BIOGRAPHICAL NAMES

The following is a list of all the people mentioned in this book. The asterisks following some of the names indicate that there are chapters devoted to them. Abbreviations: CPSU: Communist Party of the Soviet Union; KGB: Komitet Gosudarstvennoi Bezopasnosti (Committee of State Security); NKVD: Narodnii Komissariat Vnutrennikh Del (People’s Commissariat of Internal Affairs)

Abrikosov, Alexei I. (1875–1955). Russian-Soviet pathologist; A. A. Abrikosov’s father

Abrikosov,* Alexei A. (1928– ). Soviet-American physicist; Nobel laureate (2003)

Abrikosov, Dmitrii I. (1876–1950). Russian diplomat and author; A. A. Abrikosov’s uncle

Agre, Peter (1949–). American biomedical scientist; Nobel laureate (2003)

Agrest, Mattes M. (1915–2005). Soviet mathematician; later moved to the US

Akhmatova, Anna (1889–1966). Russian-Soviet poet

Akulov, Nikolai S. (1900–1976). Soviet physicist; N. N. Semenov’s unprincipled adversary

Aleksandrov, Anatoly P. (1903–1994). Soviet physicist; President of the Soviet Academy of Sciences (1975–1986)

Alekseevskii, Nikolai E. (1912–1993). Soviet physicist

Alikhanov, Abraham I. (1904–1970). Soviet-Armenian physicist

Alikhanov, Gevork (1897–1937). Armenian communist leader; Elena Bonner’s father

Alikhanyan, Artem (1908–1978). Soviet-Armenian physicist

Allen, J. F. (1908–2001). Canadian-British physicist; codiscoverer of helium superfluidity

Altshuler, Lev V. (1913–2003). Soviet physicist

Amiton, Ilya P. (1946–). Soviet crystallographer

Andreiev, Nikolai N. (1880–1970). Soviet physicist

Andrianov, Kuzma A. (1904–1978). Soviet chemist

Andropov, Yurii V. (1914–1984). KGB chief (1967–1982); General Secretary of the CPSU (1982–1984)

Arkhipov, R. G. Soviet physicist

Aronov, Yurii E. (1938–1986). Soviet chemist; persecuted for his protest against the invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968

Arrhenius, Svante (1859–1927). Swedish physical chemist; Nobel laureate (1903)

Artsimovich, Lev A. (1909–1973). Soviet physicist

Balandin, A. A. (1898–1967). Soviet chemist

Baldwin, Stanley (1867–1947). thrice Prime Minister of the UK (1923–1924, 1924–1929, and 1935–1937)

Balfour, Arthur (1848–1930). British politician; Prime Minister (1902–1905); Foreign Secretary (1916–1919)

Bárány, Anders (1942–). Swedish physicist; Secretary of the Nobel Committee for Physics (1989–2003)

Bardeen, John (1908–1991). American physicist; twice Nobel laureate (1956; 1972)

Barton, Derek (1918–1998). British chemist; Nobel laureate (1969)

Bauman, Karl I. (1892–1937). Soviet party official; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Bednorz, J. Georg (1950–). Swiss physicist; Nobel laureate (1987)

Belousov,* Boris P. (1893–1970). Soviet chemist

Bergius, Friedrich (1884–1949). German chemist; Nobel laureate (1931)

Beria, Lavrentii P. (1899–1953). Chief of Soviet secret police; Supervisor of the Soviet nuclear program

Bethe, Hans (1906–2005). German-American physicist; Nobel laureate (1967)

Blumenfeld, Lev A. (1921–2002). Soviet biophysicist

Bochvar, Dmitrii A. (1903–1990). Soviet quantum chemist

Bodenstein, Max (1871–1942). German physical chemist

Bohr, Niels (1885–1962). Danish physicist; Nobel laureate (1922)

Bokii, Georgii B. (1909–2001). Soviet crystallographer

Bonhoeffer, Karl F. (1899–1957). German physical chemist

Bonner, Elena (Lusia) (1923–2011). Soviet human rights activist; Andrei Sakharov’s second wife

Boreisha, Maria (1879–1923). Russian philologist; Nikolai Semenov’s first wife

Born, Max (1882–1970). German-British physicist; Nobel laureate (1954)

Bosch, Carl (1874–1940). German chemical engineer; Nobel laureate (1931)

Botvinnik, Maria M. (1902–1970). Soviet chemist

Bourbaki, Nicolas. invented collective pseudonym of a group of mathematicians

Boyle, Robert (1627–1691). British scientist

Brezhnev, Leonid I. (1906–1982). Soviet politician; General Secretary of the CPSU (1964–1982)

Bronshtein, Matvei P. (1906–1938). Soviet physicist; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Bukatin, Michael (Mikhael) A. (1964–). American mathematician and software engineer; Anatol Zhabotinsky’s son

Bukatina, Anna E. (1940–). Soviet-American biophysicist; Anatol Zhabotinsky’s first wife

Bukharin, Nikolai I. (1888–1938). Soviet politician; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Bulganin, Nikolai A. (1895–1975). Soviet politician; Prime Minister (1955–1958)

Bunin, I. A. (1870–1953). Russian poet; Nobel laureate (1933)

Burovskaya, Mirra Ya. (1880–1947). Russian actress; Yulii Khariton’s mother

Burtseva (Semenova), Natalia N. (1902–1996). Nikolai Semenov’s second wife

Bush, George W. (1946–). US president (2001–2009)

Butlerov, Aleksander M. (1828–1886). Russian chemist

Chadwick, James (1891–1974). British physicist; Nobel laureate (1935)

Chekhov, Anton P. (1860–1904). Russian writer

Chelintsev, G. V.; Soviet chemist; campaigned against the proponents of the theory of resonance

Cherenkov, Pavel A. (1904–1990). Soviet physicist; Nobel laureate (1958)

Chernenko, Konstantin U. (1911–1985). Soviet politician; General Secretary of the CPSU (1984–1985)

Chernomyrdin, Viktor (1938–2010). Prime Minsiter of Russia (1992–1998)

Chernosvitova, Nadezhda. Petr Kapitza’s first wife

Chernyakhovskaya, Inna Yu. Yakov Zeldovich’s third wife

Chernyshev, Alexei K. (1945–). Soviet physicist

Chirkov, Nikolai M. (1908–1972). Soviet chemist

Choibalsan, Khorloogiin (1895–1952). Communist leader of Mongolia

Chu, Steven (1948–). American physicist; Nobel laureate (1997); US Secretary of Energy (2009–)

Churchill, Winston (1874–1965). British politician; Prime Minister; Nobel laureate (1953)

Cockcroft, John D. (1897–1967). British physicist; Nobel laureate (1951)

Cohen-Tannoudji, Claude (1933–). French physicist; Nobel laureate (1997)

Conan Doyle, Arthur (1859–1930). British author

Cooper, Leon (1930–). American physicist; Nobel laureate (1972)

Crick, Francis (1916–2004). British physicist turned biologist; Nobel laureate (1962)

Dalyell, Tam (now, Lord Dalyell) (1932–). British politician

De Broglie Louis (1892–1987). French physicist; Nobel laureate (1929)

De Kruif, Paul (1890–1971). American biologist turned author of popular science books

Delbrück, Max (1906–1981). German-American scientist; Nobel laureate (1969)

Democritus (460–370 BCE). Greek philosopher

Dirac, Paul A. M. (1902–1984). British physicist; Nobel laureate (1933)

Doroshkevich, A. G. (1936–). Soviet-Russian astrophysicist and cosmologist

Drell, Sidney D. (1926–). American physicist

Drobantseva, Konkordia (Kora) (1908–1984). Soviet chemical engineer; L. D. Landau’s wife

Dyatkina, M. E. (1915–1972). Soviet chemist

Dzyaloshinskii, I. E. (1931–). Soviet physicist

Ehrenfest, Paul (1880–1933). Dutch physicist

Einstein, Albert (1879–1955). German Swiss-American physicist; Nobel laureate (1922 for 1921)

Eitington, Max; German psychiatrist; second husband of Yulii Khariton’s mother

Elsasser, Walter M. (1904–1991). German-American physicist

Eltenton, George. British chemical engineer; member of the Soviet atomic spy ring

Engelhardt, Vladimir A. (1895–1984). Soviet biochemist

Epstein, Irving R. (1944–). American physical chemist

Erlander, Tage F. (1901–1985). Swedish prime minister (1946–1969)

Ermakova, Nina I. (1922–). Vitaly Ginzburg’s second wife

Escher, Maurice C. (1898–1972). Dutch graphic artist

Eyring, Henry (1901–1981). American physical chemist

Ezhov, Nikolai I. (1895–1940). Head of the NKVD during the Great Purge of 1937–1938

Fedin, Erlen I. (1926–2009). Soviet chemist

Fedorov, E. K. (1910–1981). Researcher of polar regions; official of the Soviet Academy of Sciences

Feinberg, E. L. (1912–2005). Soviet physicist

Fermi, Enrico (1901–1954). Italian-American physicist; Nobel laureate (1938)

Fersman, Aleksandr E. (1883–1945). Russian-Soviet geologist

Feynman, Richard (1918–1988). American physicist; Nobel laureate (1965)

Fock, Vladimir A. (1898–1974). Soviet physicist

Fomin, P. F. (1904–1976). Soviet admiral; commander of the Novaya Zemplya proving ground for thermonuclear bomb tests

Frank, Ilya M. (1908–1990). Soviet physicist; Nobel laureate (1958)

Frank-Kamenetskii, David A. (1910–1970). Soviet physicist and chemist

Fredga, Arne (1902–1992). Swedish chemist

Freidlina, Rakhil Kh. (1906–1986). Soviet chemist

Frenkel, Yakov I. (1894–1952). Soviet physicist

Friedman, Aleksandr A. (1888–1925). Russian-Soviet cosmologist

Frumkin, Aleksandr N. (1895–1976). Soviet electrochemist

Fuchs, Klaus (1911–1988). German-British physicist; Soviet atomic spy

Fuller, R. Buckminster (1895–1983). American designer and author

Gagarin, Yurii A. (1934–1968). Soviet pilot; first human in space (1961)

Galpern, Elena (1935–). Soviet chemist

Gambaryan, Natalya P. (1929–). Soviet chemist

Gamow, George (at birth, Georgii A.) (1904–1968). Russian-American physicist and author of popular science books

Gavrilov, Nikolai I. (1892–1966). Soviet chemist

Gershtein, Semyon S. (1929–). Soviet physicist

Gessen, B. M. (1893–1936). Soviet physicist and philosopher; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Gilbert, Walter (1932–). American physicist and biologist; Nobel laureate (1980)

Gill, Eric (1882–1940). British sculptor

Ginzburg, Irina V. (1939–). Vitaly Ginzburg’s daughter

Ginzburg, Nina I. See Ermakova, Nina I.

Ginzburg, Lazar (1863–1942). Russian-Soviet engineer; Vitaly Ginzburg’s father

Ginzburg,* Vitaly L. (1916–2009). Soviet physicist; Nobel laureate (2003)

Glashow, Sheldon (1932–). American physicist; Nobel laureate (1979)

Goldanskii, Vitalii I. (1923–2001). Soviet physical chemist; Nikolai Semenov’s son-in-law

Gomberg, Moses (1866–1947). American chemist

Gorbachev, Mikhail S. (1931–). Soviet politician; General Secretary of the CPSU (1985–1991); President of the Soviet Union (1990–1991); Nobel laureate (1990)

Gorelik, Gennady E. (1948–). Soviet-American science historian

Gorky, Maxim (1868–1936). Soviet writer

Gorkov, Lev P. (1929–). Soviet-American-Russian physicist

Gorobets, Boris S. (1942–). Soviet-Russian physicist, mineralogist, science historian

Gorskaya, Natalia V. (1941–2008). Soviet crystallographer

Groves, Leslie R. (1896–1970). US Army general; manager of the Manhattan Project

Gurevich, I. I. (1912–1992). Soviet physicist

Hahn, Otto (1879–1968). German chemist; Nobel laureate (awarded in 1945 for the year 1944)

Hartree, Douglas (1897–1958). British physicist

Hecker, Siegfried S. (1943–). American metallurgist; former director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory

Heisenberg, Werner (1901–1976). German physicist; Nobel laureate (1933 for 1932)

Heitler, Walter (1904–1981). German-British physicist

Hinshelwood, Cyril Norman (1897–1967). British physical chemist; Nobel laureate (1956)

Hoffmann, Roald (1937–). American chemist and author; Nobel laureate (1981)

Hulthén, Lamek (1909–1995). Swedish physicist

Ingelstam, Erik (1909–1988). Swedish physicist

Ioffe, Abram F. (1880–1960). Russian-Soviet physicist; mentor of many renowned Soviet physicists

Ipatev, Vladimir N. (1867–1952). Russian-American chemist

Ivanenko, Dmitrii D. (1904–1994). Soviet physicist

Ivanitskii, Genrikh R. (1936–). Soviet biophysicist

John Paul II (1920–2005). Pope of the Catholic Church (1978–2005)

Jordan, Pascual (1902–1980). German physicist

Kabachnik, Martin I. (1908–1997). Soviet chemist

Kabalkina, Sarra S. (1918–1999). Soviet physicist

Kamenev, Lev B. (1883–1936). Soviet politician; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Kamerlingh-Onnes, Heike (1853–1926). Dutch physicist; Nobel laureate (1913)

Kanegiesser, Evgeniya; Rudolf Peierls’s Russian-born wife

Kapitza, Anna A. (1903–1996). Petr Kapitza’s wife

Kapitza, Andrei P. (1931–2011). geographer; Petr Kapitza’s son

Kapitza,* Petr L. (1894–1984). Soviet physicist; Nobel laureate (1978)

Kapitza, Sergei P. (1928–2012). Physicist; Petr Kapitza’s son

Kargin, Valentin A. (1907–1969). Soviet polymer chemist

Kedrov, Bonifatii M. (1903–1983). Soviet philosopher

Keldysh, Leonid V. (1931–). Soviet-American physicist

Keldysh, Mstislav V. (1911–1978). Soviet mathematician; President of the Soviet Academy of Sciences (1961–1975)

Kendrew, John (1917–1997). British biochemist; Nobel laureate (1962)

Kennedy, John F. (1917–1963). US president (1961–1963)

Khalatnikov, Isaak M. (1919–). Soviet physicist

Khariton, Boris O. (1876–1940). Journalist; Yulii Khariton’s father

Khariton, Maria N. (1902–1977). Yulii Khariton’s wife

Khariton, Tatyana Yu. (1926–1985). Yulii Khariton’s daughter

Khariton,* Yulii B. (1904–1996). Soviet physicist; long-time scientific head of Arzamas-16

Khrushchev, Nikita S. (1894–1971). Supreme leader of the Soviet Union after Stalin’s death (1953–1964)

Khvolson, Orest D. (1852–1934). Russian physicist

Kikoin, Isaak K. (1908–1984). Soviet physicist

Kitaigorodskii,* Aleksandr I. (1914–1985). Soviet crystallographer

Kitaigorodskii, Isaac (1888–1965). Soviet chemical engineer; A. I. Kitaigorodskii’s father

Klein, Oskar (1894–1977). Swedish physicist

Knunyants, Ivan L. (1906–1990). Soviet chemist

Kochetkov, Nikolai K. (1915–2005). Soviet chemist

Kolmogorov, Andrei N. (1903–1987). Soviet mathematician

Kondratev, Viktor N. (1902–1979). Soviet physical chemist

Konstantinov, Boris P. (1916–1969). Soviet physicist

Konstantinova, Varvara P. (1907–1976). Soviet physicist; Ya. B. Zeldovich’s first wife

Korolev, Sergei (1907–1966). General Constructor of the Soviet rocket program

Korshak, Vasilii V. (1909–1988). Soviet chemist

Koshland, Daniel E. Jr. (1920–2007). American biochemist; editor of Science (1985–1995).

Kovalev, Sergei (1930–). Soviet biologist and human rights activist

Krasin, Viktor (1929–). Soviet human rights activist; later US citizen

Krinskaya, Albina (1938–). Anatol Zhabotinsky’s second wife

Krinskii, Valentin I. (1938–). Soviet biophysicist

Krylov, Aleksey N. (1863–1945). Russian naval engineer

Krylova, Anna A. A. N. Krylov’s daughter; see Kapitza, Anna A.

Kurchatov, Igor V. (1903–1960). Soviet physicist; supreme leader of the Soviet nuclear program

Kursanov, Dmitrii N. (1899–1983). Soviet chemist

Landau, David L. (1866–1943). Oil engineer; Lev Landau’s father

Landau, Igor L. (1944–2011). Soviet-Swiss physicist; Lev Landau’s son

Landau,* Lev D. (1908–1968). Soviet physicist; Nobel laureate (1962)

Landau (née Harkavi), Lyubov V. (1876–1941). Lev Landau’s mother

Landsberg, Grigory S. (1890–1957). Soviet physicist

Lauterbur, Paul (1929–2007). American chemist; Nobel laureate (2003)

Lavrentiev, Mikhail A. (1900–1980). Soviet mathematician

Lawrence, Ernest O. (1901–1958). American physicist; Nobel laureate (1939)

Lebedev, Petr N. (1866–1912). Russian physicist

Leggett, Anthony J. (1939–). British-American physicist; Nobel laureate (2003)

Leipunskii, Aleksandr I. (1903–1972). Soviet physicist

Leipunskii, Ovsei I. (1909–1990). Soviet physicist

Lenin, Vladimir I. (1870–1924). Russian communist revolutionary; first leader of the Soviet Union

Leontovich, Mikhail A. (1903–1981). Soviet physicist

Letokhov, Vladilen S. (1939–2009). Soviet-Russian physicist

Levi, Saul. Refugee physicist from Germany; Vitaly Ginzburg’s physics tutor; later moved to the United States

Levi-Montalcini, Rita (1909–2012). Italian biomedical scientist; Nobel laureate (1986)

Liberman (also, Liberman-Smith), Marina (1968–). Andrei Sakharov’s granddaughter

Lifshits Ilya M. (1917–1982). Soviet physicist

Lifshits (née Mazel’), Berta. E. M. and I. M. Lifshits’s mother

Lifshits,* Evgenii M. (1915–1985). Soviet physicist

Lindh, Axel E. (1888–1960). Swedish physicist; member of the Nobel Committee for Physics (1935–1960)

Liszt, Franz (Ferenc) (1811–1886). Hungarian composer and virtuoso pianist

Livanova, Anna (1917–2001). Soviet physicist and author of books about scientists; Anatol Zhabotinsky’s mother. Livanova was her pen-name; her original surname was Lifshits.

Liverovskii, Alexei; Russian medical doctor; first husband of Maria Boreisha, Nikolai Semenov’s first wife

London, Fritz W. (1900–1954). German-American physicist

Lucretius (99–55 BCE). Roman philosopher

Luzhkov, Yury M. (1936–). Mayor of Moscow (1992–2010)

Luzin, Nikolai N. (1883–1950). Russian-Soviet mathematician

Lvov, V. E. Soviet writer, critic of the theory of resonance in chemistry

Lysenko, Trofim D. (1898–1976). Soviet charlatan agronomist; wielded great power and destroyed modern biology in the Soviet Union

MacGillavry, Carolina H. (1904–1993). Dutch crystallographer

MacKinnon, Roderick (1956–). American biologist; Nobel laureate (2003)

Malenkov, Georgii M. (1902–1988). Soviet communist leader; Prime Minister (1953–1955)

Malevich, Kazimir (1879–1935). Russian-Soviet avant-garde artist

Malyshev, Vyacheslav (1902–1957). Soviet official; head of the Ministry of Medium Machine Building (the camouflaged name for the ministry responsible for nuclear matters)

Mamedov, Khudu (1927–1988). Soviet-Azerbaijani crystallographer

Mandelshtam, Leonid I. (1879–1944). Soviet physicist

Mandelshtam, Osip (1891–1938). Russian poet; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Mansfield, Peter (1933–). British physicist; Nobel laureate (2003)

Mechnikov, Ilya (in international literature, Élie) (1845–1916). Russian-Ukrainian biologist; Nobel laureate (1908)

Meitner, Lise (1878–1968). Austrian-German physicist; codiscoverer of nuclear fission

Mendel, Gregor (1822–1884). Austrian monk and pioneer geneticist

Mendeleev, Dmitrii I. (1834–1907). Russian chemist

Mezhlauk, Valery I. (1893–1938). Soviet deputy prime minister; head of state planning; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Migdal, Alexander (1945–). Soviet-American physicist; Arkadii Migdal’s son

Migdal, Arkadii (1911–1991). Soviet physicist

Mikhoels, Solomon (1890–1948). Soviet actor; head of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee; assassinated on Stalin’s orders

Misener, A. D. British physicist; codiscoverer of helium superfluidity

Mokhov, Viktor N. (193?–2011). Soviet physicist

Molotov, Vyacheslav M. (1890–1986). Leading Soviet politician; Prime Minister (1930–1941); Foreign Minister (1939–1949; 1953–1956)

Mond, Ludwig (1839–1909). German-British chemist-industrialist

Monroe, Marilyn (1926–1962). American actress

Müller, K. Alexander (1927–). Swiss physicist; Nobel laureate (1987)

Myshkis, Anatoli D. (1920–2009). Soviet mathematician

Nametkin, Sergey S. (1876–1950). Russian-Soviet chemist

Nedelin, Mitrofan I. (1902–1960). Soviet military leader

Neizvestny, Ernst I. (1925–). Soviet-American sculptor

Nemchinov, V. S. (1894–1964). Soviet economist

Nernst, Walther (1864–1941). German physical chemist; Nobel laureate (1920)

Nesmeyanov,* Aleksandr N. (1899–1980). Soviet chemist; president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences (1951–1961)

Nesmeyanov, Vasilii N. Aleksandr Nesmeyanov’s brother; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Neumann, John von (1903–1957). Hungarian-American mathematician

Newton, Isaac (1642–1727). British scientist

Nikolai II of Russia (1868–1918). Last Emperor of Russia

Nixon, Richard M. (1913–1994). US president (1968–1974)

Nobel, Alfred (1833–1896). Swedish chemical engineer and inventor; founded the award known today as the Nobel Prize

Novikov, Igor D. (1935–). Soviet-Danish astrophysicist

Nuzhdin, Nikolai I. (1904–1972). Soviet biologist; close associate of Trofim Lysenko

Obreimov, I. V. (1894–1981). Soviet physicist

Ondra, Annie (1902–1987). German film star

Oparin, Aleksander I. (1894–1980). Soviet biochemist

Oppenheimer, J. Robert (1904–1967). American physicist; first director of the Los Alamos Laboratory

Orbán, Miklós (1939–). Hungarian chemist

Orwell, George (1903–1950). British writer

Osawa, Eiji (1935–). Japanese chemist

Ovchinnikova (née Zeldovich), Marina Ya. (1939–). Soviet physicist, Ya. B. Zeldovich’s daughter

Panofsky, Wolfgang (1919–2007). American physicist

Pasternak, Boris (1890–1960). Russian poet, novelist; Nobel laureate (1958; was forced to decline the award)

Pauli, Wolfgang (1900–1958). Austrian-Swiss physicist; Nobel laureate (1945)

Pauling, Linus (1901–1994). American chemist; twice Nobel laureate (1954; 1963 for 1962)

Pavlov, Ivan P. (1849–1936). Russian physiologist; Nobel laureate (1904)

Pavlov, Nikolai I. (1915–1990). KGB general

Peebles, P. J. E. (1935–). American physicist

Peierls, Rudolf E. (1907–1995). German-British physicist

Penzias, Arno (1933–). American astrophysicist; Nobel laureate (1978)

Perutz, Max F. (1914–2002). Austrian-British biochemist

Peter the Great (1672–1725). Emperor of Russia (1682–1725)

Petrovskii, Ivan G. (1901–1973). Soviet mathematician

Phillips, William D. (1948–). American physicist; Nobel laureate (1997)

Pitaevskii, L. P. (1933–). Soviet physicist

Planck, Max (1858–1947). German physicist; Nobel laureate (1919 for 1918)

Pomeranchuk, Isaak Ya. (1913–1966). Soviet physicist

Prigogine, Ilya (1917–2003). Belgian physical chemist; Nobel laureate (1977)

Putin, Vladimir V. (1952–). Russian politician; President (2000–2008; 2012–); Prime Minister (1999–2000; 2008–2012)

Pyatigorskii, Leonid M. (1909–1993). Soviet physicist

Rabi, Isidor I. (1898–1988). American physicist; Nobel laureate (1945 for 1944)

Raman, C. V. (1888–1970). Indian physicist; Nobel laureate (1930)

Rapoport, Iosif A. (1912–1990). Soviet geneticist

Razuvaev, Grigorii A. (1895–1989). Soviet chemist

Reagan, Ronald W. (1911–2004). US president (1981–1989)

Roginskii, Simon Z. (1900–1970). Soviet physical chemist

Romanov, Yurii A. (1926–2010). Soviet physicist

Röntgen, Wilhelm Conrad (1845–1923). German physicist; Nobel laureate (1901)

Rozhdestvenskii, Dmitrii S. (1876–1940). Russian physicist

Russell, Bertrand (1872–1970). British philosopher

Rutherford, Ernest (1871–1937). British physicist; Nobel laureate (1908)

Sagdeev, Roald Z. (1932–). Soviet-American physicist

Sakharov,* Andrei D. (1921–1989). Soviet physicist and human rights activist; Nobel laureate (1975)

Sakharov, Dmitrii I. (1889–1961). Physicist; pedagogue; author; Andrei Sakharov’s father

Sakharov, Dmitrii A. (1957). Andrei Sakharov’s son

Sakharova, Lyubov (Lyuba) A. (1949–). Teacher; Andrei Sakharov’s daughter

Sakharova, Tatyana A. (1945–). Biologist; Andrei Sakharov’s daughter

Samoilov, David S. (1920–1990). Soviet poet

Schrieffer, J. Robert (1931–). American physicist; Nobel laureate (1972)

Schrödinger, Erwin (1887–1961). Austrian physicist; Nobel laureate (1933)

Seaborg, Glenn T. (1912–1999). American chemist; Nobel laureate (1951)

Semenov, Alexey Yu. (1951–). Biologist; Nikolai Semenov and Yulii Khariton’s grandson

Semenov,* Nikolai N. (1896–1986). Soviet chemical physicist; Nobel laureate (1956)

Semenov, Yurii N. (1925–1995). Philosopher, Nikolai Semenov’s son

Semenova (Burtseva), Natalia N. See Burtseva, Natalia

Semenova, Ludmilla N. (1928–). Teacher at music school; Nikolai Semenov’s daughter

Shabad, Leon M. (1902–1982). Soviet cancer specialist

Shakespeare, William (1564–1616). English poet and playwright

Shalnikov, Aleksandr I. (1905–1986). Soviet physicist

Shcherbakova (Shcherbakova-Semenova), Lidia G. (1926–). Soviet chemist; Nikolai Semenov’s third wife

Shemyakin, Mikhail M. (1908–1970). Soviet chemist

Shilov, E. A. (1893–1970). Soviet chemist

Shire, Edward S. (1908–1978). British physicist

Shiryaeva, O. K. (1911–2000). Soviet artist and architect; was incarcerated and exiled; had daughter with Ya. B. Zeldovich

Shnol, Simon (1930–). Soviet-Russian biochemist

Shoenberg, David (1911–2004). British physicist

Shubin, Semyon (1908–1938). Soviet physicist; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Shubnikov, Alexey V. (1887–1970). Soviet crystallographer

Shubnikov, Lev V. (1901–1937). Soviet physicist; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Shunyaev, Rashid A. (1943–). Soviet-Russian physicist

Sidur, Vadim A. (1924–1986). Soviet avant-garde sculptor

Sigmund Freud (1856–1939). Austrian neurologist

Sillén, Lars Gunnar (1916–1970). Swedish chemist

Simon, Francis (1893–1956). German-British physicist

Sindelevich, Asya; A. I. Kitaigorodskii’s mother

Smirnov, Yurii N. (1937–2011). Soviet physicist and historian of science

Sobko, I. D.; Soviet journal editor

Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr I. (1918–2008). Russian writer; Nobel laureate (1970)

Spinoza, Baruch (1632–1677). Dutch philosopher

Stalin, Iosif V. (1878–1953). Soviet dictator

Stankevich, Ivan V. (1933–2012). Soviet physicist

Steinbeck, John (1902–1968). American writer; Nobel laureate (1962)

Stern, Otto (1888–1969). German-American physicist; Nobel laureate (1943)

Strassmann, Fritz (1902–1980). German chemist; codiscoverer of nuclear fission

Struchkov, Yurii T. (1926–1995). Soviet crystallographer

Syrkin, Yakov K. (1894–1974). Soviet chemist

Szilard, Leo (1898–1964). Hungarian-American scientist

Tamm,* Igor E. (1895–1971). Soviet physicist; Nobel laureate (1958)

Tamm, Leonid E. (1896 or later–1937, 1938 at the latest). Igor Tamm’s brother; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Tamm, Natalia V. (née Shuiskaya). Igor Tamm’s wife

Telegdi, Valentine (1922–2006). Hungarian-American physicist

Teller, Edward (1908–2003). Hungarian-American physicist

Thomson, J. J. (1856–1940). British physicist; Nobel laureate (1906)

Thorne, Kip S. (1940–). American physicist

Timofeev-Resovskii, Nikolai V. (1900–1981). Soviet biologist

Tiselius, Arne (1902–1971). Swedish biochemist; Nobel laureate (1948)

Tisza, Laszlo (1907–2009). Hungarian-American physicist

Todd, Alexander (1907–1997). British chemist; Nobel laureate (1957)

Tolstoy, Lev (in international literature, Leo) N. (1828–1910). Russian writer

Trapeznikova, Olga N. (1901–1997). Soviet physicist; Lev Shubnikov’s widow

Trotsky, Lev (in international literature, Leon) (1879–1940). Soviet communist revolutionary; was assassinated in exile on Stalin’s order

Truman, Harry S. (1884–1972). US president (1945–1952)

Tsukerman, Veniamin (1913–1993). Soviet physicist

Tsvetaeva, Marina (1892–1941). Russian-Soviet poet

Tupolev, Andrei N. (1888–1972). Soviet aircraft designer

Turgenev, Ivan S. (1818–1883). Russian writer

Ulam Stanislaw (1909–1984). Polish-American mathematician

Vainshtein, Boris K. (1921–1996). Soviet crystallographer

Vainshtein, L. A. (1920–1989). Soviet physicist

Valta, Zinaida (born probably in 1902; year of death unknown). Together with Yulii Khariton investigated the oxidation of phosphorus

Valter, Alexander F. (1898–1941). Soviet physicist

van ‘t Hoff, Jacobus (1852–1911). Dutch chemist; Nobel laureate (1901)

Vasileva Anzhelika Ya. (? –1985). Yakov Zeldovich’s second wife

Vavilov, Nikolai V. (1887–1943). Soviet plant biologist; victim of Stalin’s Terror

Vavilov, Sergei V. (1891–1951). Soviet physicist; President of the Soviet Academy of Sciences (1945–1951)

Velikhov, Evgenii P. (1935–). Soviet physicist

Verne, Jules (1828–1905). French writer; pioneer of science fiction

Vernyi, Alexander (1950). Physicist and historian of science; Andrei Sakharov’s son-in-law (Lyuba’s husband)

Vikhrieva, Klavdia (1919–1969). Chemical engineer; Andrei Sakharov’s first wife

Vildauer, Rosa (1891–1948). Vitaly Ginzburg’s stepmother

Vildauer-Ginzburg, Augusta (1887–1920). Russian medical doctor; Vitaly Ginzburg’s mother

Volpin, Mark E. (1923–1996). Soviet chemist

Watson, James D. (1928–). American biologist; Nobel laureate (1962)

Weinberg, Steven (1933–). American physicist; Nobel laureate (1979)

Weisskopf, Victor (1908–2002). Austrian-American physicist

Weizsäcker, Carl Friedrich von (1912–2007). German physicist

Wells, H. G. (1866–1946). British author

Wheland, George W. (1907–1962). American chemist

Wigner, Eugene P. (1902–1995). Hungarian-American physicist; Nobel laureate (1963)

Wilkins, Maurice (1916–2004). British biophysicist; Nobel laureate (1962)

Wilson, Robert W. (1936–). American physicist; Nobel laureate (1978)

Wöhler, Friedrich (1800–1882). German chemist

Woodward, Robert B. (1917–1979). American chemist; Nobel laureate (1965)

Wul’ff, Fanny D.; Alexei Abrikosov’s mother

Yakir, Petr I. (1923–1982). Soviet human rights activist

Yeltsin, Boris N. (1931–2007). President of Russia (1991–1999)

Zababakhin, Evgenii I. (1917–1984). Soviet physicist; director of Chelyabinsk-70

Zaikin, Albert N. (1935–). Soviet biophysicist

Zaks, Yulia B. (1937–). Soviet chemist; was fired from her job for expressing sympathy with persecuted human rights activists; in 1976 immigrated to the United States

Zamsha, Olga I. (1915–). Soviet physicist; Vitaly Ginzburg’s first wife

Zavaritskii, Nikolai V. (1925–1997). Soviet physicist

Zavoiskii, Evgenii K. (1907–1976). Soviet physicist; inventor of the electron paramagnetic resonance technique

Zeeman, Pieter (1865–1943). Dutch physicist; Nobel laureate (1902)

Zeldovich, Anna P. (1892–1975). Translator, writer; Ya. B. Zeldovich’s mother

Zeldovich, Boris N. (1888–1943). Soviet lawyer; Ya. B. Zeldovich’s father

Zeldovich, Boris Ya. (1944–). Soviet-American physicist; Ya. B. Zeldovich’s son

Zeldovich, Olga Ya. (1938–). Soviet physicist; Ya. B. Zeldovich’s daughter

Zeldovich,* Yakov B. (1914–1987). Soviet physicist

Zelinsky, Nikolai D. (1861–1953). Russian-Soviet chemist

Zhabotinsky,* Anatol M. (1938–2008). Soviet-American biophysicist

Zhabotinsky, Mark E. (1917–2003?). Soviet physicist; A. M. Zhabotinsky’s father

Zhdanov, Andrei A. (1896–1948). Soviet Communist Party leader

Zorky, Petr (1933–2005). Soviet crystallographer

Zysin, Yurii A. (1917–1978). Soviet physicist