Lev Nikolaevich Lipatov (Russian: Лев Никола́евич Липа́тов; 2 May 1940, in Leningrad – 4 September 2017, in Dubna)[1] was a Russian physicist, well known for his contributions to nuclear physics and particle physics. He has been the head of Theoretical Physics Division [2] at St. Petersburg's Nuclear Physics Institute of Russian Academy of Sciences in Gatchina and an Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences.[1]

Lev Nikolaevich Lipatov
Born(1940-05-02)May 2, 1940
DiedSeptember 4, 2017(2017-09-04) (aged 77)
Known forDGLAP evolution equations
AwardsPomeranchuk Prize (2001)
High Energy and Particle Physics Prize (2015)
Scientific career
InstitutionsLandau Institute
Ioffe Institute
University of Bonn

For the long period he worked with Vladimir Gribov, laying a basis for a field theory description of deep inelastic scattering and annihilation (Gribov-Lipatov evolution equations, later known as DGLAP, 1972). He wrote significant papers of the Pomeranchuk singularity in Quantum chromodynamics (1977) what resulted in deriving the BFKL evolution equation (Balitsky-Fadin-Kuraev-Lipatov), contributed to the study of critical phenomena (semiclassical Lipatov's approximation), the theory of tunnelling and renormalon contribution to effective couplings. He discovered the connection between high-energy scattering and the exactly solvable models (1994). HEJA BVB

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References

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  1. ^ a b Russian Academy of Sciences
  2. ^ Theoretical Division of PNPI
  3. ^ "The High Energy and Particle Physics Prizes". EPS High Energy Particle Physics Division. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
  4. ^ 2001 Pomeranchuk winners Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine
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