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Mstislav Keldysh

Mstislav Vsevolodovich Keldysh (Russian: Мстисла́в Все́володович Ке́лдыш; 10 February [O.S. 28 January] 1911 – 24 June 1978) was a Soviet mathematician who worked as an engineer in the Soviet space program.

Mstislav Keldysh
Мстислав Келдыш
Keldysh in 1971
Born(1911-02-10)10 February 1911
Died24 June 1978(1978-06-24) (aged 67)
Resting placeKremlin Wall Necropolis
NationalitySoviet
Alma materMoscow State University
Awards Hero of Socialist Labour
(1956, 1961, 1971)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsSteklov Institute of Mathematics
Doctoral advisorMikhail Lavrentyev
Doctoral studentsSergey Mergelyan
Signature

He was the academician of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union (1946), President of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union (1961–1975), three-time Hero of Socialist Labour (1956, 1961, 1971), and fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (1968). He was one of the key figures behind the Soviet space program. Among scientific circles of the USSR Keldysh was known by the epithet "the Chief Theoretician"[1] in analogy with epithet "the Chief Designer" used for Sergei Korolev.

Family edit

Keldysh was born to a professional family of Russian nobility.[2] His grandfather, Mikhail Fomich Keldysh (1839–1920), was a military physician, who retired with the military rank of General.[3] Keldysh's grandmother, Natalia Keldysh (née Brusilova), was a cousin of general Aleksei Brusilov. Keldysh's maternal grandfather, Alexander Nikolayevich Skvortsov, was a General of Infantry, and fought in the Caucasian War.

Keldysh's father, Vsevolod Mikhailovich Keldysh (1878–1965), was a civil engineer, Major General of the Engineering Service, and a full professor, teaching at the Kuybyshev Military Engineering Academy from 1918. He became a Distinguished Engineering Scientist of the Soviet Union (Заслуженный деятель науки и техники СССР) in 1944. He was one of the authors of contemporary methods for calculating the strength of reinforced concrete, and a designer of the Moscow Canal and Moscow Metro projects.

Several members of the Keldysh family were victims of political repressions. In the 1930s Keldysh's uncle was sent to a labor camp on the White Sea–Baltic Canal construction site. In 1935 Keldysh's mother was arrested but was released after a few weeks. It was a part of the campaign of collecting gold from the population, but after Keldysh's father brought all the jewelry the family had, the unsatisfied NKVD officer returned "all this garbage" back.[4] Keldysh's brother Mikhail, a historian who specialized in Medieval Germany, was arrested in 1936 and executed in 1937 on suspicion of being a German spy. In 1938 another of Keldysh's brothers, Alexander, was arrested as a French spy. Alexander was spared because of the slight liberalization of the repressions during the transfer of the NKVD leadership from Nikolai Yezhov to Lavrentiy Beria, and was acquitted in the court.

The strongest influence on Keldysh was his older sister, Lyudmila Keldysh (1904–1976), a mathematician and Keldysh's first teacher. Among her children are Leonid Keldysh, director of Lebedev Physical Institute and Sergei Novikov, a mathematician.

Biography edit

Keldysh was born in 1911 in Riga. When he was four the family evacuated to Moscow during the First World War. In the first years of the Soviet Union he was refused entrance to an Institute of Civil Engineers because of his attachment to a noble family. Later, he managed to enter and graduate from the Physics and Mathematics department of the Moscow State University. He obtained employment at the Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute (TsAGI) under Mikhail Lavrentyev and Sergey Chaplygin.

Working at TsAGI he explained the auto-oscillation effects of flutter (in-flight auto-induced oscillations and structural deformations), and shimmy (auto-oscillation in the nose-wheel of aircraft undercarriages while on the ground). The effects were responsible for many aircraft catastrophes at the time.

In 1937 Keldysh became Doctor of Science with his dissertation entitled Complex Variable and Harmonic Functions Representation by Polynomial Series, and was appointed a Professor of Moscow State University.[5] In 1943 he became a Corresponding Member of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union. He got his first Stalin Prize in 1946 for his works on aircraft auto-oscillations. In 1943 he also became a full member of the Academy and the Director of NII-1 (Research Institute number 1) of the Department of the Aviation Industry. He also headed the Department of Applied Mechanics of the Steklov Institute of Mathematics. In 1966 this department became an independent organization as the Institute of Applied Mathematics. After his death in 1978 it is named after him to become the Keldysh Institute of Applied Mathematics.

During the 1940s Keldysh became the leader of a group of applied mathematicians involved in almost all large scientific projects of the Soviet Union. Keldysh created the Calculation Bureau that carried most of the mathematical problems related to the development of nuclear weapons. The bureau is also credited with design of the first Soviet computers. In 1947 he became a member of the Communist Party.

Keldysh's main efforts were devoted to jet propulsion and rockets including supersonic gas dynamics, heat and mass exchange, and heat shielding. 1959 saw successful testing of the Soviet first cruise missile Burya.

In 1954 Keldysh, Sergei Korolev and Mikhail Tikhonravov submitted a letter to the Soviet Government proposing development of an artificial satellite to orbit the Earth. The letter was rejected, and the group filed exaggerated Soviet newspaper articles which influenced American authorities to start satellite programs. This in turn began the effort that culminated in the world's first satellite, Sputnik 1 in October 1957, which marked the beginning of mankind's Space Age.[6][7][8] In 1955 Keldysh was appointed chairman of the Satellite Committee at the Academy of Science. In recognition of his contribution to the problems of defense Keldysh was awarded the Hero of Socialist Labour (1956) and the Lenin Prize (1957). In 1961 he received a second Hеrо of Socialist Labour award for his contribution to Yuri Gagarin's flight into space, the first person to orbit the Earth.

In 1961 Keldysh was elected President of the Academy of Sciences and kept this position for 14 years. Concomitantly, he became a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. His last scientific works were devoted to creation of the Shuttle Buran. In 1962 he was elected a member of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union.

Keldysh was 67 when he suddenly died on June 24, 1978. He was honoured with a state funeral and his ashes were buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis on Red Square.

Awards and honors edit

 
A Russian postal stamp commemorating Keldysh in 2011.

Keldysh was a member of many foreign academies of sciences, including the Mongolian Academy of Sciences (1961), Polish Academy of Sciences (1962), Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences (1962), and Romanian Academy of Sciences (1965). He was also an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1966), Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (1966), Hungarian Academy of Sciences (1970), and Royal Society of Edinburgh (1968), foreign corresponding member of the German Academy of Sciences (1966), and Saxon Academy of Sciences in Leipzig (1966).

Keldysh was awarded the Stalin Prize (1942, 1946), Lenin Prize (1957), six Orders of Lenin, three other orders, numerous medals and four foreign orders.

The crater Keldysh on the Moon, and the research vessel Akademik Mstislav Keldysh are named after him. A minor planet, 2186 Keldysh discovered in 1973 by Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Chernykh, is named in his honor.[9]

A street (Akadēmiķa Mstislava Keldiša iela) was named after Keldysh in the district of Pļavnieki in his native Riga, Latvia. On 15 December 2022, the street was renamed Brāļu Kaudzīšu Street.[10]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Boris Chertok, Rockets and people Online version 6 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ (in Russian) Keldysh's family
  3. ^ Главный Теоретик М. В. Келдыш и Главный Конструктор космонавтики С. П. Королёв — покорители космоса
  4. ^ Mstislav Vsevolodovich Keldysh // Family stories
  5. ^ Формула Келдыша. Просчёт главного теоретика (in Russian)
  6. ^ "Sputnik remembered: The first race to space (part 1) (page 1)". www.thespacereview.com. The Space Review. 2 October 2017. from the original on 24 April 2019.
  7. ^ Harford 1997
  8. ^ "Sixty Years Later, Sputnik Declassifications Offer Primer in Fake News". Fordham Newsroom. Fordham University. 10 October 2017. "In 1954 . . . because they knew a lot of Soviet journalists, they flooded the Soviet media with speculative articles on space flight .. cited a lot in the Washington Post and New York Times. July 1955, the Eisenhower administration announces they're going to launch a satellite in a couple of years, it's going to be a scientific satellite
  9. ^ Schmadel, Lutz D. (2003). Dictionary of Minor Planet Names (5th ed.). New York: Springer Verlag. p. 178. ISBN 3-540-00238-3.
  10. ^ Rīga changes Russia-related street names, lsm.lv, 15 December 2022, retrieved 15 December 2022

External links edit

  • Mstislav Keldysh at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • (in Russian) Keldysh Institute for Applied Mathematics
  • Keldysh memorial page (at Keldysh Institute site)
  • (in Russian)
  • (in Russian)
  • A.I. Ostashev, Sergey Pavlovich Korolyov the Genius of the 20th Century — 2010 M. of Public Educational Institution of Higher Professional Training MGUL ISBN 978-5-8135-0510-2.
  • "Bank of the Universe" edited by Boltenko A. C., Kyiv, 2014., publishing house "Phoenix", ISBN 978-966-136-169-9
  • Mstislav Keldysh //Family history
  • S. P. Korolyov. Encyclopedia of life and creativity edited by C. A. Lopota, RSC Energia. S. P. Korolyov, 2014 ISBN 978-5-906674-04-3
  • Harford, James (1999). Korolev: How One Man Masterminded the Soviet Drive to Beat America to the Moon. John Wiley Sons. ISBN 0-471-14853-9. NASA segments
Academic offices
Preceded by President of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR
1961–1975
Succeeded by

mstislav, keldysh, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, customs, patronymic, vsevolodovich, family, name, keldysh, mstislav, vsevolodovich, keldysh, russian, Мстисла, Все, володович, Ке, лдыш, february, january, 1911, june, 1978, soviet, mathema. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs the patronymic is Vsevolodovich and the family name is Keldysh Mstislav Vsevolodovich Keldysh Russian Mstisla v Vse volodovich Ke ldysh 10 February O S 28 January 1911 24 June 1978 was a Soviet mathematician who worked as an engineer in the Soviet space program Mstislav KeldyshMstislav KeldyshKeldysh in 1971Born 1911 02 10 10 February 1911Riga Governorate of Livonia Russian EmpireDied24 June 1978 1978 06 24 aged 67 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet UnionResting placeKremlin Wall NecropolisNationalitySovietAlma materMoscow State UniversityAwardsHero of Socialist Labour 1956 1961 1971 Scientific careerFieldsMathematicsInstitutionsSteklov Institute of MathematicsDoctoral advisorMikhail LavrentyevDoctoral studentsSergey MergelyanSignature He was the academician of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union 1946 President of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union 1961 1975 three time Hero of Socialist Labour 1956 1961 1971 and fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1968 He was one of the key figures behind the Soviet space program Among scientific circles of the USSR Keldysh was known by the epithet the Chief Theoretician 1 in analogy with epithet the Chief Designer used for Sergei Korolev Contents 1 Family 2 Biography 3 Awards and honors 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksFamily editKeldysh was born to a professional family of Russian nobility 2 His grandfather Mikhail Fomich Keldysh 1839 1920 was a military physician who retired with the military rank of General 3 Keldysh s grandmother Natalia Keldysh nee Brusilova was a cousin of general Aleksei Brusilov Keldysh s maternal grandfather Alexander Nikolayevich Skvortsov was a General of Infantry and fought in the Caucasian War Keldysh s father Vsevolod Mikhailovich Keldysh 1878 1965 was a civil engineer Major General of the Engineering Service and a full professor teaching at the Kuybyshev Military Engineering Academy from 1918 He became a Distinguished Engineering Scientist of the Soviet Union Zasluzhennyj deyatel nauki i tehniki SSSR in 1944 He was one of the authors of contemporary methods for calculating the strength of reinforced concrete and a designer of the Moscow Canal and Moscow Metro projects Several members of the Keldysh family were victims of political repressions In the 1930s Keldysh s uncle was sent to a labor camp on the White Sea Baltic Canal construction site In 1935 Keldysh s mother was arrested but was released after a few weeks It was a part of the campaign of collecting gold from the population but after Keldysh s father brought all the jewelry the family had the unsatisfied NKVD officer returned all this garbage back 4 Keldysh s brother Mikhail a historian who specialized in Medieval Germany was arrested in 1936 and executed in 1937 on suspicion of being a German spy In 1938 another of Keldysh s brothers Alexander was arrested as a French spy Alexander was spared because of the slight liberalization of the repressions during the transfer of the NKVD leadership from Nikolai Yezhov to Lavrentiy Beria and was acquitted in the court The strongest influence on Keldysh was his older sister Lyudmila Keldysh 1904 1976 a mathematician and Keldysh s first teacher Among her children are Leonid Keldysh director of Lebedev Physical Institute and Sergei Novikov a mathematician Biography editKeldysh was born in 1911 in Riga When he was four the family evacuated to Moscow during the First World War In the first years of the Soviet Union he was refused entrance to an Institute of Civil Engineers because of his attachment to a noble family Later he managed to enter and graduate from the Physics and Mathematics department of the Moscow State University He obtained employment at the Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute TsAGI under Mikhail Lavrentyev and Sergey Chaplygin Working at TsAGI he explained the auto oscillation effects of flutter in flight auto induced oscillations and structural deformations and shimmy auto oscillation in the nose wheel of aircraft undercarriages while on the ground The effects were responsible for many aircraft catastrophes at the time In 1937 Keldysh became Doctor of Science with his dissertation entitled Complex Variable and Harmonic Functions Representation by Polynomial Series and was appointed a Professor of Moscow State University 5 In 1943 he became a Corresponding Member of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union He got his first Stalin Prize in 1946 for his works on aircraft auto oscillations In 1943 he also became a full member of the Academy and the Director of NII 1 Research Institute number 1 of the Department of the Aviation Industry He also headed the Department of Applied Mechanics of the Steklov Institute of Mathematics In 1966 this department became an independent organization as the Institute of Applied Mathematics After his death in 1978 it is named after him to become the Keldysh Institute of Applied Mathematics During the 1940s Keldysh became the leader of a group of applied mathematicians involved in almost all large scientific projects of the Soviet Union Keldysh created the Calculation Bureau that carried most of the mathematical problems related to the development of nuclear weapons The bureau is also credited with design of the first Soviet computers In 1947 he became a member of the Communist Party Keldysh s main efforts were devoted to jet propulsion and rockets including supersonic gas dynamics heat and mass exchange and heat shielding 1959 saw successful testing of the Soviet first cruise missile Burya In 1954 Keldysh Sergei Korolev and Mikhail Tikhonravov submitted a letter to the Soviet Government proposing development of an artificial satellite to orbit the Earth The letter was rejected and the group filed exaggerated Soviet newspaper articles which influenced American authorities to start satellite programs This in turn began the effort that culminated in the world s first satellite Sputnik 1 in October 1957 which marked the beginning of mankind s Space Age 6 7 8 In 1955 Keldysh was appointed chairman of the Satellite Committee at the Academy of Science In recognition of his contribution to the problems of defense Keldysh was awarded the Hero of Socialist Labour 1956 and the Lenin Prize 1957 In 1961 he received a second Hero of Socialist Labour award for his contribution to Yuri Gagarin s flight into space the first person to orbit the Earth In 1961 Keldysh was elected President of the Academy of Sciences and kept this position for 14 years Concomitantly he became a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union His last scientific works were devoted to creation of the Shuttle Buran In 1962 he was elected a member of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union Keldysh was 67 when he suddenly died on June 24 1978 He was honoured with a state funeral and his ashes were buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis on Red Square Awards and honors edit nbsp A Russian postal stamp commemorating Keldysh in 2011 Keldysh was a member of many foreign academies of sciences including the Mongolian Academy of Sciences 1961 Polish Academy of Sciences 1962 Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences 1962 and Romanian Academy of Sciences 1965 He was also an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1966 Bulgarian Academy of Sciences 1966 Hungarian Academy of Sciences 1970 and Royal Society of Edinburgh 1968 foreign corresponding member of the German Academy of Sciences 1966 and Saxon Academy of Sciences in Leipzig 1966 Keldysh was awarded the Stalin Prize 1942 1946 Lenin Prize 1957 six Orders of Lenin three other orders numerous medals and four foreign orders The crater Keldysh on the Moon and the research vessel Akademik Mstislav Keldysh are named after him A minor planet 2186 Keldysh discovered in 1973 by Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Chernykh is named in his honor 9 A street Akademika Mstislava Keldisa iela was named after Keldysh in the district of Plavnieki in his native Riga Latvia On 15 December 2022 the street was renamed Bralu Kaudzisu Street 10 See also editKeldysh bomberReferences edit Boris Chertok Rockets and people Online version Archived 6 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Keldysh s family Glavnyj Teoretik M V Keldysh i Glavnyj Konstruktor kosmonavtiki S P Korolyov pokoriteli kosmosa Mstislav Vsevolodovich Keldysh Family stories Formula Keldysha Proschyot glavnogo teoretika in Russian Sputnik remembered The first race to space part 1 page 1 www thespacereview com The Space Review 2 October 2017 Archived from the original on 24 April 2019 Harford 1997 Sixty Years Later Sputnik Declassifications Offer Primer in Fake News Fordham Newsroom Fordham University 10 October 2017 In 1954 because they knew a lot of Soviet journalists they flooded the Soviet media with speculative articles on space flight cited a lot in the Washington Post and New York Times July 1955 the Eisenhower administration announces they re going to launch a satellite in a couple of years it s going to be a scientific satellite Schmadel Lutz D 2003 Dictionary of Minor Planet Names 5th ed New York Springer Verlag p 178 ISBN 3 540 00238 3 Riga changes Russia related street names lsm lv 15 December 2022 retrieved 15 December 2022External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mstislav Keldysh Mstislav Keldysh at the Mathematics Genealogy Project in Russian Keldysh Institute for Applied Mathematics Keldysh memorial page at Keldysh Institute site in Russian Biography of Keldysh in Russian Keldysh and Viktor Glushkov A I Ostashev Sergey Pavlovich Korolyov the Genius of the 20th Century 2010 M of Public Educational Institution of Higher Professional Training MGUL ISBN 978 5 8135 0510 2 Bank of the Universe edited by Boltenko A C Kyiv 2014 publishing house Phoenix ISBN 978 966 136 169 9 Mstislav Keldysh Family history S P Korolyov Encyclopedia of life and creativity edited by C A Lopota RSC Energia S P Korolyov 2014 ISBN 978 5 906674 04 3 Harford James 1999 Korolev How One Man Masterminded the Soviet Drive to Beat America to the Moon John Wiley Sons ISBN 0 471 14853 9 NASA segments Academic offices Preceded byAlexander Nesmeyanov President of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR1961 1975 Succeeded byAnatoly Alexandrov Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mstislav Keldysh amp oldid 1222523650, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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