Nadezhda Alexejewna Agaltsova

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nadezhda Alexejewna Agaltsova

Nadeschda Alexejewna Agalzowa ( Russian: Надежда Алексеевна Агальцова ; born February 3, 1938 ) is a Soviet - Russian physicist .

Life

Agaltsova studied at the Leningrad Institute of Precision Mechanics and Optics (LITMO) in the Faculty of Optics , graduating in 1961.

In March 1961, Agalzowa was employed in the Leningrad laboratory of the Central Research Institute for Geodesy , Aerial Photography and Cartography (ZNIIGAiK) named after Krassowski . The laboratory was headed by Mikhail Mikhailovich Russinov , whom she then married. She developed lenses for aerial photography. The super wide-angle lenses Russar-55, Russar-63 and Russar-71 were developed under Russinov's direction .

Between 1969 and 1971 graduated Agalzowa the postgraduate in ZNIIGAiK. In 1972 she successfully defended her dissertation on wide-angle mirror lens lenses at the Moscow Institute for Engineers in Geodesy, Aerophotography and Cartography for her doctorate as a candidate in technical sciences.

The bright, wide-angle lens of the sixth generation, Russar-93, was the prototype for the Russar-96 lens system, which was used for the Mars 96 mission .

In 2003 Agalzowa retired.

Honors, prizes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f LITMO Museum: Агальцова Надежда Алексеевна (accessed June 30, 2020).
  2. a b Борис Абрамович Ратушный: ЖИВЫЕ ИМЕНА. Михаил Михайлович Русинов. Гений земли русской (accessed June 30, 2020).
  3. Агальцова Н. А .: Широкоугольные зеркально-линзовые аэрофотообъективы: Автореф. дис. на соискание учен. степени канд. техн. наук: (258) . Моск. ин-т инженеров геодезии, аэрофотосъемки и картографии, Moscow 1972.