Vladimir G Kurt
P N Lebedev Physical Insitute, Russia
Posters & Accepted Abstracts: J Astrophys Aerospace Technol
Joseph Shklovsky was born on 1 July 1916 in a small Ukranian town Glukhov. He finished school in 1932 and in 1933 he entered Physical-Mathematical faculty of Vladivostok State University. After the 2-d year he was transferred to the Optic Department of the Physical Faculty of the Moscow State University which he graduated in 1938. The same year he took a Postgraduate at the Sternberg Astronomical Institute where he worked his whole life. He became a Professor and since 1969 he was the Head of the Astrophysical Department in the Space Research Institute. He made outstanding works almost in all the fields of modern astrophysics. He was the first to show the possibility of observing the neutral Hydrogen in the Galaxy in the line 21 cm. He made outstanding works in cosmology, planetary astronomy and cosmogony. Shklovsky was a brilliant lecturer. He lectured at Astronomical Department of the Physical Faculty of the Moscow State University various courses: ??General Astronomy?, ??Radio Astronomy?, ??Quantum Mechanics?, and many professors in different universities in Russia, the USA and Europe were his students. He solved the problem of genetic relationship of low-mass stars of the Sun type, red giants and planetary nebulae. He calculated wavelengths and the intensity of radio lines of OH and other molecules in the interstellar medium. He was the first to identify the spectrum of the Earth atmosphere glow. Three of his students were elected members of the Russian Academy of Sciences and more that 20 became doctors and proffesors. He was a good specialist in the history of discovering of South and Central America, as well as in Japanese history. Shklovsky was an erudite and a remarkable artist. He was a specialist in literature and poetry. Being a free man, he struggled against anti-semitism in the USSR and persecution of dissidents. Therefore for many years he couldn??t travel abroad and take part in the international conferences. He was elected the member of Royal Astronomical Society of Great Britain, the member of the American Academy of Sciences and Art, an honorary member of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, an Honorary professor of Paris University. Pacific Astronomical Society of the USA awarded him with Bruce golden medal (1972). He is the author of more than 300 articles published in ??Nature?, Astrophysical Journal, Month. Noth., Astronomical Journal and other Russian and international journals. He died on 3 March 1968, a few months before his 70s anniversary.
E-mail: vkurt@asc.rssi.ru
Astrophysics & Aerospace Technology received 114 citations as per Google Scholar report