- Science and technology in the Soviet Union
In the
Soviet Union , science and technology served as an important part of nationalpolitics , practices, and identity. From the time ofLenin until the dissolution of theUSSR in the early 1990s, both science and technology were intimately linked to the ideology and practical functioning of theSoviet state, and were pursued along paths both similar and distinct from models in other countries. Many great scientists, who worked inImperial Russia (like, e.g.Konstantin Tsiolkovsky ), continued to work in theUSSR and gave birth to Soviet science.Marked by a highly developed pure science and innovation at the theoretical level, interpretation and application fell short.
Biology ,chemistry ,materials science ,mathematics , andphysics , were fields in whichSoviet citizens have excelled.Science was emphasized at all levels of education, and very large numbers ofengineers graduated every year.The
Soviet government made the development and advancement of science a national priority and showered top scientists with honours. Although the sciences were less rigorously censored than other fields such as art, there were several examples of suppression of ideas. In the most notorious, the Ukrainianagronomist Trofim Lysenko refused to accept thechromosome theory of heredity usually accepted by moderngenetics . Claiming his theories corresponded toMarxism , he managed to talkJoseph Stalin in 1948 into to banningpopulation genetics and several other related fields of biological research; this decision was not reverted up to the 1960s.The core of fundamental science was the
Academy of Sciences , originally set up in 1725 and moved from Leningrad toMoscow in 1934 and then toChernogolovka in 1943. It consisted of 250 research institutes and 60,500 full-time researchers in 1987, a large percentage in thenatural sciences such asbiology . Also, all of the union's republics except theRSFSR had their own mini-academies of science. Despite this, the majority of research (90%) was carried out outside the academy system. Most of this research was of an applied nature related toweapons systems and performed in secret facilities.Soviet scientists won acclaim in several fields. They were at the cutting edge of science in fields such asmathematics and in several branches ofphysical science , notably theoreticalnuclear physics ,chemistry , andastronomy . Thephysical chemist andphysicist Nikolay Semenov was the firstSoviet citizen to win aNobel Prize , in 1956. For a complete list ofSoviet Nobel Prize winners, see below.Soviet technology was most highly developed in the fields ofnuclear physics , where the arms race with the West convinced policy makers to set aside sufficient resources for research. Due to a crash program directed byIgor Kurchatov , theSoviet Union was the secondnation to develop anatomic bomb , in 1949, four years after theUnited States . TheSoviet Union detonated ahydrogen bomb in 1953, a mere ten months after theUnited States .Space exploration was also highly developed: in October 1957 theSoviet Union launched the first artificialsatellite ,Sputnik 1 , intoorbit ; in April 1961 a Russiancosmonaut ,Yuri Gagarin , became the first man in space. TheSoviets maintained a strong space program until economic problems led to cutbacks in the 1980s.oviet Nobel Prize winners in science
The following Soviet scientists were recipients of a
Nobel prize .Physics
*1958
Pavel Cherenkov ,Ilya Frank andIgor Tamm "for the discovery and interpretation of theCherenkov effect "
*1962Lev Landau "for his theories about condensed matter, particularly about liquid helium (superfluidity )"
*1964Nikolay Basov and Aleksandr Prokhorov "for fundamental work in the area of thequantum electronics , which led to the construction of oscillators and amplifiers on the basis of themaser laser principle "
*1978Pyotr Kapitsa "for his fundamental inventions and discoveries in theCryophysics "
*2001Zhores Alferov (RU) "for the development of semiconductor heterostructures for high-speed and optoelectronics" (working in the time of the USSR)
*2003 Alexei Abrikosov (RU),Vitaly Ginzburg (RU) "for innovative work in the theory about superconductors" (working in the time of the USSR)Chemistry
*1956
Nikolai Semenov For outstanding work on the mechanism of chemical transformation includes an exhaustive analysis of the application of the chain theory to varied reactions (1934–1954) and, more significantly, to combustion processes. He proposed a theory of degenerate branching, which led to a better understanding of the phenomena associated with the induction periods of oxidation processes.cientific Research Institutions (NII)
A large part of research was conducted in "NII"s — "scientific research institutions" (Russian: НИИ, нау́чно-иссле́довательский институ́т). There have been a great number of NIIs, each specialized in a particular field.
*
Ioffe Physico-Technical Institute founded 1918
*Institute of Anthropology and Ethnography founded 1933
*Institute for Physical Problems founded 1934
*Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology founded 1946
*Institute of Radio-engineering and Electronics founded 1954
*Joint Institute for Nuclear Research founded 1956References
*
Loren Graham "What Have We Learned About Science and Technology from the Russian Experience" and "Science and Technology in Russia and the Soviet Union"loc - [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/sutoc.html Soviet Union]
ee also
*
Suppressed research in the Soviet Union
*Sharashka
*Soviet Antarctic Expedition
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