• Thumbnail for Georgy Flyorov
    Wikimedia Commons has media related to Georgy Flyorov. Significant Flerov Dates Annotated bibliography of Georgy Flerov from the Alsos Digital Library...
    10 KB (734 words) - 06:24, 9 May 2024
  • Flyorov (Russian: Флёров) may refer to: Georgy Flyorov (1913–1990), a Soviet nuclear physicist Ivan Flyorov (1905–1941), the commander of the first battery...
    398 bytes (84 words) - 09:42, 18 June 2021
  • film director Georgy Chicherin (1872–1936), Soviet politician Georgy Egorychev (born 1938), Soviet and Russian mathematician Georgy Flyorov (1913–1990)...
    3 KB (360 words) - 18:02, 29 December 2023
  • discovered in 1999. The lab's name, in turn, honours Russian physicist Georgy Flyorov (Флёров in Cyrillic, hence the transliteration of "yo" to "e"). IUPAC...
    73 KB (11,997 words) - 23:10, 8 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Soviet atomic bomb project
    Russian physicist Georgy Flyorov suspected that the Allied powers had secretly been developing a "superweapon" since 1939. Flyorov wrote a letter to Stalin...
    70 KB (7,614 words) - 07:34, 11 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Yuri Oganessian
    multiple elements of the periodic table. He succeeded Georgy Flyorov as director of the Flyorov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions at the Joint Institute...
    40 KB (2,977 words) - 17:05, 11 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Joint Institute for Nuclear Research
    Pontecorvo Boris Arbuzov Aureliu Emil Săndulescu [ro] Albert Tavkhelidze Georgy Flyorov Ilya Frank Andrzej Hrynkiewicz [pl] Șerban Țițeica F. Shapiro Dmitry...
    23 KB (1,864 words) - 17:16, 14 April 2024
  • (JINR) in Dubna, Russia (then the Soviet Union), led principally by Georgy Flyorov: they named the element kurchatovium (Ku), after Igor Kurchatov. IUPAC...
    18 KB (2,137 words) - 01:32, 1 March 2024
  • part of JINR, where the element was synthesised; itself named after Georgy Flyorov, Russian physicist 14 7 p-block [289] (11.4±0.3) (284±50) – – – – synthetic...
    2 KB (444 words) - 15:23, 10 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Spontaneous fission
    fission by Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann in 1938, Soviet physicists Georgy Flyorov and Konstantin Petrzhak began conducting experiments to explore the...
    18 KB (1,961 words) - 17:16, 10 April 2024