Karen Ter-Martirosian
Karen Avetovich Ter-Martirosyan (28 September 1922 – 19 November 2005) was a Soviet and Russian theoretical physics scientist,[1] known for his contributions to quantum mechanics and quantum field theory and the author of several hundred articles in his area.
He was born in Tbilisi and graduated from Tbilisi State University in 1943. After two years of teaching physics at the Tbilisi Railroad Institute, he did a Ph.D. at the Leningrad Physico-Technical Institute in St. Petersburg, advised by Yakov Frenkel. After working at the theory division the same place (1949–55) he moved to Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics in Moscow, where he founded the Elementary Particle Physics chair of the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology and the Laboratory of Hadron Physics.[2]
He was a student of Lev Landau and his research colleague Isaak Pomeranchuk. Among his students were Vladimir Gribov, Alexey Andreevich Anselm, Alexander Polyakov, Arkady Migdal, Alexander Zamolodchikov, Alexey Kaidalov. Also, he organized schools and conferences in Nor-Hamberd of Yerevan in Armenia.
Awards
- Pomeranchuk Prize 1999
- member of Russian Academy of Science 2000[3]
Publications
- Theory of Gauge Interactions of Elementary Particles (1984). Book, with Misha Voloshin
- Theory of Coulomb excitation of nuclei (1952)
- Theory of three body systems (1956)
- Development of the Regge pole theory for high energy scattering and theory of Regge cuts, with V.N.Gribov and I.Ya.Pomeranchuk, 1964–1976
- QCD inspired model of quark-gluon strings, with A.B.Kaidalov