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 | |
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Born | |
Died | September 4, 2017 | (aged 77)
Known for | DGLAP evolution equations |
Awards | Pomeranchuk Prize (2001) High Energy and Particle Physics Prize (2015) |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | Landau 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
Awards
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edit- ^ a b Russian Academy of Sciences
- ^ Theoretical Division of PNPI
- ^ "The High Energy and Particle Physics Prizes". EPS High Energy Particle Physics Division. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
- ^ 2001 Pomeranchuk winners Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine