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Vsevolod Frederiks

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Name
  
Vsevolod Frederiks


Role
  
Physicist

Vsevolod Frederiks httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaruthumb2

Died
  
1944, Nizhny Novgorod, Russia

Vsevolod Konstantinovich Frederiks (or Fréedericksz; Russian: Всеволод Константинович Фредерикс [ˈvʲsʲɛvəɫəd fʲrʲɪdʲɪˈrʲiks]; April 29, 1885, Warsaw – January 6, 1944, Gorkiy) was a Russian/Soviet physicist. His primary contribution to physics was in the field of liquid crystals. The Frederiks transition was named after him.

Vsevolod Frederiks httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaru220Fre

After high school Frederiks attended Geneva University and for one semester attended the lectures of Paul Langevin in Paris. After defending his thesis and obtaining his PhD, Fredericks decided to continue his studies at Göttingen University. He was there for more than eight years, and with the outbreak of World War I he became a civil prisoner. During that period he became personal assistant to David Hilbert.

In the summer of 1918 Frederiks returned to Russia, and worked at the Institute of Physics and Biophysics in Moscow. In 1919 he became a lecturer at the University of Petrograd.

He was arrested by the NKVD in 1937, and although released before the war he died before reaching home.

References

Vsevolod Frederiks Wikipedia