Gersh Budker

Gersh Itzkovich Budker
Born (1918-04-01)April 1, 1918
Murafa, near Vinnytsia
Died July 4, 1977(1977-07-04) (aged 59)
Akademgorodok
Nationality USSR
Fields Physicist
Institutions Institute of Nuclear Physics
Known for Electron cooling

Gersh Itskovich Budker (Герш Ицкович Будкер), also named Andrey Mikhailovich Budker, (1 May 1918 – 4 July 1977) was a Soviet physicist, specialized in nuclear physics and accelerator physics.

Biography

He was elected a Corresponding Member of the Siberian Division of the Soviet Academy of Sciences on 28 March 1958 and was promoted to an Academician of the Division of Nuclear Physics on 26 June 1964.

He is best known for his invention in 1968 of electron cooling, a method of reducing the emittance of particle beams by thermalisation with a copropagating electron beam.[1]

Academician Budker was the founder (in 1959) and first Director of the Institute of Nuclear Physics in Akademgorodok, Russia. There he lived in the 100-flat building. His portrait decorates the famous Round Table Room in the Institute. After his death, the Institute was renamed the Budker Institute for Nuclear Physics in his honour.

Budker became one of the founders of Faculty of Physics of Novosibirsk State University in 1961.[2]

Budker died in Akademgorodok from a heart attack at 59.

Budker's life and works were celebrated in a collection of essays by his colleagues, including Pyotr Kapitsa, Lev Landau, and Andrei Sakharov, and two by Budker himself. The collection, G. I. Budker: Reflections & Remembrances (edited by Boris N. Breizman) was published in 1988 and was later translated into English by James W. Van Dam.

Notes

References

External links

Quotations related to Gersh Budker at Wikiquote

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