Yaroslav Derbenev

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yaroslav S. Derbenev (* 1940 ) is an American physicist of Russian origin.

Derbenev received his MS from Lomonosov University in 1963 . In 1968 he went to the Budker Institute for Nuclear Physics and was a junior scientist in the theoretical field until 1968. From 1969 to 1978 he was a scientist at the same institute and received a doctorate in physics there in 1978. Derbenev switched to the theory group for particle acceleration in 1979, which he left in 1985 when he worked for a year at the Atomic Energy Agency of the USSR in Yerevan . By 1990 he was again in Novosibirsk at the Institute of Complete Electric Drive . In 1990 he moved to the USA where he taught at the University of Michigan until 2001 . He has been with the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility since 2001 .

In 2011 he received the Robert R. Wilson Prize for his contributions to particle beam physics, including the theory and control of polarization with Siberian snakes, electron and ionization cooling, round to flat beam transformation, free electron lasers, and electron-ion colliders.

Awards

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A Special Beam Physics Symposium in Honor of Yaroslav Derbenev's 70th Birthday. Retrieved October 14, 2013 .
  2. ^ Prize recipient Yaroslav Derbenev. Retrieved October 14, 2013 .

Web links