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The Physical Society of Iran (PSI) (انجمن فيزيک ايران) is Iran's professional and academic society of physicists. PSI is a non-profit organization aimed at establishing and strengthening scientific contacts between physicists and academic members of the country's institutes of higher education in the field of physics.
Touraj Atabaki, professor of social history of the Middle East and Central Asia, Department of History, University of Amsterdam [5] Reza Amrollahi, Physicist and the former president of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran
View history; Tools. Tools. move to sidebar hide. ... Pakistan Physics Society; Photonics Society of Poland; Physical Society of Iran; Physical Society of London;
[citation needed] Mansouri has served as the president of The Physical Society of Iran. He is one of the founders of Institute for Studies in Theoretical Physics and Mathematics and was the head of its Astronomy School for several years, which is responsible for Iran's 3.4-meter national telescope (INO340.
Hessabi was born in Tehran to the family of Abbas and Goharshad Hessabi. His family's hometown is Tafresh, Markazi province, Iran. [3] His family moved to Beirut in 1907 when his father was appointed consul at the Iranian embassy. [4]
The Iranian Journal of Physics Research (Persian: مجله پژوهش فيزيک ايران) is a quarterly peer-reviewed open access scientific journal of physics published by the Physics Society of Iran. It was established in 1995, with S. Mohammad Amini as editor-in-chief.
Mehdi Golshani (Persian: مهدی گلشنی, born 1939 in Isfahan, Iran) is a contemporary Iranian theoretical physicist, academic, scholar, philosopher and distinguished professor at Sharif University of Technology.
Some old Persian names in astronomy have barely survived; the names of the four Royal stars that were used by the Persians for almanacs are Aldeberan, Regulus, Antares and Fomalhaut, and are thought by scientists to equate to the modern-day star systems of Alcyone, Regulus, Albireo, and Bungula (Alpha Centauri) for almanacs.