List of Russian astronomers and astrophysicists

This list of Russian astronomers and astrophysicists includes the famous astronomers, astrophysicists and cosmologists from the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation.

Staff of the Pulkovo Observatory (around 1883–1886). Otto Wilhelm von Struve is in the center.

Alphabetical list

A

B

  • Nikolai P. Barabashov, co-author of the ground breaking publication of the first pictures of the far side of the Moon in 1961, called Atlas of the Other Side of the Moon; a crater and a planet were named after him
  • Vladimir Belinski, an author of the BKL singularity model of the Universe evolution
  • Igor Belkovich, made contributions to astronomy; the crater Bel'kovich on the Moon is named after him
  • Aristarkh Belopolsky, invented a spectrograph based on the Doppler effect, among the first photographers of stellar spectra
  • Sergey Belyavsky, discovered the bright naked-eye comet C/1911 S3 (Beljawsky); discovered and co-discovered a number of asteroids
  • Gennady S. Bisnovatyi-Kogan, first determined the maximum mass of a hot neutron star
  • Sergey Blazhko, discovered a secondary variation of the amplitude and period of some RR Lyrae stars and related pulsating variables, now known as the Blazhko effect
  • Semion Braude, co-developed large-scale radio interferometers for precise examination of extraterrestrial radio sources
  • Fyodor Bredikhin, developed the theory of comet tails, meteors and meteor showers, a director of the Pulkovo Observatory
  • Matvei Petrovich Bronstein, theoretical physicist; pioneer of quantum gravity; author of works in astrophysics, semiconductors, quantum electrodynamics and cosmology
  • Jacob Bruce, statesman, naturalist and astronomer, founder of the first observatory in Russia (in the Sukharev Tower)
Bredikhin

C

D

  • Denis Denisenko, astronomer, author of more than 25 scientific articles and a presenter at five international conferences
  • A. G. Doroshkevich, along with Igor Novikov, discovered cosmic microwave background radiation as a detectable phenomenon
  • Alexander Dubyago, expert in theoretical astrophysics; the lunar crater Dubyago is named after him and his father, Dmitry Ivanovich Dubyago
  • Dmitry Dubyago, expert in theoretical astrophysics, astrometry, and gravimetry; a crater on the Moon is named after him and his son

E

  • Vasily Engelhardt, researched comets, asteroids, nebulae, and star clusters, in an observatory he built himself

F

  • Vasily Fesenkov, founded the Alma-Ata (now Tien Shan) astrophysical observatory, and was the first to make a study of Zodiacal light using photometry, and suggested a theory of its dynamics
  • Kirill Florensky, head of Comparative Planetology at the Vernadsky Institute of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences; the crater Florensky on the Moon is named after him
  • Alexander Friedmann, mathematician and cosmologist, discovered the expanding-universe solution to the general relativity field equations.; authored the FLRW metric of Universe
  • Alexei Fridman, predicted existence of smaller satellites around Uranus

G

  • George Gamow, theoretical physicist and cosmologist, discovered alpha decay via quantum tunneling and Gamow factor in stellar nucleosynthesis, introduced the Big Bang nucleosynthesis theory, predicted cosmic microwave background
  • Vitaly Ginzburg, co-developed the theory of superconductivity, the theory of electromagnetic wave propagation in plasmas, and a theory of the origin of cosmic radiation
  • Sergey Glazenap, astronomer; a crater on the Moon and the minor planet 857 Glasenappia are named after him
  • Alexander A. Gurshtein, developed a concept of history of constellations and the zodiac
  • Matvey Gusev, the first to prove the non-sphericity of the Moon, pioneer of photography in astronomy

I

  • Naum Idelson, astronomer

J

K

  • Lyudmila Karachkina, discovered a number of asteroids, including the Amor asteroid 5324 Lyapunov, 10031 Vladarnolda and the Trojan asteroid 3063 Makhaon
  • Nikolai Kardashev, astrophysicist, inventor of Kardashev scale for ranking the space civilizations
  • Isaak Khalatnikov, an author of the BKL singularity model of the Universe evolution
  • Viktor Knorre, astronomer, discovered four asteroids
  • Marian Kowalski, first to measure the rotation of the Milky Way
  • Nikolai Aleksandrovich Kozyrev, astronomer, observed the transient lunar phenomenon
  • Georgij A. Krasinsky, astronomer, researched planetary motions and ephemeris
  • Feodosy Krasovsky, astronomer and geodesist; measured the Krasovsky ellipsoid, a coordinate system used in the USSR and the post-Soviet states
  • Yevgeny Krinov, astronomer, renowned meteorite researcher; the mineral Krinovite, discovered in 1966, was named after him

L

M

N

  • Grigory Neujmin, discovered 74 asteroids, and most notably 951 Gaspra and 762 Pulcova
  • Igor Dmitriyevich Novikov, formulated the Novikov self-consistency principle, an important contribution to the theory of time travel
  • Boris Numerov, created various astronomic and mineralogical instruments, as well as various algorithms and methods that bear his name

P

  • Pavel Petrovich Parenago, known for contributions to the field of galactic astronomy
  • Yevgeny Perepyolkin, observed the proper motion of stars with respect to extragalactic nebula
  • Solomon Pikelner, made a significant contribution to the theory of the interstellar medium, solar plasma physics, stellar atmospheres, and magnetohydrodynamics
  • Elena V. Pitjeva, expert in the field of Solar System dynamics and celestial mechanics

S

T

  • Gavriil Tikhov, invented the feathering spectrograph; one of the first to use color filters to increase the contrast of surface details on planets

V

Y

Z

See also

References

  1. "ISU Astronomic Observatory". Irkutsk State University. Retrieved 2 December 2023.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.