Wikimedia Commons has media related to Georgy Flyorov. Significant Flerov Dates Annotated bibliography of Georgy Flerov from the Alsos Digital Library...
10 KB (734 words) - 11:48, 10 July 2024
film director Georgy Chicherin (1872–1936), Soviet politician Georgy Egorychev (born 1938), Soviet and Russian mathematician Georgy Flyorov (1913–1990)...
3 KB (360 words) - 18:02, 29 December 2023
Flyorov (Russian: Флёров) may refer to: Georgy Flyorov (1913–1990), a Soviet nuclear physicist Ivan Flyorov (1905–1941), the commander of the first battery...
398 bytes (84 words) - 09:42, 18 June 2021
discovered in 1999. The lab's name, in turn, honours Russian physicist Georgy Flyorov (Флёров in Cyrillic, hence the transliteration of "yo" to "e"). IUPAC...
73 KB (12,013 words) - 02:41, 22 June 2024
Pontecorvo Boris Arbuzov Aureliu Emil Săndulescu [ro] Albert Tavkhelidze Georgy Flyorov Ilya Frank Andrzej Hrynkiewicz [pl] Șerban Țițeica F. Shapiro Dmitry...
23 KB (1,867 words) - 00:32, 29 June 2024
Russian physicist Georgy Flyorov suspected that the Allied powers had secretly been developing a "superweapon" since 1939. Flyorov wrote a letter to Stalin...
69 KB (7,541 words) - 08:16, 3 July 2024
multiple elements of the periodic table. He succeeded Georgy Flyorov as director of the Flyorov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions at the Joint Institute...
40 KB (2,977 words) - 13:47, 10 June 2024
(1969). This discovery was also claimed by JINR, led principally by Georgy Flyorov: they named the element kurchatovium (Ku), after Igor Kurchatov. IUPAC...
17 KB (2,059 words) - 12:37, 25 June 2024
physics at the Saint Petersburg State University. Receiving credit with Georgy Flyorov, a physicist, for the discovery of spontaneous fission of uranium in...
30 KB (2,519 words) - 07:16, 4 May 2024
attention to the possibility of an atomic bomb Frisch–Peierls memorandum Georgy Flyorov, who wrote a similar letter to the Soviet leadership to start their...
20 KB (2,368 words) - 08:40, 29 June 2024
Reactions, part of JINR, where it was synthesized; itself named after Georgy Flyorov, Russian physicist 14 7 p-block [289] (11.4±0.3) (284±50) – – – – synthetic...
2 KB (439 words) - 21:16, 2 July 2024
moderators for a natural uranium reactor, and in August 1940, along with Georgy Flyorov, submitted a plan to the Russian Academy of Sciences calculating that...
84 KB (9,923 words) - 04:40, 7 July 2024
fission by Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann in 1938, Soviet physicists Georgy Flyorov and Konstantin Petrzhak began conducting experiments to explore the...
18 KB (1,962 words) - 14:44, 28 May 2024
Kurchatov moved to Kazan and raised objection on spontaneous fission when Georgy Flyorov directed a letter about the discovery.: 47–57 In 1942–43, Kurchatov...
36 KB (3,233 words) - 21:18, 30 April 2024
with the Metallurgical Laboratory Laura Fermi: Enrico Fermi's wife Georgy Flyorov: Soviet nuclear physicist Winston Churchill: Prime Minister of the United...
18 KB (2,185 words) - 17:25, 24 May 2024
Soviets noticed the silence, however. In April 1942 nuclear physicist Georgy Flyorov wrote to Joseph Stalin on the absence of articles on nuclear fission...
179 KB (21,812 words) - 17:49, 9 July 2024
location of the Riken institute 114 Flerovium, Fl, for Russian physicist Georgy Flyorov 115 Moscovium, Mc, for Moscow 116 Livermorium, Lv, for Lawrence Livermore...
45 KB (5,132 words) - 02:47, 28 June 2024
scientists at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) led by Georgy Flyorov. Each team claimed discovery, and in some cases each proposed their...
252 KB (27,193 words) - 09:33, 21 June 2024
lead, inherited directly from Old English. Flerovium was named after Georgy Flyorov and his Institute. Carbon is most commonly used in its amorphous form...
32 KB (3,868 words) - 01:48, 17 March 2024
were considering two names for the new element: flyorium, in honor of Georgy Flyorov, the founder of the research laboratory in Dubna; and moskovium, in...
63 KB (10,424 words) - 16:33, 10 July 2024
Makhnjov, accompanied by Soviet physicists Isaak Kikoin, Lev Artsimovich, Georgy Flyorov, and V. V. Migulin (of the Russian Alsos operation), they praised the...
29 KB (3,323 words) - 22:57, 28 June 2024
element 102 flerovium (Fl) as part of a new proposal, after either Georgy Flyorov or his eponymous Flerov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions. This proposal...
39 KB (8,152 words) - 07:23, 21 May 2024
part of JINR, where the element was synthesised; itself named after Georgy Flyorov, Russian physicist 115 Mc Moscovium Moscow Oblast, Russia, where the...
64 KB (2,126 words) - 12:26, 26 June 2024
Britain by Frisch and Titterton, and independently in the Soviet Union by Georgy Flyorov and Konstantin Petrzhak in 1940; the latter are generally credited with...
129 KB (16,870 words) - 07:21, 27 May 2024
Reactions, part of JINR, where it was synthesized; itself named after Georgy Flyorov, Russian physicist 14 7 p-block [289] (11.4±0.3) (284±50) – – – – synthetic...
74 KB (9,741 words) - 18:18, 7 July 2024
Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research Georgy Flyorov Scientist 1913–1990 Russian 116 Livermorium Lv 2000 Livermore, California...
12 KB (859 words) - 02:20, 3 January 2024
619, M:851, S:6606c. Sergei Eisenstein. 2000: 619, M:851, S:6606c. Georgy Flyorov (1913, Rostov-on-Don – 1990, Moscow), a Soviet nuclear physicist, one...
59 KB (5,568 words) - 14:54, 16 May 2024
entrenched name nobelium for element 102 was replaced by flerovium after Georgy Flyorov, following the recognition by the 1993 report that that element had...
16 KB (1,163 words) - 10:23, 11 June 2024
discoverer of Faddeev–Popov ghosts and Faddeev equations in quantum physics Georgy Flyorov, an initiator of the Soviet atomic bomb project, co-discoverer of seaborgium...
204 KB (22,817 words) - 16:06, 12 July 2024
discoverer of Faddeev–Popov ghosts and Faddeev equations in quantum physics Georgy Flyorov, nuclear physicist, one of the initiators of the Soviet atomic bomb...
13 KB (1,353 words) - 15:38, 7 June 2024