Mark Aronowitsch Aiserman

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Mark Aronowitsch Aiserman ( Russian Марк Аронович Айзерман ; born May 24 . Jul / 6. June  1913 greg. In Daugavpils , † 8. May 1992 in Russia ) was a Russian physicist , cybernetics and university teachers .

Life

Aiserman's teachers were Nikolai Nikolajewitsch Lusin and Alexander Alexandrovich Andronov . From 1939 he worked at the Institute for Automatics and Telemechanics (the later WA Trapesnikov Institute for Problems of Control Theory of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR ). In 1941, when the German attack began , he went to the front as a volunteer despite his exemption . In 1945 he was demobilized. 1946 Aiserman was with his thesis Nonlinear control systems for Doctor of Technical Sciences PhD .

In 1964, Aiserman received the Lenin Prize for developing a system of building blocks for industrial pneumatic machines and was appointed to the chair of theoretical mechanics at the Moscow University of Physics and Technology , which he held until 1978. In 1945, together with Felix Ruwimowitsch Gantmacher, he published The Absolute Stability of Control Systems (supplement to the magazine regulation technology, R. Oldenbourg Verlag , Munich and Vienna, 1965). In 1982, on Aiserman's initiative, the Laboratory for the Dynamics of Nonlinear Control Processes was set up in the WA Trapesnikov Institute for Control Theory , which was then headed by JS Pyatnitsky . In the same year Aiserman initiated the establishment of the laboratory for the processing of large amounts of data in hierarchical systems with the head of AA Dorofejuk on the basis of his own laboratory No. 25 for selection and decision analysis.

Aiserman's students included Fuad Tagijewitsch Aleskerow and Emmanuel Markowitsch Brawerman .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Vladimir Vovk, Harris Papadopoulos, Alexander Gammerman: Measures of Complexity: Festschrift for Alexey Chervonenkis . Springer 2015, ISBN 978-3-319-21851-9 , S. XVI.
  2. Yevgeny Serafimowitsch Pjatnizki (Russian, accessed April 24, 2016).
  3. ^ Laboratory No. 25 (accessed April 24, 2016).