Yevgeny Zavoisky

Yevgeny Zavoisky
Born
Yevgeny Konstantinovich Zavoisky

September 28 [O.S. September 15] 1907
Died9 October 1976(1976-10-09) (aged 69)
Alma materKazan University
Known forDiscovery of electron paramagnetic resonance (1944)
AwardsStalin Prize (1949), Lenin Prize (1957), International EPR Society Prize (1977, posthumously)
Scientific career
FieldsSpectroscopy
InstitutionsKazan University, Arzamas-16, Institute of Atomic Energy
Signature

Yevgeny Konstantinovich Zavoisky (Russian: Евгений Константинович Завойский; September 28, 1907 – October 9, 1976) was a Soviet physicist known for discovery of electron paramagnetic resonance in 1944.[1][2] He likely observed nuclear magnetic resonance in 1941, well before Felix Bloch and Edward Mills Purcell, but dismissed the results as not reproducible.[3][4] Zavoisky is also credited with design of luminescence camera for detection of nuclear processes in 1952 and discovery of magneto-acoustic resonance in plasma in 1958.

  1. ^ Zavoisky, E. (1945). "Spin-magnetic resonance in paramagnetics". Fizicheskiĭ Zhurnal. 9: 211–245.
  2. ^ Zavoisky, E. (1944). "Paramagnetic Absorption in Perpendicular and Parallel Fields for Salts, Solutions and Metals". PhD Thesis. Kazan State University.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference b1 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference b2 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).