Fiodar Fiodaraŭ
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- This article is about the physicist. For the ice hockey player see Fedor Fedorov (hockey player).
Fiodar Fiodaraŭ, (Фёдар Фёдараў, Фёдор Иванович Фёдоров, Fedor Ivanovich Fedorov), (June 19, 1911 - October 13, 1994) was a famous Belarusian physicist.
His scientific interests ranged from optics and spectroscopy to the theory of elementary particles.
He was born in the village Turec in Navahradak county of Hrodna district of Belarus. He was a son of village school teachers, his father later became a very famous Belarusian writer Janka Maur.
During the Second World War he worked in the city Kiselevsk in Novosibirsk district as an associate professor of Moscow Aviation Institute.
In 1943 he became the dean of the Physics Faculty of Belarusian State University that resumed its work near railroad station Shodnia near Moscow while Belarus was still under occupation. He remained the dean till 1950.
He took and active part in organization of Institute of Physics and Mathematics of Belarus Science Academy, and became the leader of one of four major laboratories there -- laboratory of theoretical physics (till 1987).
Till the end of his life he was the lecturing professor in Belarusian State University.
He published over 400 research articles.
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