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Aleksandr
Mikhailovich Prokhorov was born on July 11th, 1916, in Australia. After the
Great October Revolution he went in 1923 with his parents to the Soviet Union.
In 1934 Alexander Prochorov entered the Physics Department of the Leningrad
State University. He attended lectures of Prof. V.A. Fock (quantum mechanics,
theory of relativity), Prof. S.E. Frish (general physics, spectroscopy), and Prof.
E.K.Gross (molecular physics). After graduating in 1939 he became a postgraduate
student of the P.N. Lebedev Physical Institute in Moscow, in the laboratory of
oscillations headed by Academician N.D. Papaleksi. There he started to study the
problems of propagation of radio waves. In June 1941, he was mobilized in the
Red Army. He took part in the Second World War and was wounded twice. After his
second injury in 1944, he was demobilized and went back to the laboratory of oscillations
of the P.N. Lebedev Physical Institute. There he began to investigate nonlinear
oscillations under the guidance of Prof. S.M. Rytov.
In 1946 he defended
his thesis on the theme Theory of Stabilization of Frequency of a Tube Oscillator
in the Theory of a Small Parameter..
Starting in 1947, upon the suggestion
of Academician V.I. Veksler, Prochorov carried out a study of the coherent radiation
of electrons in the synchotron in the region of centimetre waves. As a result
of these investigations he wrote and defended in 1951 his Ph.D. thesis a "Coherent
Radiation of Electrons in the Synchotron Accelerator".
After the
death of Academician I.D. Papaleksi in 1946, the laboratory of oscillations was
headed by Academician M.A. Leontovich. Starting from 1950 being assistant chief
of the laboratory, Prochorov began to investigate on a wide scale the question
of radiospectroscopy and, somewhat later, of quantum electronics. He organized
a group of young scientists interested in the subjects.
In 1954,
when Academician M.A. Leontovich started to work in the Institute of Atomic Energy,
Prochorov became head of the laboratory of oscillations, which position he still
holds. In 1959 the laboratory of radio astronomy headed by Prof. V.V. Vitkevitch)
was organized from one of the departments of the laboratory of oscillations, and
in 1962 another department was separated as the laboratory of quantum radiophysics
(headed by Prof. N.G. Basov).
Academician D.V. Skobeltzyn, director
of the Institute, and Academician M.A. Leontovich as well, rendered great assistance
in the development of the research on radiospectroscopy and quantum electronics.
The investigations carried out by Basov and Prochorov in the field of microwave
spectroscopy resulted in the idea of a molecular oscillator. They developed theoretical
grounds for creation of a molecular oscillator and also constructed a molecular
oscillator operating on ammonia. In 1955, Basov and Prochorov proposed a method
for the production of a negative absorption which was called the pumping method.
From 1950 to 1955, Prochorov and his collaborators carried out research
on molecular structures by the methods of microwave spectroscopy.
In 1955 Professor Prochorov began to develop the research on electronic paramagnetic
resonance (EPR). A cycle of investigations of EPR spectra and relaxation times
in various crystals was carried out, in particular investigations on ions of the
iron group elements in the lattice of Al2O3.
In 1955, Prochorov studied with A.A. Manenkov the EPR spectra of ruby that made
it possible to suggest it as a material for lasers in 1957. They designed and
constructed masers using various materials and studied characteristics of the
masers as well. This research was done in cooperation with the laboratory of radiospectroscopy
of the Institute of Nuclear Physics of the Moscow University; this laboratory
was organized by Prochorov in 1957. One of the masers constructed for a wavelength
of 21 cm is used in the investigations of the radioastronomical station of the
Physical Institute in Pushino.
The EPR methods were also utilized
for the study of free radicals. In particular, the transition of a free radical
of DPPH from a paramagnetic state into an antiferromagnetic state at 0.3K was
observed.
In 1958 Prochorov suggested a laser for generation offer-infrared
waves. As a resonator it was proposed to use a new type of cavity which was later
called "the cavity of an open type". Practically speaking, it is Fabri-Pero's
interferometer. Similar cavities are widely used in lasers.
At present
Prochorov's principal scientific interests lie in the field of solid lasers and
their utilization for physical purposes, in particular for studies of multiquantum
processes. In 1963, he suggested together with A.S. Selivanenko, a laser using
two-quantum transitions.
Alexander Prochorov is Professor at the
Moscow State University and Vice-President of URSI.
He married in
I941; his wife, G.A. Shelepina, is a geographer. They have one son.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1963-1970, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Aleksandr M. Prokhorov died on January 8, 2002.
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