Rem Khokhlov Explained

Rem Viktorovich Khokhlov
Birth Date:1926 7, df=yes
Birth Place:Livny, Orel region, USSR
Citizenship:Russia
Field:Radiophysics, Nonlinear optics
Work Institution:Moscow State University
Alma Mater:Moscow State University (1948)
Known For:One of the founders of nonlinear optics
Doctoral Advisor:Pyotr Krasnushkin
Doctoral Students:Anatoly Sukhorukov,
Vladimir Braginsky
Awards: Order of Lenin
Order of the Red Banner of Labor
Jubilee Medal "In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin"
Lenin Prize (1970)
State Prize of the USSR (1985)

Rem Viktorovich Khokhlov (Russian: link=no|Рем Викторович Хохлов; July 15, 1926, in Livny – August 8, 1977, in Moscow) was a Soviet physicist and university teacher, rector of Lomonosov Moscow State University, one of the founders of nonlinear optics.[1] [2]

Biography

Khokhlov was born in the family of political officer and graduate of the Moscow Energetic Institute Viktor Khristoforovich Khokhlov and physicist Maria Yakovlevna. He graduated from a seven-year school in 1941 and worked in a car workshop during the Great Patriotic War. In 1944, he externally passed exams in high school and began to study at the Moscow Aviation Institute. In 1945, he moved to the Physics department at Moscow State University, where he spent his whole life. After graduating from university in 1948, he entered graduate school at the Department of Oscillation Physics. In 1952 he defended his thesis with the title of candidate of physical and mathematical sciences(PhD). With his investigations into vibrational physics he belonged to the third generation of the vibration physics school of Leonid I. Mandelstam and Nikolai D. Papaleksi. In 1959, he was sent to a one-year study visit to the United States at Stanford University. In 1962 he was awarded a doctorate (habilitation) in doctoral studies. Khokhlov organized together with S. A. Akhmanov, the first laboratory for nonlinear optics of the Soviet Union at the Lomonosov Moscow State University.

Selected publications

Honors

Notes and References

  1. V. J. Frenkel, Encyclopedia.com: Khokhlov, Rem Victorovich (accessed on July 9, 2016).
  2. I. S. Drowenikov: Khokhlow's Phenomenon (Russian, accessed July 9, 2016).