Translation

Select text and it is translated.
This area is result which is translated word.

Languages


Igor Tamm

Igor Tamm
Igor Tamm Born July 8, 1895
Vladivostok, Russian EmpireDied April 12, 1971
Moscow
Nationality RussiaFields physicsKnown for Cherenkov-Vavilov effectNotable awards Nobel Laureate in Physics, 1958

Igor Yevgenyevich Tamm (Russian И́горь Евге́ньевич Та́мм) (July 8, 1895April 12, 1971) was a Soviet physicist, mathematician and a Nobel laureate.

Biography

Tamm was born in Vladivostok, Russian Empire (now Russia), studied at the grammar school in Elisavetgrad (now Kirovohrad, Ukraine). In 1913-1914 he studied at the University of Edinburgh together with his gymnasium school friend Boris Hessen. He then moved to the Moscow State University from which graduated in 1918. In 1928 Igor Tamm spent a few months with Paul Ehrenfest at the University of Leiden.

In 1945 he developed an approximation method for many-body physics. As Sidney Dancoff developed it independently in 1950, it is now called the Tamm-Dancoff approximation.

He was the Nobel Laureate in Physics for the year 1958 together with Pavel Alekseyevich Cherenkov and Ilya Mikhailovich Frank for the discovery and the interpretation of the Cherenkov-Vavilov effect.

In 1951 together with Andrei Dmitrievich Sakharov proposed a tokamak system of the realization of CTF on the basis of toroidal magnetic thermonuclear reactor and soon after the first such devices were built by the INF, resulting the T-3 Soviet magnetic confinement device from 1968, when the plasma parameters unique for that time were obtained, of showing the temperatures in their machine to be over an order of magnitude higher than what was expected by the rest of the community. The western scientists visited the experiment and verified the high temperatures and confinement, sparking a wave of optimism for the prospects of the tokamak as well as construction of new experiments, which is still the dominant magnetic confinement device today.

Tamm died in Moscow, Soviet Union (now Russia). Lunar crater Tamm is named after him.

Tamm was a student of Leonid Isaakovich Mandelshtam in science and life.

When captured by anti-communists during the Russian Revolution, he was forced to calculate the error of a Taylor series approximation of n terms to save his life after he told them he was a mathematician.[1]

References

  1. ^ Taylor Series - a matter of life or death


v • d • eNobel Laureatesin Physics

John Cockcroft / Ernest Walton (1951) · Felix Bloch / Edward Purcell (1952) · Frits Zernike (1953) · Max Born / Walther Bothe (1954) · Willis Lamb / Polykarp Kusch (1955) · William Shockley / John Bardeen / Walter Brattain (1956) · Chen Yang / T.D.Lee (1957) · Pavel Cherenkov / Ilya Frank / Igor Tamm (1958) · Emilio G. Segrè / Owen Chamberlain (1959) · Donald A. Glaser (1960) · Robert Hofstadter / Rudolf Mössbauer (1961) · Lev Landau (1962) · E.P. Wigner / Maria Goeppert-Mayer / J. Hans D. Jensen (1963) · Charles Townes / Nikolay Basov / Aleksandr Prokhorov (1964) · Sin-Itiro Tomonaga / Julian Schwinger / Richard Feynman (1965) · Alfred Kastler (1966) · Hans Bethe (1967) · Luis Alvarez (1968) · Murray Gell-Mann (1969) · Hannes Alfvén / Louis Néel (1970) · Dennis Gabor (1971) · John Bardeen / Leon Cooper / John Schrieffer (1972) · Leo Esaki / Ivar Giaever / Brian Josephson (1973) · Martin Ryle / Antony Hewish (1974) · A.Bohr / Ben Mottelson / James Rainwater (1975)

Complete roster | (1901-1925) | (1926-1950) | (1951-1975) | (1976-2000) | (2001-2025)

Categories: 1895 births | 1971 deaths | Experimental physicists | Heroes of Socialist Labor | Moscow State University alumni | Moscow State University faculty | Nobel laureates in Physics | Particle physicists | People from Vladivostok | Russian inventors | Russian physicists | Soviet physicists | Stalin Prize winners

Related word on this page

Related Shopping on this page