Viktor Ambartsumian
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox scientist
Viktor Amazaspovich AmbartsumianTemplate:Efn (Template:Langx; Template:Langx, Viktor Hamazaspi Hambardzumyan; Template:OldStyleDateTemplate:Spaced ndash12 August 1996) was a Soviet and Armenian astrophysicist and science administrator.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> One of the 20th century's leading astronomers, he is widely regarded as the founder of theoretical astrophysics in the Soviet Union.
Educated at Leningrad State University (LSU) and the Pulkovo Observatory, Ambartsumian taught at LSU and founded the Soviet Union's first department of astrophysics there in 1934. He subsequently moved to Soviet Armenia, where he founded the Byurakan Observatory in 1946. It became his institutional base for the decades to come and a major center of astronomical research. He also co-founded the Armenian Academy of Sciences and led it for almost half a century—the entire post-war period. One commentator noted that "science in Armenia was synonymous with the name Ambartsumian." In 1965 Ambartsumian founded the journal Astrofizika and served as its editor for over 20 years.
Ambartsumian began retiring from the various positions he held only from the age of 80. He died at his house in Byurakan and was buried on the grounds of the observatory. He was awarded the title of National Hero of Armenia in 1994.
Background
Ambartsumian was born in Tiflis on Template:OldStyleDate,<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> to Armenian parents Hripsime Khakhanian (1885–1972)Template:Sfn and Hamazasp Hambardzumyan (1880–1966).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Hripsime's father was an Armenian Apostolic priest from Tskhinvali,Template:Sfn while Hamazasp hailed from Vardenis (Basargechar).Template:Sfn His ancestors had moved from Diyadin, what is now Turkey, to the southern shores of Lake Sevan in 1830, in the aftermath of the Russo-Turkish War.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn HamazaspTemplate:Efn was an educated man of letters who studied law at Saint Petersburg University.Template:Sfn<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> He was also a writer and translator and notably translated Homer's Iliad into Armenian from Classical Greek.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/>Template:Sfn In 1912 he co-founded the Caucasian Society of Armenian Writers, which lasted until 1921.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Ambartsumian was the secretary, while Hovhannes Tumanyan, the famed poet, served as its president.Template:Sfn Ambartsumian knew Tumanyan personally. In 1922, after the 14-year-old boy described Sirius to him, Tumanyan wrote a short poem about the star.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web; excerpt </ref>
Ambartsumian's parents married in 1904.Template:Sfn He had a brother, Levon, and sister, Gohar.Template:Sfn Levon, a geophysics student, died at 23-24 while on an expedition in the Urals.<ref name="Sobolev96"/><ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> Gohar (1907–1979) was a mathematician and Chair of Probability Theory and Mathematical Statistics at Yerevan State University towards the end of her life.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Education
Ambartsumian developed an early interest in mathematics and was able to multiply by the age of 4. His interest in astronomy began with reading a Russian translation of a book by Ormsby M. Mitchel at 11. By his own account, he considered himself an astronomer by the age of 12.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> Between 1917 and 1924 he studied at Tiflis gymnasiums #3 and #4 where schooling was done in both Russian and Armenian. In 1921 he transferred to gymnasium #4 to study under Nikolay Ignatievich Sudakov, a Moscow-educated astronomer, whom Ambartsumian called a "very serious teacher of astronomy." Ambartsumian worked with Sudakov at the school observatory the latter had built.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> At school, Ambartsumian wrote several papers on astronomyTemplate:Sfn and delivered lectures on the origin of the Solar System and extraterrestrial life at "first in school and then in the various clubs and houses of culture" beginning at 12–13.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> In 1924 Ambartsumian delivered a lecture at Yerevan State University about the theory of relativity. He also met Ashot Hovhannisyan and Alexander Miasnikian, Armenia's communist leaders.Template:Sfn
In 1924 Ambartsumian moved to Leningrad, where he began attending the Herzen Pedagogical Institute. Shakhbazyan suggests that his non-peasant, non-proletarian background prevented him from entering Leningrad State University (LSU).Template:Sfn However, Ambartsumian explained in an interview that by the time he arrived in August, LSU's admissions were already closed. To avoid losing a year, he opted to study in the physics and mathematics department of the pedagogical institute.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> After one year, he transferred to LSU's physics and mathematics department.<ref name="Sobolev96"/>Template:Sfn<ref name="RASBio"/> At university, Ambartsumian was interested in both astronomy and mathematics. "I loved mathematics, but at the same time I felt that my profession would be astronomy. Mathematics was like a hobby, but I did complete the full mathematics curriculum. Thus you could say that I graduated with a major in mathematics, but in fact it is recorded that I graduated as an astronomer," he said in an interview in 1987.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> At LSU among his professors were the physicist Orest Khvolson and mathematician Vladimir Smirnov. He studied alongside other major Soviet scientists such as Lev Landau, Sergei Sobolev, Sergey Khristianovich and George Gamow.<ref name="Sobolev96"/> In 1926 he published the first of his 16 scholarly papers as a student.<ref name="RASBio"/><ref name="Sobolev96"/> He graduated in 1928, although he received his diploma only fifty years later—in 1978.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> His undergraduate thesis was "devoted to a study of radiative transfer radiative equilibrium."<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> He completed his postgraduate<ref name="Blaauw97"/>Template:Sfn studies at the Pulkovo Observatory under Aristarkh Belopolsky between 1928 and 1931.<ref name="RASBio"/>Template:Sfn<ref name="Uspekhi1969"/>
Career
Leningrad
After completing his postgraduate studies in 1931, Ambartsumian began working at the Pulkovo Observatory and teaching part-time at LSU.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/>Template:Sfn In 1931 Ambartsumian began reading the first course on theoretical astrophysics in the Soviet Union.<ref name="Sobolev96"/> He also served as Pulkovo's scientific secretary in 1931–32, which involved mostly administrative work.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/><ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> Ambartsumian later characterized Pulkovo as being a "very old institution, and for this reason there were certain elements of ossification and stagnation. Nevertheless, this was the best qualified astronomical institution in the Soviet Union."<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/>
In 1934 Ambartsumian was fired by Pulkovo director Boris Gerasimovich for alleged "laziness." Gerasimovich viewed Ambartsumian and other young astrophysicists as "undisciplined and in too much of a rush to publish untested theories and poorly documented research." Gerasimovich himself had a "tendency to non-cooperativeness."Template:Sfn Gerasimovich was not taken seriously by them. When in 1934 Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar visited Leningrad, he was told by Ambartsumian, "Look here, here is a set of papers by Gerasimovich. I turn to an arbitrary paper and to an arbitrary line. I am sure you will find a mistake."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Chandrasekhar stated in 1977 that during his visit in 1934 Ambartsumian "was very free and very open. He was extremely critical of his seniors."<ref name="Chandrasekhar77"/>
After leaving Pulkovo, Ambartsumian founded the first department of astrophysics in the Soviet Union at Leningrad State University in 1934.<ref name="physicstoday"/><ref name="RASBio"/><ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/><ref name="Sobolev96"/> In 1934 he was named professor at LSU and in 1935 he was named doctor of physical-mathematical sciences without having to defend a thesisTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref name="YSUbio"/> "based on his scientific work through that date."<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> He headed the department until 1946Template:Sfn or 1947.<ref name="RASBio"/><ref name="Sobolev96"/>
Between 1939 and 1941 Ambartsumian was the director of the Astronomical Observatory of LSU. He was simultaneously prorector (deputy president) of the university.<ref name="RASBio"/> Among his graduate students were Viktor Sobolev,<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> Benjamin Markarian,<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> Grigor Gurzadyan,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and others. Ambartsumian considered Sobolev his "most brilliant graduate student."<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/>
- Stalin's purges
Many of Ambartsumian's colleagues and friends suffered during the Great Purge under Stalin, most notably Nikolai Aleksandrovich Kozyrev (1908–83), with whom he became close friends in the mid-1920s.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> Kozyrev was sentenced to ten years in a forced-labor camp, but survived the repressions. Others such as Matvei Petrovich Bronstein and Pulkovo director Boris Gerasimovich did not survive. Ambartsumian's relations with Kozyrev were "strained for the remainder of his life." McCutcheon notes that while in the West some have questioned Ambartsumian's possible role in the terror, "there is no hard evidence to suggest that he was guilty of anything more serious than surviving at a time when others did not."<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/>
- World War II
Ambartsumian led the evacuation of part of the faculty of Leningrad State University to Elabuga, Tatarstan in 1941, after the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union. There a branch of LSU operated under Ambartsumian's leadership until 1944.<ref name="RASBio"/><ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/><ref name="Sobolev96"/> He served as the dean of the branch.<ref name="Uspekhi1969"/>
Armenia
In 1943Template:Sfn<ref name="Uspekhi1969"/> Ambartsumian moved with his family to Yerevan, Soviet Armenia, where he lived until the end of his life.Template:Sfn In the same year, he co-founded the Armenian Academy of Sciences along with scientists and scholars Hovsep Orbeli, Hrachia Acharian, Artem Alikhanian, Abram Alikhanov, Manuk Abeghian and others.<ref name="sciacad"/> He served as vice president of the academy until 1947 and as president from 1947 to 1993.<ref name="Sobolev96"/>
Since 1943 Ambartsumian served as director of the Yerevan Astronomical Observatory.Template:Sfn The small observatory was affiliated with Yerevan State University. Ambartsumian had secured a nine-inch telescope from Leningrad for the observatory. Ambartsumian said that before the war "this observatory did not rise significantly above the level of amateur variable star observations. During the war they also carried out photographic observations of variable stars using a small camera."<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> In 1945–1946 Ambartsumian founded the department of astrophysics at Yerevan State University (YSU).<ref name="YSUChair"/><ref name="YSUbio"/> He was named professor of astrophysics at YSU in 1947.<ref name="Blaauw97"/> He served as chair of the department until 1994.<ref name="YSUChair"/>Template:Efn
In 1965 Ambartsumian founded the journal Astrofizika (Armenian: Աստղաֆիզիկա, Russian: Астрофизика), which has been published by the Armenian Academy of Sciences since then. It was originally published in Russian, subsequently articles in English began to appear. He served as its editor-in-chief until 1987.<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> The journal has also been published since the first issue in English by Springer in the US as Astrophysics.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Byurakan
In 1946 Ambartsumian founded the Byurakan Astrophysical Observatory in the village of Byurakan, at an altittude of Template:Convert, on the slopes of Mount Aragats, some Template:Convert from Yerevan.<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref name="ByurHistory"/> The first buildings were completed in 1951,<ref name="ByurHistory"/> though the official inauguration took place in 1956.Template:Sfn Observations began to be carried out simultaneous with the construction of the observatory. "Our instruments stood under the open sky, covered with tarpaulin," said Ambartsumian.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> Ambartsumian initially lived at a house in the village of Byurakan then build a house within the observatory grounds with the money awarded with the 1950 Stalin Prize.Template:Sfn Ambartsumian directed the Byurakan Observatory until 1988 and was named its honorary director that year.<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/><ref name="aras"/> From 1946 until his death in 1996, the Byurakan Observatory served as Ambartsumian's "institutional base."Template:Sfn
In 1960 Ambartsumian secured a Schmidt telescope with 40І (102 cm) correcting plate and 52І (132 cm) mirror for Byurakan.<ref name="ByurHistory"/> The telescope was reportedly made by Carl Zeiss AG in Nazi Germany in the 1930s and was transferred to Leningrad as spoils of war. It was completed in Leningrad and sent to Armenia.<ref name="hetq2018"/> Beginning with 1965, on Ambartsumian's initiative,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Benjamin Markarian started the First Byurakan Survey that resulted in the discovery of the Markarian galaxies.<ref name="ByurHistory"/> A number of international symposiums and meetings were held at Byurakan under Ambartsumian's supervision.<ref name="ByurHistory"/> In 1968 the observatory was awarded the Order of Lenin, the Soviet Union's highest civilian order for its great merit to the development of science.<ref name="ByurHistory"/> In 1961 Ambartsumian supervised the establishment of an astrophysical station of Leningrad State University, his alma mater, within the grounds of the Byurakan Observatory.<ref name="Sobolev96"/> It is where graduate students of the LSU did their summer internships until the late 1980s. It was shut down in 1993.<ref>Chronology at Astronomy at St. Peteresburg University (in Russian). 1961: Начала создаваться Бюраканская станция. ;1993: В октябре-ноябре Т.А. Полякова последней из сотрудников Астрономического института проводит наблюдения на нашей Бюраканской станции. С тех пор станция законсервирована.</ref>
Ambartsumian and his disciples at the Byurakan Observatory became known in the scholarly literature as the "Byurakan School."Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> From 1977 to 1996 Ambartsumian headed a specialized council for theses defenses at Byurakan. Over 50 scientists defended their PhD (Candidate) and Doctoral theses on astronomy, astrophysics and theoretical physics in those years under Ambartsumian.<ref name="ByurHistory"/> Though most of the students were graduates of the astrophysics department of Yerevan State University,Template:Sfn many came from Russia, Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Hungary, Bulgaria, and elsewhere.Template:Sfn Several symposiums of the International Astronomical Union and numerous conferences were held in Byurakan in attendance of Jan Oort, Fritz Zwicky, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, Pyotr Kapitsa, Vitaly Ginzburg, and others. It was also visited by Soviet leaders Nikita Khrushchev and Leonid Brezhnev.Template:Sfn
With the Byurakan Observatory, Ambartsumian "put Armenia on the astronomical map"<ref name="Lynden-BellIndep"/> and made Soviet Armenia "one of the world's centers for the study of astrophysics."<ref name="Adalian"/> By the time of his death in 1996, The New York Times described Byurakan as "one of the world's leading astronomical research centers."<ref name="NYTobit"/> As of 1960 the Byurakan Observatory maintained regular contact with 350 research institutions and with scientists from 50 countries.<ref name="Pisarzhevsky"/>
Research
Ambartsumian carried out basic research in astronomy and cosmogony.<ref name="Uspekhi1969"/><ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> It covered astrophysics, theoretical physics and mathematical physics,Template:Sfn and mostly focused on the physics of nebulae, star systems, and extragalactic astronomy.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/> He is best known for having discovered stellar associations and predicted activity of galactic nuclei.<ref name="physicstoday"/> In his later career, Ambartsumian held views in contradiction to the consequences of the general relativity, such as rejecting the existence of black holes.Template:Sfn
Stellar associations
In 1947 Ambartsumian discovered stellar associations, a new type of stellar system, which led to the conclusion that star formation continues to take place in the Milky Way galaxy.<ref name="AstronEnc"/><ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/><ref name="britannica"/><ref name="NYTobit"/><ref name="Andrews97"/><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> At the time the "idea of star formation as an ongoing process was regarded as very speculative."<ref name="Israelian97"/> His discovery was announced in a short publication<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> by the Armenian Academy Sciences.Template:Sfn Ambartsumian's discovery was based on his observation of stars of O and B spectral types and T Tauri and flare stars that cluster very loosely.Template:Sfn This is significantly different from open clusters, which have a higher density of stars, while stellar associations have lower than average density.Template:Sfn Ambartsumian divided stellar associations into OB and T groups<ref name="Israelian97"/> and concluded that the "associations have to be dynamically unstable configurations, and must expand subsequently, dissolving to form field stars."Template:Sfn He thus argued that star forming is ongoing in the galaxy and that stars are born explosivelyTemplate:Sfn and in groups.<ref name="Uspekhi1969"/>Template:Sfn
Ambartsumian's concept was not immediately accepted. Chandrasekhar noted the "early scepticism with which this discovery was received by the astronomers of the 'establishment' when I first gave an account of [Ambartsumian's] paper at the colloquium at the Yerkes Observatory in late 1950."Template:Sfn Chandrasekhar noted that Ambartsumian's discovery of stellar associations had "far-reaching implications for subsequent theories relating to star formation."<ref name="Chandrasekhar"/> McCutcheon noted that the discovery "opened an entirely new field of astrophysical research."<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/>
Active galactic nuclei (AGN)
Ambartsumian began studying nuclei of galaxies in the mid-1950s.Template:Sfn He found that clusters of galaxies are unstable and that galaxy formation is still ongoing.<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> At the 1958 Solvay Conference on Physics in Brussels he gave a famous report in which he emphasized the extraordinary character of the activity of galactic nuclei (AGN).Template:Sfn He claimed "enormous explosions take place in galactic nuclei and as a result a huge amount of mass is expelled. In addition, if this is so, these galactic nuclei must contain bodies of huge mass and unknown nature."<ref name="Israelian97"/> Lynden-Bell and Gurzadyan note that Ambartsumian was "perhaps the first to emphasize explosive phenomena in galactic nuclei."Template:Sfn Evidence for the activity included the Markarian galaxies, discovered at Byurakan.Template:Sfn The concept of AGN was widely accepted some years later,<ref name="Israelian97"/> especially after quasars were discovered in 1963.Template:Sfn Ambartsumian developed and summarized his views on activity of galaxies in the 1960s.Template:Sfn
Radiative transfer
Ambartsumian discovered basic results in radiative transfer in astronomy.Template:Sfn He was the first or one of the first to study stellar radiation transfer in gaseous nebulae.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/><ref name="AstronEnc"/> He devised techniques for calculating the rates of star cluster decay and the time needed to reach statistical equilibrium in double star systems.<ref name="AstronEnc"/><ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/>
In 1943 he introduced the principle of invariance, a method introduced by Ambartsumian in a theory of radiation transfer.<ref name="Israelian97"/> Lynden-Bell and Gurzadyan describe it as the "law that diffuse reflection by a semi-infinite, plane-parallel atmosphere must be invariant to the addition or subtraction of layers of arbitrary thickness to the atmosphere."Template:Sfn It has been applied in other areas, including optics, mathematical physics,<ref name="Israelian97"/> radiophysics, geophysics, oceanology,Template:Sfn "allowing people to handle easily very complex mathematical problems."<ref name="Israelian97"/> It was further developed by Chandrasekhar in his Radiative Transfer (1950).<ref name="Israelian97"/>Template:Sfn According to Chandrasekhar, the formulation of the principles of invariance in the theory of radiative transfer is a "theoretical innovation that is of the greatest significance." He admitted that Ambartsumian's ideas influenced his own.<ref name="Chandrasekhar"/>
Astronomy from space
Ambartsumian was a "pioneer of astronomical research from Soviet spacecraft."Template:Sfn The program was directed by his disciple Grigor Gurzadyan and was launched in 1961. In April 1971 the Salyut 1 space station carried Orion 1, the "first space telescope with an objective prism, into orbit." In December 1973 the crewed Soyuz 13 mission operated the "Orion-2 ultraviolet Cassegrain telescope with a quartz objective prism built in the Byurakan Observatory. Spectra of thousands of stars to as faint as thirteenth magnitude were obtained, as was the first satellite ultraviolet spectrogram of a planetary nebula, revealing lines of aluminium and titanium-elements not previously observed in planetary nebulae."Template:Sfn
These activities, especially the space missions, when for example a special crewed spaceship had to be devoted to an experiment from the smallest Soviet republic, needed powerful backing, both in Kremlin corridors and within the top-secret rocket industry establishment. This was achieved due to Ambartsumian's political skills, with the active support of Mstislav Keldish, the then President of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR.Template:Sfn
Mathematics
Ambartsumian also made contributions to mathematics, most notably with his 1929 paper in Zeitschrift für Physik,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Sfn where he first introduced the inverse Sturm-Liouville problem.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> He proved that "among all vibrating strings only the homogeneous vibrating string has eigenvalues that are specific to it—that is, homogeneous vibrating strings have a spectrum of eigenvalues."<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> It was only in the mid-1940s when his paper received attention and became a "significant research topic in the ensuing decades."<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> He commented: "when an astronomer is publishing a mathematical paper in a physical journal, he cannot expect to attract too many readers."Template:Sfn
Ambartsumian had made an independent discovery of Radon's problem in 1936. He did so in a three dimensional velocity space rather than ordinary space and gave the solution in two and three dimensions. Allan MacLeod Cormack, the 1979 Nobel Prize Laureate in Physiology or Medicine for his work on X-ray computed tomography, noted that it is the "first numerical inversion of the Radon transform" and suggested that it disproves the "often made statement that computed tomography would be impossible without computers." Ambartsumian's calculations, Cormack argued, "suggest that even in 1936 computed tomography might have been able to make significant contributions to, say, the diagnosis of tumors in the head." Ambartsumian told Cormack that he was informed of Radon's results two years after he published his work.<ref>A.M. Cormack, "Computed tomography: some history and recent developments", Proceedings of Symposia in Applied Mathematics, American Mathematical Society, Volume 27, 1982, pp. 35-42 (alt archived)</ref>
Science administration
Soviet Academy of Sciences
Ambartsumian was elected corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences in 1939 and full member (academician) in 1953.<ref name="RASBio"/><ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> In 1955 he became a member of the academy's presidium, the governing body.<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/>Template:Sfn He also chaired the Academy's Joint Coordinating Scientific Council on astronomy, which was responsible for the priorities and all major decisions in all of astronomy.Template:Sfn He was also chairman of the academy's commissions on astronomy (1944–46) and cosmogony (1952–64).<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/>Template:Sfn
In these positions, Ambartsumian was "one of the most powerful scientists of his time."Template:Sfn McCutcheon noted that Ambartsumian's "towering authority as an astrophysicist combined with his position in the Soviet establishment made him arguably the most powerful Soviet astronomer of his day."<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> He was often the "official head of Soviet delegations at many conferences, not only on astronomy but also on natural philosophy."Template:Sfn
From 1944 to 1979 Ambartsumian was a member of the editorial board of Astronomicheskii zhurnal (also known as Astronomy Reports), the Soviet Union's main astronomy journal.<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/>Template:Sfn He was also on the editorial board of Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR (Proceedings of the USSR Academy of Sciences).Template:Sfn
Armenian Academy of Sciences
Although the Armenian branch of the Soviet Academy of Sciences was established in 1935, it was not until 1943 that the National Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR was found. Ambartsumian was one of its original co-founders along with other prominent scholars and scientists, including Hovsep Orbeli, who became its first president. Ambartsumian initially served as vice president<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/>Template:Sfn and in 1947 he became the academy's second president, serving for 46 years until 1993.<ref name="sciacad">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> When he stepped down, Ambartsumian was declared honorary president of the academy.<ref name="physicstoday"/>
Rouben Paul Adalian wrote that Ambartsumian "exercised enormous influence in the advancement of science in Soviet Armenia, and was revered as his country's leading scientist."<ref name="Adalian"/> McCutcheon went on to note that "From that point forward, science in Armenia was synonymous with the name Ambartsumian."<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> As president of the principal coordinating body for scientific research in Soviet Armenia, Ambartsumian played a significant role in promoting the sciences in the country.Template:Sfn He actively promoted the natural and exact sciences, including physics and mathematics, radioelectronics, chemistry, mechanics and engineering.<ref name="YSUbio"/> Artashes Shahinian noted that Ambartsumian played a significant role in the development of the physical and mathematical sciences.Template:Sfn He played an instrumental role in the establishment and development of the Yerevan Scientific Research Institute of Mathematical Machines (YerNIIMM) in 1956,Template:Sfn popularly known as the "Mergelyan Institute" after its first director, mathematician Sergey Mergelyan.<ref name="Oganjanyan&Silantiev"/> Apoyan rejects that Ambartsumian had a direct involvement in its creation and characterizes his role as "favorable neutrality."<ref name="Apoyan2005"/> Overall, Apoyan criticizes Ambartsumian's role in science administration, arguing that he had a tendency to "fail projects that did not directly serve his fame."<ref name="Apoyan2005"/> He went as far as call Ambartsumian a "tyrant."<ref name="Apoyan2005"/>
Ambartsumian and Mergelyan had a complicated relationship. In 1971 Ambartsumian persuaded him to return to Armenia from Moscow and become vice president of the Armenian Academy of Sciences. However, in 1974 Mergelyan was not reelected to the presidium of the academy and was forced to leave it. Some academicians called for a revote, but Ambartsumian rejected any such attempts. Oganjanyan and Silantiev note that Ambartsumian was rumored to have seen Mergelyan as a rival for the academy's president and decided to "get rid of the competitor forever."<ref name="Oganjanyan&Silantiev"/>
Ambartsumian was the Chairman of the Editorial Board of the Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia,<ref name="YSUbio"/><ref name="Adalian"/> published in 13 volumes in 1974–87.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
International
According to Jean-Claude Pecker Ambartsumian "had a very strong influence on world astropolitics" and is one of the few astronomers who have had such a "deep influence on the life of the international bodies devoted to the promotion and defense of astronomy and science in general."<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- International Astronomical Union
Ambartsumian was a member of the International Astronomical Union (IAU) since 1946. He served as vice-president of the IAU from 1948 to 1955, then as president from 1961 to 1964.<ref name="Blaauw2007"/><ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/><ref name="aras"/> As Vice President Ambartsumian attempted to have the IAU General Assembly be held in Leningrad in 1951, however, the IAU Executive Committee canceled the assembly, increasing tensions within the IAU. An IAU General Assembly eventually took place in Moscow in 1958.<ref name="Blaauw2007"/> Ambartsumian headed the organizing committee.Template:Sfn Blaauw noted that "During these years, Ambartsumian, although violently opposing the IAU's policy, remained loyal to the Executive Committee's majority decisions for the sake of safeguarding international collaboration, an attitude that contributed to his election as President of the IAU in 1961."<ref name="Blaauw2007"/> He continued to support it as "the world-wide organization embracing astronomers from all countries. His election as President of the IAU in 1961 reflected both the appreciation for his efforts in this respect and his outstanding scientific achievements."<ref name="Blaauw97"/>
Ambartsumian was outspoken about the importance of international cooperation. At the 1952 IAU General Assembly in Rome he declared: "We believe that the joint study of such large problems as that of the evolution of celestial bodies will contribute to the cultural rapprochement of different nations, and to a better understanding among them. This is our modest contribution to the noble efforts toward maintaining peace throughout the world."<ref name="Kragh"/> At the 1963 IAU symposium in Sydney he stated that while competition between nations is important, it should be associated with co-operation.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- International Council of Scientific Unions
Ambartsumian also served as president of the International Council of Scientific Unions (ICSU) between 1968 and 1972, being elected twice for two-year terms in 1968 and 1970.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="aras"/> He was the first individual from the Eastern bloc to be elected to that post.Template:Sfn
Philosophical and cosmological views
Ambartsumian made "philosophical excursions",<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> and published several books and articles on philosophy, including Philosophical Questions About the Science of the Universe (1973).<ref name="Astrofiz1998"/> In a 1968 paper Ambartsumian wrote that he believes in a close collaboration of philosophy and the natural sciences to solve the main scientific problems about nature.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Ambartsumian became a member of the administration of the Philosophical Society of the Soviet Union when it was established in 1971. In 1990 he became honorary president of the Philosophical Society of Armenia, which was created through his efforts.<ref name="Astrofiz1998"/>
Science and religion
Ambartsumian was an atheist<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> and believed that science and religion are irreconcilable.<ref name="Kragh"/> Ambartsumian wrote in 1959 that the "idea of the existence of God, the idea of world-creation has been defeated entirely."<ref>Амбарцумян В. А. Наука о Вселенной и религия. [К критике фидеизме]. Наука и религия, 1959, No 1, стр. 9 – 12; cited in Template:Cite journal</ref> In an interview months before his death, Ambartsumian said that "God is an idea [...] the embodiment of morality [...] an idea that gives meaning to life, profound meaning, and thus, it must be acknowledged that it exists."<ref>original source: Template:Cite web; excerpt</ref>
For over four decades,Template:Efn he headed Gitelik, the Armenian branch of the all-Soviet organization Znaniye (Knowledge), founded in 1947 to continue the pre-war atheist work of the League of Militant Godless.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The organization engaged in what it called "scientific-atheistic propaganda"<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> by publishing atheist novels and journals, producing films and organizing lectures on the supremacy of science over religion.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> As of 1986, the society had around 20,000 members.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
According to one associate, Ambartsumian self-identified as an "Armenian Christian" but was not religious.Template:Sfn He felt that Christianity has been important in preserving Armenian identity.Template:Sfn Ambartsumian had friendly relations with Vazgen I, the long-time head (Catholicos) of the Armenian Apostolic Church, especially since at least the late 1980s.Template:Efn In 1969 Ambartsumian visited San Lazzaro degli Armeni in Venice, home of the Armenian Catholic congregation of the Mekhitarists and was declared an honorary member of its academy.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Sfn
Marxism–Leninism and dialectical materialism
Ambartsumian accepted and followed Marxist-Leninist philosophy<ref name="Kragh"/> and staunchly promoted dialectical materialism and projected it on his astrophysical interpretations.<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> Helge Kragh described Ambartsumian as a "convinced Marxist."<ref name="Kragh"/> He wrote on Marxism–Leninism and dialectical materialism in 1959:Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Template:Quote frame
Dialectical materialism influenced Ambartsumian's cosmological views and ideas.<ref name="Kragh"/> According to Loren Graham, "perhaps no great Soviet scientist has made more outspoken statements in favor of dialectical materialism" than Ambartsumian.Template:Sfn Mark H. Teeter wrote in a 1981 report that Ambartsumian is "one of a rather limited group of Soviet scholars of international stature who claim that dialectical materialism has assisted them in their work."<ref name="Teeter"/> Kragh noted that Ambartsumian was not a cosmologist, but an astrophysicist, and that "his ideas of the universe were influenced both by his background in astrophysics and his adherence to Marxist–Leninist philosophy."<ref name="Kragh"/> Graham notes that his "praise of dialectical materialism has been voiced again and again over the years; these affirmations have come when political controls were rather lax as well as when they were tight. We have every reason to believe that they reflect, at root, his own approach to nature."Template:Sfn
Political career and views
Ambartsumian is often referred to as a politician; Donald Lynden-Bell called him a skillful one.<ref name="Lynden-BellIndep"/> In a 1977 interview Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar went as far as to opine that Ambartsumian has been "much more of a politician than an astronomer" since the mid-1940s.<ref name="Chandrasekhar77"/>
Template:Ill, a colleague and friend, wrote that "Ambartsumian was a true patriot of his native land, Soviet Armenia and all the Soviet Union, and simultaneously, he was a convinced internationalist."Template:Sfn He was described by a Soviet-run magazine as an "ardent advocate of the widest possible international scientific exchange."<ref name="Pisarzhevsky"/>
Soviet politics
McCutcheon noted that Ambartsumian's life was "shaped and directed by the Soviet system" and he was politically loyal to the Soviet regime.<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> Adriaan Blaauw wrote that "his political views harmonized to a considerable degree with those of Soviet rulers."<ref name="Blaauw2007"/> Loren Graham argued that, simultaneously, he was "not afraid to reprimand the Communist Party ideologues when they obstructed his research."Template:Sfn In favor with the Communist Party, he enjoyed the freedom to regularly travel to the West.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> McCutcheon noted that Ambartsumian's "scientific genius combined with his political loyalty took him to the heights of the Soviet scientific establishment."<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/>
Ambartsumian jointed the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) in 1940.<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> In 1948 he became a member of the Central Committee (the executive branch) of the Communist Party of the Armenian SSR.<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> Ambartsumian was also a member of the Supreme Soviet from 1950 to 1989 (3rd to 11th convocation sessions).Template:Sfn<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> In 1989 he was elected as a representative from Armenia to the Congress of People's Deputies of the Soviet Union in the first relatively free elections.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Ambartsumian was a delegate to the 19th (1952), 20th (1956), 22nd (1961), 23rd (1966), 24th (1971), 25th (1976) and 26th (1981) congresses of the CPSU.Template:Sfn
Cold War politics
Ambartsumian often signed open letters in support of the official line of the Soviet authorities. In 1971 he was among leading 14 Soviet scientists who signed a letter to U.S. President Richard Nixon in support of Angela Davis and appealed him to "give her an opportunity of continuing her scientific work."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 1983 Ambartsumian was among 244 Soviet scientists who signed a statement attacking U.S. President Ronald Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative ("Star Wars"), namely Reagan's plan for an effective defense against nuclear attack. The scientists stated that Reagan is "creating a most dangerous illusion that may turn into an even more threatening spiral of the arms race."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Ambartsumian's relationship with dissidents was complicated. In 1973 he refused to meet Yuri Orlov, nuclear physicist and a prominent dissident, after having offered him a job in Yerevan. Ambartsumian told him through subordinate that "there are situations when even an Academy member is helpless."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In 1975 he was among 72 Soviet scientists who denounced the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Soviet physicist and dissident Andrei Sakharov.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Armenian causes
Ambartsumian revered the Armenian language and supported its usage.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He insisted all internal communication of the Armenian Academy of Sciences be done in Armenian when he became president in 1947.Template:Sfn As president of the Armenian Academy of Sciences, Ambartsumian often gave speeches at major events, such as during the commemorations of the 1600th anniversary of Mesrop Mashtots, the inventor of the Armenian alphabet, in 1962<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> and the 100th anniversary of Hovhannes Tumanyan, Armenia's national poet, in 1969.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Ambartsumian stated: "The history of our culture has given many outstanding figures, but of all these figures, the Armenian people owe the most to Mashtots."<ref name="1962days">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Armenian genocide
Ambartsumian delivered a speech on 24 April 1965, on the 50th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, describing it as "extermination of the Armenian population of Western Armenia." He linked it to the 45th anniversary of Soviet Armenia and the revival of the Armenian people as a result of the October Revolution.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> In an article published in Pravda on 24 April 1975 Ambartsumian linked the Armenian genocide to the Holocaust and blamed German imperialism during World War I for inspiring the Young Turks and the capitalist states for failing to defend the innocent Armenian population and praised the October Revolution for saving the Armenian nation.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Nagorno-Karabakh
Ambartsumian played a role in the Karabakh movement and was vocal in the initial phase of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. In November 1989, the Ambartsumian-led Armenian Academy of Sciences issued a statement protesting the decision of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union to return Nagorno-Karabakh under the direct control of Soviet Azerbaijan.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
In September 1990 Ambartsumian and four other Armenians, including writer Zori Balayan and actor Sos Sargsyan, went on a hunger strike at the Hotel Moskva in Moscow to protest the military rule over Nagorno-Karabakh declared by Mikhail Gorbachev.<ref name="Shogren"/><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Ambartsumian celebrated his 82nd birthday hunger striking.<ref name="Schodolski"/><ref name="NadlerUPI"/> He insisted that Gorbachev had violated the Soviet constitution by keeping Nagorno-Karabakh under direct rule from Moscow. "This is a bad thing when a government does not abide by its own laws," he argued. He also stated: "My desire is that Karabakh be part of Armenia. This is a problem that has to be solved with a long process and with concessions."<ref name="Schodolski"/> Ambartsumian stated that his only demand is that the "elected leaders of Nagorno-Karabakh regain control."<ref name="Shogren"/> Ambartsumian called the hunger strike a "modest step" aimed at making a "huge resonance in the world—to let the world know."<ref name="NadlerUPI"/> The Soviet authorities "totally ignored" the strike.Template:Sfn He ended it after 9 days only when Catholicos Vazgen I persuaded him to do so.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
On 11 May 1991 Ambartsumian and a number of members of the Armenian Academy of Sciences wrote a letter to Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev expressing their concern with the forced expulsion of ethnic Armenians from parts of NKAO and Shahumian rayon as part of Operation Ring.<ref name="PBH1991"/>
Soviet collapse and independence of Armenia
In June 1991 the session of the Armenian Academy of Sciences issued a statement on its views on Armenian independence and the future of the Soviet Union. The Academy stated its unconditional support for the independence of Armenia, pushed at the time by the Pan-Armenian National Movement (HHSh). However, it argued that because Armenia is economically interconnected with and dependent on other Soviet republics, an abrupt disruption in the existing relations would result in "unimaginable levels of economic collapse, unemployment and emigration." Thus, they called for Armenia to join the New Union Treaty proposed by Gorbachev. The session also argued that leaving the Soviet Union would mean to abandon Nagorno-Karabakh.<ref name="PBH1991"/>
As a communist, Ambartsumian reportedly regretted the collapse of the Soviet Union, but voted for Armenia's independence in the 1991 referendum. He appreciated independent Armenia, but reminded Armenians that they will be paying a high price for it.Template:Sfn In 1995 he congratulated Armenians worldwide with Armenia's independence and stated that the newly independent republic is "moving forward."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> According to Yuri Shahbazyan, a friend and biographer of Ambartsumian, he remained sympathetic towards the Communist Party of Russia and was critical of Western-sponsored economic liberalization in Russia and other post-Soviet countries.Template:Sfn
Personal life
When Ambartsumian was referred to by foreigners as a Russian scientist, he corrected them by saying he was Armenian. He spoke perfect Armenian, albeit with an accent.<ref name="hetq2018"/>
Between 1946 and 1996 Ambartsumian mostly divided his time between Yerevan and Byurakan. He built himself a house within the Byurakan Observatory with the award money that came with his second Stalin Prize in 1950.Template:Sfn Since 1960 he also maintained a house next to the building of the Academy of Sciences in Yerevan, on Baghramyan Avenue.
Personality
Donald Lynden-Bell characterized Ambartsumian as a "broad-shouldered thickset man of medium height, quick intellect and strong character."<ref name="Lynden-BellIndep"/> Lynden-Bell and Vahe Gurzadyan wrote that Ambartsumian was modest in private life and behaved simply in public.Template:Sfn Fadey Sargsyan described Ambartsumian as an "extremely modest" man.Template:Sfn Anthony Astrachan wrote in The New Yorker that Ambartsumian is "by all reports an engaging human being."<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Ambartsumian admitted to not having any hobbies: "My only passion is science, astronomy. Like a jealous wife, it expects a man to give all of himself."<ref name="SovLife1968"/> However, he loved poetry and music,<ref name="Lynden-BellIndep"/> and "could enliven even the most abstract mathematical lectures with quotations from classical and contemporary poets."<ref name="Andrews97"/>
Family
In 1930 or 1931 Ambartsumian married Vera Fyodorovna (née Klochikhina), an ethnic Russian, who was the niece and the adopted daughter of Pelageya Shajn, the wife of Grigory Shajn, both Russian astronomers.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/>Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn She was an English teacher who taught him to read his papers in English when he visited the U.S. and Britain. However, she could not reconcile with his "barbarous pronunciation," as she described it.<ref name="SovLife1968"/> He was deeply depressed by her death in 1995.Template:Sfn They had four children: daughters Karine (b. 1933) and Yelena (b. 1936) and sons Rafayel (b. 1940) and Rouben (b. 1941). All four became either mathematicians or physicists.Template:Sfn<ref name="Andrews97"/> As of 1987 he had eight grandchildren.<ref name="McCutcheonAIP"/>
Retirement and death
Ambartsumian began retiring from the various positions he held in 1988, at 80. He left the position of the director of the Byurakan Observatory that year. In 1993 he stepped down as president of the Armenian Academy of Sciences and in 1994 as chair of astrophysics at Yerevan State University.<ref name="physicstoday"/><ref name="YSUChair"/>
Ambartsumian died at his Byurakan house on August 12, 1996, a month short of his 88th birthday.<ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/><ref name="NYTobit"/><ref name="Astrofiz1998"/> He was buried at the observatory grounds, next to his wife and parents.Template:Sfn His funeral was attended by thousands of people, including Armenia's president Levon Ter-Petrosyan.Template:Sfn
His house was inaugurated as a museum in August 1998.<ref name="Astrofiz1998"/>
Recognition
Ambartsumian was one of the 20th century's leading astrophysicistsTemplate:Efn and astronomers.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>Template:Efn He was the leading astronomer of the Soviet UnionTemplate:Efn and is universally recognized as the founder of the Soviet school of theoretical astrophysics.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="britannica"/>Template:Efn Ambartsumian was also well-regarded internationally.<ref>Detre Centennial Conference: Proceedings (2006). Hungarian Academy of Sciences. p. 22 "This agreement obviously was a tribute of Victor Ambartsumian, the president of the Armenian Academy of Sciences and an astronomer of very high international reputation."</ref>Template:Efn Loren Graham called him "one of the best-known abroad of all Soviet scientists."Template:Sfn He was an honorary or foreign member of academies of sciences of over 25 countries.<ref name="Israelian97"/>
Despite being a Soviet scientist, he was well-regarded in the United States.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> During the Cold War, Ambartsumian was the first Soviet scientist to become foreign honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and foreign associate of the National Academy of Sciences in 1958 and 1959, respectively.<ref name="amacad"/>Template:Efn In January 1971 Ambartsumian was invited to the U.S. House Committee on Science and Astronautics, where he was introduced by Fred Lawrence Whipple as a "man who is rated the world's greatest astronomer or at least among the very greatest."<ref>Template:Cite journal (archived PDF)</ref>
In 1977 Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar stated: "My own impression has always been that he was, when he was in his prime, one of the most perceptive and elegant of astronomers."<ref name="Chandrasekhar77"/> Chandrasekhar opined in 1988:<ref name="Chandrasekhar">Template:Cite journal. Reprinted in
In Armenia
After he visited Byurakan for the First Soviet-American Conference on Communication with Extraterrestrial Intelligence in 1971, William H. McNeill wrote that Ambartsumian is a "world famous astronomer and a man of enormous local prestige."<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> One of the "modern icons of Armenian pride,"<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Ambartsumian is recognized as the most prominent scientist in 20th century Armenia,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and the most important since the seventh century polymath Anania Shirakatsi.<ref name="hetq2018"/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Fadey Sargsyan, Ambartsumian's successor as President of the Armenian Academy of Sciences, stated in 1998 that he went "beyond the limits of his scientific fields and in his own lifetime [became] a great national figure."<ref name="Astrofiz1998"/>
On 11 October 1994 Armenia's President Levon Ter-Petrosyan awarded Ambartsumian the title of a National Hero of Armenia<ref name="NatHero">Template:Cite web</ref> for his scientific work of international significance, science administration and patriotic activism.<ref name="ArmObit"/> His official obituary was signed by Armenia's president, government and parliament.<ref name="ArmObit"/>
Tribute
An asteroid discovered at the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory in 1972 by Tamara Smirnova is named 1905 Ambartsumian.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Ambartsumian's Knot is a small tidal dwarf galaxy located in NGC 3561 in the constellation Ursa Major.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
In 1998 Ambartsumian's 90th anniversary was celebrated in Armenia; the International Astronomical Union held a symposium at the Byurakan Observatory<ref name="Astrofiz1998"/> and the Central Bank of Armenia issued a 100 dram banknote depicting Ambartsumian and the Byurakan Observatory.<ref name="cba"/> The Byurakan Observatory was officially named after him that year.<ref name="ByurHistory"/> Other things named after Ambartsumian include Chair of General Physics and Astrophysics at Yerevan State University,<ref name="YSUChair"/> a street, park, and public school in Yerevan,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and the Pedagogical Institute of Vardenis.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 2009 a Template:Convert bronze statue of Ambartsumian was unveiled in Yerevan at the park around the Yerevan Observatory in attendance of President Serzh Sargsyan and other officials.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Busts of Ambartsumian stand at the Byurakan Observatory, the city of Vardenis (1978),<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and at the central campus of Yerevan State University.<ref name="YSUbio"/>
In 2009 Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan established an international prize in Ambartsumian's memory.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It was first awarded in 2010 and is awarded every two years. The prize was initially $500,000, but was reduced to $300,000 in 2018.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It is considered one of the prestigious awards in astronomy and related fields.<ref name="prize"/>
Awards and honors
Template:Col-begin Template:Col-2
State awards
- Soviet Union<ref name="aras"/><ref name="RASBio"/>
- File:Sickle and Hammer.jpg Hero of Socialist Labour (1968, 1978)
- File:Заслуженный деятель науки Армянской ССР.png Honored Scientist of the Armenian SSR (1940) and the Georgian SSR (1968)
- File:SU Order of Lenin ribbon.svg Order of Lenin (1945, 1958, 1968, 1974, 1978)
- File:SU Order of the Red Banner of Labour ribbon.svg Order of the Red Banner of Labour (1944, 1953)
- File:SU Order of the Badge of Honour ribbon.svg Order of the Badge of Honour (1988)
- File:SU Order of the October Revolution ribbon.svg Order of the October Revolution (1983)
- File:SU Medal For Labour Valour ribbon.svg Medal "For Labour Valour" (1960)
- File:Stalin Medal.png USSR State Prize (1946, 1950)
- Armenia
- File:Ribbon bar of Order of Fatherland.png National Hero of Armenia (1994)<ref name="NatHero"/>
- Foreign countries
- File:POL Order Zaslugi PRL kl3 BAR.png Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland 3rd class, Polish People's Republic (1973)
- File:HUN Order of the Flag of the HPR Green-Wreath BAR.svg Order of the Flag of the People's Republic of Hungary, People's Republic of Bulgaria (1975)
- File:St.AndrewOrder.png Order of Cyril and Methodius, People's Republic of Bulgaria (1969)<ref name="aras"/>
- File:RusStatePrize.jpg State Prize of the Russian Federation (1995)<ref name="RASBio"/>
Professional awards
- Janssen Prize of Société astronomique de France (1956)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (1960) "for outstanding contributions to astrophysics"<ref name="Redman"/>
- Bruce Medal of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (1960)<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Lomonosov Gold Medal of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, "for outstanding achievements in the field of astronomy and astrophysics" (1971)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Helmholtz Medal (Helmholtz-Medaille) of the Academy of Sciences of the German Democratic Republic (1971)<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- Cothenius Medal of the Academy of Sciences Leopoldina (1974)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Membership
- Soviet Union
- Corresponding Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences (1939)<ref name="RASBio"/>
- Full member (Academician) of the Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences (1943)<ref name="aras"/>
- Full member (Academician) of the USSR Academy of Sciences (1953)<ref name="RASBio"/>
- Honorary member of the Academies of Sciences of the Georgian SSR and Azerbaijan SSRTemplate:Sfn
- Abroad
Ambartsumian was elected honorary and foreign member of 28 Academies of Sciences,<ref name="aras"/> including:
- Honorary Member of the American Astronomical Society (1947)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Associate of the Royal Astronomical Society (1953)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Corresponding member (1958) and foreign associate (1978) of the French Academy of Sciences<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1958)<ref name="amacad">Template:Cite web</ref>
- Foreign Associate of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (1959)<ref name="Acad1959">Template:Cite news</ref>
- Honorary Member of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada (1959)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Foreign Member of the Royal Society (1969)<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Honorary degrees
Ambartsumian received honorary doctorates from several universities: Australian National University (1963),<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> University of Paris (1967), University of Liège (1967), Charles University in Prague (1967), Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń (1973), National University of La Plata (1974).<ref name="aras"/>Template:Sfn
Publications
Throughout his career, Ambartsumian authored some 20 books and booklets and over 200 academic papers.<ref name="aras"/>
Theoretical Astrophysics (1952)
Ambartsumian served as editor and senior author of the 1952 book Teoreticheskaia Astrofizika (Теоретическая астрофизика).Template:Sfn It is an extended<ref name="Blaauw2007"/> version of his 1939 book on theoretical astrophysics—the first systematic textbook on the subject in Russian—based on his lectures at Leningrad State University.<ref name="Redman"/>Template:Sfn It was translated into a number of languages, including English, German, and Chinese.Template:Sfn The English translation appeared in 1958 as Theoretical Astrophysics.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> It became a bible for a generation of astronomers and astrophysicists<ref name="Israelian97"/><ref name="McCutcheonEnc"/> and was well received by reviewers. Roderick Oliver Redman called it "a welcome addition to the comparatively few general texts of solid worth which are now available"<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> and noted that in a short time it had found "many appreciative readers in both German and English speaking countries."<ref name="Redman"/> Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin wrote that it is the "only advanced book of this scope in English, it will be of the greatest value."<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> George B. Field described the book as "comprehensively and competently constructed."<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> A. David Andrews described it as a "valuable textbook", which "contains examples of [Ambartsumian's] unique and fruitful approaches to stubborn astronomical problems."<ref name="Andrews97"/> Leonard Searle lauded the sections on stellar atmospheres, but criticized the section on interstellar material, especially the constitution of stars as outdated for ignoring fundamental post-war western contributions.<ref name="Searle"/>
See also
References
- Notes
- Citations
Bibliography
- Books on Ambartsumian
- Journal articles
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal; translated in Template:Cite journal
- General books
External links
- Oral history interview transcript with Viktor Amazaspovich Ambartsumian on 2 October 1987, American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library & Archives
- Ambartsumian bibliography Template:Webarchive at Sonoma State University
- Ambartsumian bibliography at ambartsumian.ru
Further reading
- Pages with broken file links
- 1908 births
- 1996 deaths
- Scientists from Tbilisi
- Armenian astronomers
- Armenian scientists
- Armenian astrophysicists
- Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Foreign associates of the National Academy of Sciences
- Foreign members of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
- Foreign members of the Royal Society
- Members of the French Academy of Sciences
- Foreign fellows of the Indian National Science Academy
- Members of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Full Members of the Russian Academy of Sciences
- Full Members of the USSR Academy of Sciences
- Heroes of Socialist Labour
- Recipients of the Stalin Prize
- Recipients of the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Recipients of the Lomonosov Gold Medal
- Recipients of the Order of Lenin
- Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour
- National Hero of Armenia
- Soviet Armenians
- Soviet astronomers
- Soviet astrophysicists
- Soviet politicians
- Communist Party of Armenia (Soviet Union) politicians
- Party leaders of the Soviet Union
- Members of the German Academy of Sciences at Berlin
- Presidents of the International Astronomical Union
- Members of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
- Recipients of the Cothenius Medal