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 |
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 |
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 |
(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 |
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 |