- Pelageya Polubarinova-Kochina
Pelageya Yakovlevna Polubarinova-Kochina (
May 13 ,1899 –July 3 ,1999 ) was aRussia n womanmathematician and scientist, working inapplied mathematics , best known for her work on the application of Fuchsiandifferential equation s tohydrodynamics .Born in 1899 in czarist Russia of an accountant and a housewife, young Pelageya was the second youngest of four children. She studied at a women's high school in
St. Petersburg and went on toPetrograd University (after theRevolution of 1917 ). Her father died in 1918 so she started to take care of the family by working at the laboratory of geophysics. There she metNikolai Kochin , and they married in 1925 and had two daughters. The two taught at Petrograd University until 1934, when they moved toMoscow , where Nikolai Kochin took a teaching position at theUniversity of Moscow . In Moskow, Polubarinova-Kochina did research at theSteklov Institute until World War II, when she and their daughters were evacuated toKazan while Kochin stayed in Moscow to work on aiding the military effort. He died before the war was over. After the war, she edited his lectures and continued to teach applied mathematics. She was later head of the department of theoretical mechanics at theUniversity of Novosibirsk and director of the department of applied hydrodynamics at the Hydrodynamics Institute. She was a founder of theSiberia n branch of the Academy of Sciences atNovosibirsk .She was awarded the
Stalin Prize in 1946, was made aHero of Socialist Labor in 1969 and received theOrder of the Friendship of Nations in 1979. She died in 1999 a few months after her 100th birthday.References
* G.W. Phillips, "Pelageya Yakovlevna Kochina", in cite book | author=Louise S. Grinstein (Editor), Paul J. Campbell (Editor) | title=Women of Mathematics: A Bio-Bibliographic Sourcebook | year=1987| publisher = Greenwood Press, New York | id = ISBN 978-0313248498 pp. 95-102.
External links
* [http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/kochina.htm "Pelageya Yakovlevna Polubarinova-Kochina", Biographies of Women Mathematicians] ,
Agnes Scott College
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