Evgenii Feinberg
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.[1] 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[2]
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)