Evgenii Feinberg
Quick Facts
Biography
Evgenii L'vovich Feinberg (27 June 1912 – 10 December 2005) was a Soviet physicist, well known for his contributions to theoretical physics.
He was a son to a physician, born in Baku, moving to Moscow in 1918 where he graduated from Moscow State University as a theoretical physicist in 1935. He worked at Lebedev Physical Institute in Troitsk, Moscow Oblast since 1938, from where he published over hundred works in his field. Mainly, he studied radio physics (wave propagation), statistical acoustics, the neutron, cosmic rays and particle physics. In his early years, he studied the Beta-decay of ionized atoms (1939), inelastic coherent processes (1941) and inelastic diffraction processes (1954).
He headed the high-energy particle interaction research groups 1952–78. Was a guest professor at Nizhny Novgorod State University 1944–46 and a professor at his former school, Moscow Engineering Physics Institute 1946–54, at what is now the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology.
Awards
- Member of Russian Academy of Science
- Pomeranchuk Prize 2000 for his studies of inelasticity of colliding hadron
Publications
- On the propagation of radio waves along an imperfect surface, J. Phys., vol. 9, pp. 317–330, 1944
- About the external diffractive production of particles in nuclear collisions (1953). With Isaak Pomeranchuk
- Propagation of radiowaves along the terrestrial surface (1961)
- Direct production of photons and dileptons in multiple hadron production (1976)
- Hadron clusters and half-dressed particles in quantum field theory (1980)
- Art in a science dominated world (Gordon & Breach, 1987)