Background
He was born on February 20, 1904, in the Elisabethpol Governorate of the Russian Empire (now Ganja, Azerbaijan), to an Armenian family. His father was a train driver.
inventor physicist university professor nuclear scientist
He was born on February 20, 1904, in the Elisabethpol Governorate of the Russian Empire (now Ganja, Azerbaijan), to an Armenian family. His father was a train driver.
In 1928 he graduated from the Leningrad Polytechnic Institute.
In 1945, he founded and became director of the Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics. In 1941 they were awarded the Stalin Prize. He died in Moscow on December 8, 1970, at the age of 66 and was buried at Novodevichy Cemetery.
Scientific career
From 1927 to 1941 Alikhanov worked at the Ioffe Institute.
He then took part in creation of the first Soviet cyclotron (under the guidance of Vitaly Khlopin and jointly with Igor Kurchatov and George Gamov). In 1934, Alikhanov began research on radioactivity and radioactive radiation.
In 1934, with A. I. Alikhanian and M. South. Kozodaev, he discovered and studied the phenomenon of the emission of electron-positron pairs by excited nuclei.
In 1935, with Alikhanian, he established the dependence of β-spectra on the atomic number of an element.
In 1936, working with Alikhanian and L. A. Artsimovich, he experimentally corroborated the law of conservation of momentum in pair annihilation. The research initiated by Alikhanov, Alikhanian, and South. Iowa. Nikitin led to the discovery in 1939 of a stream of fast protons in cosmic rays.
In 1949 Alikhanov founded the first nuclear reactor in the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics. In 1961, with V. V. Vladimirskii and others, he built the first accelerator in the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics with strong focusing and an energy of 7GeV (1 Electron volts = 1 billion eV).
Under Alikhanov’s direction, a plan was drawn up and construction begun on an accelerator with a capacity of 70GeV. On December 1, 1945 he founded the Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics in Moscow. He was the director of the institute until 1968.
In 1954 he was designated a Hero of Socialist Labor.
Russian Academy of Sciences. Academy of Sciences of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics.