Yuri Oganessian

Yuri Tsolakovich Oganessian (Russian: Юрий Цолакович Оганесян ; Armenian: Յուրի Ցոլակովիչ Օգանեսյան, born 14 April 1933) is a Soviet, Armenian and Russian nuclear physicist who is best known as a researcher of superheavy chemical elements.

He participated with the discovery of multiple elements of the periodic table. He succeeded Georgy Flyorov as director of the Flyorov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in 1989 and is now its scientific director. The heaviest element known of the periodic table, oganesson, is named after him, only the second time that an element was named after a living person (the other being seaborgium).

Yuri Oganessian
Юрий Оганесян
Yuri Oganessian
Oganessian in 2016
Born (1933-04-14) 14 April 1933 (age 91)
CitizenshipSoviet Union, Russia, Armenia
Alma materMoscow Engineering Physics Institute
Known forCo-discoverer of the heaviest elements in the periodic table; element oganesson named after him
AwardsLomonosov Gold Medal (2017)
Demidov Prize (2019)
Scientific career
FieldsNuclear physics
InstitutionsFlerov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research

Personal life

Yuri Tsolakovich Oganessian was born in Rostov-on-Don, Russian SFSR, USSR on 14 April 1933 to Armenian parents. His father was from Iğdır (now in Turkey), while his mother was from Armavir in what is now Russia's Krasnodar Krai. Oganessian spent his childhood in Yerevan, the capital of Soviet Armenia, where his family relocated in 1939. His father, Tsolak, a thermal engineer, was invited to work on the synthetic rubber plant in Yerevan. After the Eastern Front of World War II commenced, his family decided to not return to Rostov since it was occupied by Germans. Yuri attended and finished school in Yerevan. He initially wanted to become a painter.

Oganessian was married to Irina Levonovna (1932–2010), a violinist and a music teacher in Dubna, with whom he had two daughters. As of 2017, his daughters resided in the U.S.

Oganessian speaks Russian, Armenian, and English.

Career

"A remarkable physicist and experimentalist… his work is characterised by originality, an ability to approach a problem from an unexpected side, and to achieve an ultimate result."

 —Flyorov on Oganessian, 1990

Oganessian relocated to Russia, where he graduated from the Moscow Engineering Physics Institute (MEPhI) in 1956. He thereafter sought to join the Kurchatov Institute of Atomic Energy in Moscow, but as there were no vacancies left in Gersh Budker's team, he was instead recruited by Georgy Flyorov and began working at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) in Dubna, near Moscow.

He became director of the Flyorov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions at JINR in 1989, after Flyorov retired, and had the job until 1996, when he was named the scientific director of the Flyorov laboratory.

Discovery of superheavy chemical elements

During the 1970s, Oganessian invented the "cold fusion" method (unrelated to the unproven energy-producing process cold fusion), a technique to produce transactinide elements (superheavy elements). It was crucial for the discoveries of elements from 106 to 113. From the mid-1970s to the mid-1990s, the partnership of JINR, directed by Oganessian, and the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in Germany, resulted in the discovery of six chemical elements (107 to 112): bohrium, meitnerium, hassium, darmstadtium, roentgenium, and copernicium.

His newer technique, termed "hot fusion" (also unrelated to nuclear fusion as an energy process), helped to discover elements 113 to 118, completing the seventh row of the periodic table. The technique involved bombarding calcium into targets containing heavier radioactive elements that are rich in neutrons at a cyclotron. The elements discovered using this method are nihonium (2003; also discovered by Riken in Japan using cold fusion), flerovium (1999), moscovium (2003), livermorium (2000), tennessine (2009), and oganesson (2002).

Recognition

Yuri Oganessian 
Oganessian on a 2017 Armenian stamp

American chemist Sherry Yennello has called him the "grandfather of superheavy elements". Oganessian is the author of three discoveries, a monograph, 11 inventions, and more than 300 scientific papers.

Oganessian has been considered worthy of a Nobel laureate in Chemistry, including by Alexander Sergeev, former head of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Oganesson

During early 2016, science writers and bloggers speculated that one of the superheavy elements would be named oganessium or oganesson. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) announced in November 2016 that element 118 would be named oganesson to honor Oganessian. It was first observed in 2002 at JINR, by a joint team of Russian and American scientists. Directed by Oganessian, the team included American scientists of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, California. Prior to this announcement, a dozen elements had been named after people, but of those, only seaborgium was likewise named while its namesake (Glenn T. Seaborg) was alive. As Seaborg died in 1999, Oganessian is the only currently living namesake of an element.

Honors and awards

In 1990, he was elected Corresponding Member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences and in 2003 a Full Member (Academician) of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Oganessian has honorary degrees from Goethe University Frankfurt (2002), University of Messina (2009), and Yerevan State University (2022). In 2019, he was elected as an Honorary Fellow of St Catharine's College, Cambridge.

State awards

Professional awards

  • Kurchatov Medal (1989)
  • Lise Meitner Prize of the European Physical Society (2000)
  • Lomonosov Gold Medal (2018) "for fundamental research in the fields of interaction of complex nuclei and experimental evidence of existence of an 'island of stability' for superheavy elements"
  • Demidov Prize (2019)
  • UNESCO-Russia Mendeleev International Prize in the Basic Sciences (2021)

Recognition in Armenia

Oganessian was granted Armenian citizenship in July 2018 by Premier Nikol Pashinyan. Oganessian is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Foundation for Armenian Science and Technology (FAST). He is also the chairman of the international scientific board of the Alikhanian National Science Laboratory (Yerevan Physics Institute). In 2017 HayPost issued a postage stamp dedicated to Oganessian. In 2022 the Central Bank of Armenia issued a silver commemorative coin dedicated to Oganessian and the element oganesson (Og). In April 2022 he was named honorary professor of Yerevan State University.

Selected publications

  • Oganessian, Yuri (13 September 2001). "Nuclear physics: Sizing up the heavyweights". Nature. 413 (6852): 122–125. Bibcode:2001Natur.413..122O. doi:10.1038/35093194. PMID 11557964. S2CID 4414134.

Notes

References

This article uses material from the Wikipedia English article Yuri Oganessian, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license ("CC BY-SA 3.0"); additional terms may apply (view authors). Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.
®Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wiki Foundation, Inc. Wiki English (DUHOCTRUNGQUOC.VN) is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wiki Foundation.

Tags:

Yuri Oganessian Personal lifeYuri Oganessian CareerYuri Oganessian RecognitionYuri Oganessian Selected publicationsYuri Oganessian

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Peso PlumaNick KrollBobby BrownArjun RampalLeBron JamesRenfield (film)The Menu (2022 film)Riley KeoughBernard ArnaultJayden ReedFast & FuriousYouTubeKylian MbappéTom HollandThe Rookie (TV series)Adolf HitlerNicole RichieChristina Aistrup Hansen2023 WWE DraftLewis CapaldiTom Parker BowlesInternational Dance DayWilliam ShakespeareList of ethnic slursGuardians of the Galaxy (film)YouTube PremiumVivek RamaswamyEFL ChampionshipWhitney HoustonKillers of the Flower Moon (film)2023 World Snooker ChampionshipChengizAl PacinoAubrey PlazaDavid ChoeOpenAIYouTube KidsJulius BrentsBhagyashreeEvil Dead RiseUFC 288Mani RatnamLos Angeles LakersThe Diplomat (American TV series)CaliforniaTaiwanPaul WalkerDead Island 2William, Prince of Wales2 Girls 1 CupBacklash (2023)Val KilmerNick HerbigMeta PlatformsEurovision Song Contest 2023Don Lemon2024 NFL DraftBob DylanCinco de MayoElon MuskGigi Hadid.xxxJalen CarterMichael Jackson2023 FIBA Basketball World CupKirsten DunstFirefly LaneChester BenningtonNational Basketball AssociationWorld Snooker ChampionshipMary-Kate OlsenWoodstockBeef (TV series)Shaquille O'NealGillian McKeith2023 Sudan conflictTamerlan TsarnaevWorld Chess Championship🡆 More