Rudolf Muradyan
Armenian theoretical physicist (born 1936) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rudolf Muradovich Muradyan (Armenian: Ռուդոլֆ Մուրադի Մուրադյան; born 19 June 1936, Yerevan, Armenian SSR, USSR) is an Armenian theoretical physicist. Rudolf Muradyan's main research relate to theoretical physics, elementary-particle physics, cosmology and the origin of the Universe. Considering the properties of the interaction of elementary particles, he proposed the possibility of large-scale invariance in high-energy physics, from which the "Matveev-Muradyan-Tavkhelidze quark counting rule" is derived especially. He also researched the connection between the appearance of the Universe's rotation and magnetic fields and the cosmological constant. He is the recipient of the 1988 Lenin Prize, along with Albert Tavkhelidze and Viktor Matveev, for the discovery of dimensional quark counting rules.[1][2]
Rudolf Muradovich Muradyan | |
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Ռուդոլֆ Մուրադի Մուրադյան | |
Born | 19 June, 1936 (86 Years Old) |
Nationality | Armenian |
Citizenship | Armenian SSR USSR Brazil |
Alma mater | Moscow State University |
Awards | |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Theoretical physics, Elementary-Particle Physics and Cosmology |
Institutions | Institute of Physics of the Federal University of Bahia |
Thesis | Origin of magnetic fields and superdense cosmogony (1978) |