A major contributor to this article appears to have a
close connection with its subject. (May 2020) |
Viacheslav Belyi | |
---|---|
Born |
Termez, Uzbekistan | 8 August 1945
Died | 20 May 2020 | (aged 74)
Nationality | Russian |
Alma mater | Moscow State University |
Scientific career | |
Fields |
Physics Thermodynamics |
Institutions |
IZMIRAN, Russian Federation Universite Libre de Bruxelles |
Doctoral advisor | Yuri Klimontovich |
Viachelav V. Belyi, also referred to as Slava Belyi (1 August 1945 – 20 May 2020) was a Russian scientist who specialised in physics-thermodynamics, Laureate of a scientist Prize of the Russian Federation (1991, together with Irina Veretennikoff and Yuri Klimontovich), junior, then senior and finally chief scientist at IZMIRAN (1971–2020), collaborator of Nobel prize Laureate Ilya Prigogine in 1980s and 1990s with an external affiliation to the Laboratoire de physique des plasmas at the ULB (Brussels, Belgium).
Born in Termez, Uzbekistan, a town bordering Afghanistan, his father originated from eastern Ukraine, current area of Dnipro and his mother's origins were from Central Russia. At the age of 17 he moved to Moscow to study at the Moscow State University. He married there Ludmila Galakhmatova (b. 1947), a daughter of an industrialist from Urals, Nizhnyi Tagil. After their wedding in 1972, they moved to Troitsk, a scientific town in Moscow's neighborhood. With the marriage, he was a brother-in-law of another Russian scientist Andrey Slavnov who married Ludmila's sister. He had a daughter Anna (b. 1974) and a son Andrei (b. 1975). He died from COVID-19 pandemic on 20 May 2020. [1]
He graduated from the Faculty of Physics, Moscow State University in 1969. Then he obtained a degree of candidate of science in 1971 and received a title of a doctor of science in 1988. Since 1971 he worked in IZMIRAN and specialised in kinetic theory quantum phenomena in plasma (see publications list below).
Since 1982. he maintained professional and personal contacts with Nobel Prize in Chemistry laureate Ilya Prigogine. He received a status of a visiting researcher to Solvay Institute and Centre for Statistical Physics and Plasma at the University Libre de Bruxelles (ULB). [2]
In 1991, together with I rina Veretennikoff and Yuri Klimontovich (his scientific supervisor) he was granted the National Scientific Prize of the Russian Federation. [3]
In 1992, he accompanied Prigogine to visit Mikhail Gorbachev. [4]
In 1991, 1996 and 2001, he visited French foundation for prospective research called Les Treilles Foundation [5] for events and scientific activities. [6]
In recent years, he worked on fluctuation-dissipative theorem for the case of an inhomogeneous plasma. [7] In 2018 V. Belyi published an article in Scientific Reports [8] where he did put under question earlier obtained results on Thomson theorem. [9] The scholarly debate engendered further attention to the implications for Thomson scattering spectra for inhomogeneous plasmas. [10]
Media related to Viacheslav Belyi at Wikimedia Commons
A major contributor to this article appears to have a
close connection with its subject. (May 2020) |
Viacheslav Belyi | |
---|---|
Born |
Termez, Uzbekistan | 8 August 1945
Died | 20 May 2020 | (aged 74)
Nationality | Russian |
Alma mater | Moscow State University |
Scientific career | |
Fields |
Physics Thermodynamics |
Institutions |
IZMIRAN, Russian Federation Universite Libre de Bruxelles |
Doctoral advisor | Yuri Klimontovich |
Viachelav V. Belyi, also referred to as Slava Belyi (1 August 1945 – 20 May 2020) was a Russian scientist who specialised in physics-thermodynamics, Laureate of a scientist Prize of the Russian Federation (1991, together with Irina Veretennikoff and Yuri Klimontovich), junior, then senior and finally chief scientist at IZMIRAN (1971–2020), collaborator of Nobel prize Laureate Ilya Prigogine in 1980s and 1990s with an external affiliation to the Laboratoire de physique des plasmas at the ULB (Brussels, Belgium).
Born in Termez, Uzbekistan, a town bordering Afghanistan, his father originated from eastern Ukraine, current area of Dnipro and his mother's origins were from Central Russia. At the age of 17 he moved to Moscow to study at the Moscow State University. He married there Ludmila Galakhmatova (b. 1947), a daughter of an industrialist from Urals, Nizhnyi Tagil. After their wedding in 1972, they moved to Troitsk, a scientific town in Moscow's neighborhood. With the marriage, he was a brother-in-law of another Russian scientist Andrey Slavnov who married Ludmila's sister. He had a daughter Anna (b. 1974) and a son Andrei (b. 1975). He died from COVID-19 pandemic on 20 May 2020. [1]
He graduated from the Faculty of Physics, Moscow State University in 1969. Then he obtained a degree of candidate of science in 1971 and received a title of a doctor of science in 1988. Since 1971 he worked in IZMIRAN and specialised in kinetic theory quantum phenomena in plasma (see publications list below).
Since 1982. he maintained professional and personal contacts with Nobel Prize in Chemistry laureate Ilya Prigogine. He received a status of a visiting researcher to Solvay Institute and Centre for Statistical Physics and Plasma at the University Libre de Bruxelles (ULB). [2]
In 1991, together with I rina Veretennikoff and Yuri Klimontovich (his scientific supervisor) he was granted the National Scientific Prize of the Russian Federation. [3]
In 1992, he accompanied Prigogine to visit Mikhail Gorbachev. [4]
In 1991, 1996 and 2001, he visited French foundation for prospective research called Les Treilles Foundation [5] for events and scientific activities. [6]
In recent years, he worked on fluctuation-dissipative theorem for the case of an inhomogeneous plasma. [7] In 2018 V. Belyi published an article in Scientific Reports [8] where he did put under question earlier obtained results on Thomson theorem. [9] The scholarly debate engendered further attention to the implications for Thomson scattering spectra for inhomogeneous plasmas. [10]
Media related to Viacheslav Belyi at Wikimedia Commons