscosity at temperatures below critical (2.19 K); this phenomenon is now called superfluidity. These studies stimulated the development of the quantum theory of liquid helium, developed by L. Landau. In the post-war period, Kapitsa's attention was attracted to high-power electronics. He created continuous magnetron generators. In 1959, he experimentally discovered the formation of high-temperature plasma in a high-frequency discharge.

Who received the Nobel Prize.

Physics:
Tamm Igor Evgenievich "For the discovery and interpretation of the Cherenkov effect."
Frank Ilya Mikhailovich "For the discovery and interpretation of the Cherenkov effect."
Cherenkov Pavel Alekseevich “For the discovery and interpretation of the Cherenkov effect.”
Landau Lev Davydovich "For pioneering theories of condensed matter, especially liquid helium."
Basov Nikolai Gennadievich “For fundamental work in the field of quantum electronics, which led to the creation of emitters and amplifiers based on the laser-maser principle.”
Prokhorov Alexander Mikhailovich “For fundamental work in the field of quantum electronics, which led to the creation of emitters and amplifiers based on the laser-maser principle.”
Kapitsa Pyotr Leonidovich "For his basic research and discoveries in low temperature physics."
Alferov Zhores Ivanovich “For the development of semiconductor heterostructures for high-speed optoelectronics.”
Abrikosov Aleksey Alekseevich “For the creation of the theory of superconductivity of the second kind and the theory of superfluidity of liquid helium-3.”
Ginzburg Vitaly Lazarevich "For the creation of the theory of superconductivity of the second kind and the theory of superfluidity of liquid helium-3."
Konstantin Novoselov, University of Manchester (Chemistry) "for pioneering experiments in the study of the two-dimensional material graphene."
Andrey Konstantinovich Geim, head of the Manchester Center for “mesoscience and nanotechnology”, head of the department of condensed matter physics “for pioneering experiments in the study of the two-dimensional material graphene.” True, at the time he was awarded the Nobel Prize, he did not have Russian citizenship, and when he was invited by the director of the international cooperation department of the Skolkovo Foundation, Alexem Sitnikov, Game refused.
Literature:
Bunin Ivan Alekseevich “For the strict skill with which he develops the traditions of Russian classical prose».
Pasternak Boris Leonidovich "For significant achievements in modern lyric poetry, as well as for continuing the traditions of the great Russian epic novel."
Sholokhov Mikhail Alexandrovich “For the artistic strength and integrity of the epic about the Don Cossacks at a turning point for Russia.”
Solzhenitsyn Alexander Isaevich “For the moral strength with which he followed the immutable traditions of Russian literature.”
Brodsky Joseph Alexandrovich “For comprehensive creativity, imbued with clarity of thought and passion of poetry.”
Physiology and medicine:
Pavlov Ivan Petrovich “For work on the physiology of digestion.”
Mechnikov Ilya Ilyich “For his work on immunity.”
Chemistry:
Semenov Nikolai Nikolaevich “For research in the field of the mechanism of chemical reactions.”
Prigozhin Ilya Romanovich “For his work on the thermodynamics of irreversible processes, especially for the theory of dissipative structures.”
Economy:
Kantorovich Leonid Vitalievich “For his contribution to the theory of optimal resource allocation.”
Peace Prize
Sakharov Andrey Dmitrievich “For fearless support of the fundamental principles of peace between people and courageous struggle against abuse of power and any form of suppression of human dignity.”
Gorbachev Mikhail Sergeevich “In recognition of his leading role in the peace process, which today characterizes an important part of the life of the international community.”

* The list does not include people who were born in the territory Russian Empire or the USSR, but at the time of presentation of the prize did not have Russian citizenship or Soviet citizenship and, according to the Nobel Committee, were not included in the list of laureates from Russia or were not included there for ideological reasons, as well as laureates born into a family of Russian subjects or Soviet citizens on the territory of other countries. Krorme Andrei Konstantinovich Geim, who was educated at MIPT, received a PhD degree in physical and mathematical sciences at the Institute of Physics solid RAS. He worked as a researcher at the Institute of Physics and Technology of the USSR Academy of Sciences and at the Institute for Problems of Microelectronics Technology of the USSR Academy of Sciences, and only in 1990 he immigrated from the USSR.

** In 2009, Russia was twice deprived of the Nobel Prize in the category of chemistry and physiology. The award was awarded to Western scientists for those discoveries where the priority of Russian scientists is no less. Why did this happen? Is it intentional that our scientists are not awarded a prestigious prize? The answer cannot be clear. Here and human factor– choosing from many applicants is difficult. According to the rules, no more than three applicants are awarded the prize for one nomination. In addition, few of our scientists are engaged in nominating nominees from their ranks for other awards. Previous, already recognized merits may be taken into account by the Nobel Committee. PR is not enough - you need to present more, advertise your achievements. How well Western scientists do this. And you must admit that when making decisions about awarding this or that scientist from Russia, many biases are allowed.

*** From this list, I do not agree with the awarding of the Nobel Prize to M. S. Gorbachev. But this is my personal opinion.

Who could receive the award:

Alexey Starobinsky, chief researcher Institute of Theoretical Physics named after. L.D. Landau
Andrey Linde, professor at Stanford University
Vyacheslav Mukhanov, professor at the University of Munich. Ludwig Maximilian
(physics) "For contributions to the theory of the inflationary Universe"
Victor Veselago, professor at MIPT, head of laboratory and institute general physics them. A.M. Prokhorov RAS. (physics) "For the discovery of materials with a negative refractive index"
Lydia Gall, head of the laboratory at the Institute of Analytical Instrumentation of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
(chemistry) "For the development of a method for identifying and analyzing the structure of biological macromolecules"
Yuri Oganesyan, Scientific Director of the Laboratory nuclear reactions named after G.N. Flerov JINR (Dubna)
(physics) "For the synthesis of new chemical elements and approaching the "island of atomic stability"
Alexander Polyakov, professor at Princeton University
(physics) "For exceptional contributions to string theory and quantum field theory."
Anatoly Buchachenko, Head of Department, Faculty of Chemistry, Moscow State University
Yuri Molin, head of the Institute’s laboratory chemical kinetics and combustion SB RAS
Renat Sagdeev, director of the International Tomography Center of the SB RAS.
(chemistry) "For the discovery of the magnetic isotope effect"
Rashid Sunyaev, Director of the Institute of Astrophysics of the Max Planck Society (Germany)
(physics) "For the explanation of the anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background radiation"
Ludwig Faddeev, director of the International Mathematical Institute. Euler (St. Petersburg)
(physics) "For the mathematical substantiation of quantum field theory."
Tigran Shmaonov Senior Researcher, Institute of General Physics RAS
(physics) "For the discovery of the relict background."
Yuri Bunkov Professor at the Neel Institute (Grenoble, France)
Vladimir Dmitriev, chief researcher at the Institute of Physical Problems named after. P.L.Kapitsa RAS.
(physics) "For the discovery of spin superfluidity."
Alexander Spirin was director of the Protein Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences until 2001.
(physiology) “For the discovery of messenger RNA”, “For the discovery of informosomes - ribonucleoprotein complexes”, “For the study of the structure and function of ribosomes”.
Harry Abelev, head of the laboratory of the Oncological scientific center RAS and head of the laboratory of Moscow State University (Physiology and Medicine) "For the discovery of the synthesis of embryonic protein fetoprotein by tumors and the development of the foundations of immunodiagnostics."
Vladimir Garvin, head of the laboratory of the gallium-germanium neutrino telescope at the Baksan Neutrino Observatory of the Institute for Nuclear Research of the Russian Academy of Sciences
(physics) "For pioneering work in astrophysics, in particular for the registration of cosmic neutrinos."
Alexander Varshavsky, professor at the California Institute of Technology
(chemistry) "For the discovery of the role of ubiquitin in protein utilization."

TASS DOSSIER. On October 2, 2017, in Stockholm (Sweden), the process of announcing the winners of the Nobel Prizes in physiology and medicine, physics, chemistry, literature, as well as the State Bank of Sweden Prize in Economics, dedicated to the memory of Alfred Nobel, begins.

Since 1904, 24 of our compatriots have become prize winners. Two of them received the prize in physiology and medicine, twelve in physics, one in chemistry, two in economics, five in literature and two in the peace prize.

Chemistry Prize

In 1956, Nikolai Semenov became the first Soviet Nobel laureate in history.

He was awarded the Chemistry Prize jointly with British chemist Cyril Hinshelwood for his research into chemical reactions. Scientists independently developed the theory of chain reactions in the late 1920s.

Academician Nikolai Semenov is one of the founders of chemical physics, creator of the theory of thermal explosion of gas mixtures. He was among the founders of the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (1951). In the USSR, Semenov's work in the field of chain reactions was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1941. Other Soviet awards include the Order of Lenin and the Red Banner of Labor, the Lenin Prize. He was a member of academies in several countries, including the New York Academy of Sciences. He held various positions at the USSR Academy of Sciences, including vice president (1963-1971).

Prize in Physiology and Medicine

In 1904, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to physiologist Ivan Pavlov - professor, academician, founder Russian society physiologists and the Institute of Physiology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, creator of the science of higher nervous activity. He was awarded the award for his work in the field of digestive physiology. At the presentation ceremony, a representative of the Karolinska Institute (Sweden), which awards the prize, stated that, thanks to Pavlov’s work, “we were able to advance further in the study of this problem than in all previous years; now we have a comprehensive understanding of the influence of one part of the digestive system on another.” . Pavlov became the first Russian Nobel laureate.

In 1908, the laureate was Ilya Mechnikov, a biologist, embryologist and pathologist, creator of the theory of immunity and founder of scientific gerontology (the science that studies human aging). He received the award together with Paul Ehrlich (Germany) for his work on the study of immunity, which helped to understand how the body manages to defeat diseases.

Physics Prize

In 1958, Russian scientists Pavel Cherenkov, Ilya Frank and Igor Tamm received the Nobel Prize in Physics for their discovery of the emission of charged particles traveling at superluminal speeds.

In 1962, the laureate was Lev Landau, noted for the theory of condensed matter and liquid helium. Due to the fact that Landau was in the hospital after being seriously injured in a car accident, the prize was presented to him in Moscow by the Swedish Ambassador to the USSR.

In 1964, the prize was awarded to physicists Nikolai Basov and Alexander Prokhorov. Their work on the creation of quantum generators (masers and lasers), which laid the foundation for a new branch of physics - quantum electronics, was first published ten years earlier, in 1954. Independently of Soviet scientists, the American physicist Charles Townes came to similar results, and eventually received the Nobel Prize all three.

In 1978, Pyotr Kapitsa was awarded for his discoveries in low-temperature physics (he began working in this area back in the 1930s).

In 2000, Zhores Alferov won the Nobel Prize for his developments in semiconductor technology (he shared the award with the German physicist Herbert Kremer).

In 2003, Vitaly Ginzburg and Alexei Abrikosov (who took American citizenship in 1999) were awarded the prize for their fundamental work on the theory of superconductors and superfluids (the award was shared with the British-American physicist Anthony Leggett).

In 2010, the prize was awarded to Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov, who created graphene, a material with unique properties. Geim left the USSR in 1990 and subsequently received Dutch citizenship. Konstantin Novoselov left for the Netherlands in 1999, and later received British citizenship.

Literature Prize

In 1933, Ivan Bunin won the Nobel Prize in Literature. He was awarded "for the rigorous skill with which he develops the traditions of Russian classical prose."

In 1958, Boris Pasternak was awarded the prize “for outstanding services in modern lyric poetry and in the field of great Russian prose.” However, Pasternak, who was criticized in the USSR for the novel Doctor Zhivago, published abroad, was forced to refuse the award under pressure from the authorities. The medal and diploma were presented to his son in Stockholm in December 1989.

In 1965, the prize was awarded to Mikhail Sholokhov for his novel “Quiet Don” (“for the artistic strength and integrity of the epic about the Don Cossacks at a turning point for Russia”). Sholokhov is one of nine authors awarded not for the totality of achievements in the field of literature, but for a specific work.

In 1970, Alexander Solzhenitsyn became the laureate “for the moral strength with which he followed the immutable traditions of Russian literature.” By the time the award was awarded, Solzhenitsyn was in open conflict with the USSR authorities. Fearing that after participating in the award ceremony he would be banned from entering the USSR, he refused to travel to Stockholm. Alexander Solzhenitsyn received the Nobel medal and diploma in 1974, when he was already deprived of citizenship and expelled from the country after the publication abroad of the first volume of the Gulag Archipelago.

In 1987, the award was received by Joseph Brodsky, who emigrated to the United States in 1972, “for comprehensive creativity, imbued with clarity of thought and passion of poetry.”

Peace Prize

In 1975, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Soviet academician Andrei Sakharov for “the fight against abuse of power and any form of suppression of human dignity.”

In 1990, the award was received by USSR President Mikhail Gorbachev in recognition of his role in the process of détente.

Prize in Economics in Memory of Alfred Nobel

In 1975, the Soviet mathematician and economist Leonid Kantorovich (together with the American Tjalling Koopmans) was awarded the Economics Prize for substantiating the theory of optimal use of raw materials.

In 1973, the award was awarded to the American economist of Russian origin Vasily Leontiev for the development of the input-output method.

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