(Redirected from Alexei A. Abrikosov)
'Alexei Alexeyevich Abrikosov' () (born
June 25,
1928, in
Moscow,
Russian SFSR,
USSR) is a
Russian
theoretical physicist whose main contributions are in the field of
condensed matter physics.
Life and work
He graduated from the
Moscow State University in
1948. In
1948–
1965 he worked in the Institute for Physical Problems of the
USSR Academy of Sciences, where he received his Ph. D. (in
1951) for the theory of thermal diffusion in
plasmas and then the next degree, Doctor of Physical and Mathematical Sciences (in
1955) for a thesis on quantum electrodynamics at high energies. After that, in
1965–
1988 he worked in the
Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics (USSR Academy of Sciences). Professor of the
Moscow State University since
1965. Academician of the
USSR Academy of Sciences in
1987–
1991, since 1991 he is academician of the
Russian Academy of Sciences.
In
1952, Abrikosov discovered the way in which
magnetic flux can penetrate a
superconductor. The phenomenon is known as type-II superconductivity, and the accompanying arrangement of magnetic flux lines is called the
Abrikosov vortex lattice.
Since
1991 he works in the Materials Science Division at
Argonne National Laboratory in
Illinois,
U.S. on contract basis. He is a citizen of both
Russia and the
United States.
Awards
Alexei Abrikosov was awarded
Lenin Prize (in
1966),
USSR State Prize (in
1982), Fritz London Memorial Prize (in
1972). He was the co-recipient of the
2003 Nobel Prize in Physics, with
Vitaly Ginzburg and
Anthony James Leggett.
References
A.A. Abrikosov "On the magnetic properties of superconductors of the second group", Soviet Physics JETP 5, 1174 (1957), page scans of the original article.
External links
★
A Short Biography, on the website of the Material Science Division of Argonne National Laboratory
★
An article about 2003 Nobel Prize in Physics (in Russian), includes a short biography of Alexei Abrikosov