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After several reorganizations and renaming, since 1933, the institute became “Leningrad Physicotechnical Institute”. The form “Physicotechnical” is a Russian variant for “Physical & Technical”. Three decades later, in the 1960s, the word “Ioffe” was added to the institute name, in honor of the first director.
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In 1952–1954 he headed the Laboratory of Semiconductors of Academy of Sciences of the USSR, which in 1954 was reorganized as the Institute of Semiconductors. Following Ioffe's death, in 1960 the LPTI was renamed the Ioffe Physico-Technical Institute and is one of Russia's leading research centers. [citation needed]
[citation needed] In 1988, the new Physics-Technical (Fiziko-Tekhnichesky) Department (faculty) of the Institute was created. The department was modeled on the Ioffe Physico-Technical Institute and headed by the director of the Ioffe Institute Zhores Ivanovich Alferov, recipient of the 2000 Nobel Prize in physics. [citation needed]
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In 1962 Dmitri graduated from the Department of Physics of Leningrad State University. In 1964, Dmitri joined the group of Zhores Alferov at Ioffe Physical-Technical Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Leningrad. At the time, Alferov's team was among the very few research groups in the world that studied heterojunctions in ...
The founder and the first director of the Institute was Doctor of Technical Sciences, Professor Ponomarev Valentin Mikhailovich. [ 1 ] The LRCC took an active part in the creation of a North-West segment of the computer network of the Academies of Sciences of the USSR and the allied republics (Academic Network) for the collective use by ...
Ioffe, Alikhanov and Kurchatov in the early 1930s. Alikhanov switched to nuclear physics in 1933, following the discovery of the neutron and the positron in 1932. [5] [6] [2] Abram Ioffe appointed Alikhanov head of the positron laboratory at the Department of Solid-State Physics at the Physical-Technical Institute.