Kvant (magazine)

Kvant (Russian: Квант for "quantum") is a popular science magazine in physics and mathematics for school students and teachers, issued in print between 1970 and 2011. The magazine became an online-only publication in 2011.[1] Translation of selected articles from Kvant had been published in Quantum Magazine in 1990–2001, which in turn had been translated and published in Greece in 1994–2001.[2]

Kvant
CategoriesPhysics, mathematics
Year founded1970
Final issue2011 (print)
CountrySoviet Union
Russia
Based inMoscow
LanguageRussian

History

Kvant was started as a joint project of the USSR Academy of Sciences and USSR Academy of Pedagogical Sciences. In Soviet time, it was published by Nauka publisher with circulation about 200,000.

The idea of the magazine was introduced by Pyotr Kapitsa. Its first chief editors were physicist Isaak Kikoin and mathematician Andrei Kolmogorov. In 1985, its editorial board had 18 Academicians and Corresponding Members of the USSR Academy of Sciences and USSR Academy of Pedagogical Sciences, 14 Doctors of Sciences and 20 Candidates of Science.[3]

The last print issue of Kvant was published at the beginning of 2011.[1] Then the print edition was closed making the magazine an online publication.[1]

Availability

All published issues of Kvant were freely available online.[4]

Translations

Quantum Magazine

Quantum Magazine was a US-based bimonthly magazine published by the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) from 1990 to 2001. Some of its articles were translations from Kvant.

Kvant Selecta

In 1999, American Mathematical Society published translation of selected articles from Kvant on algebra and mathematical analysis as two volumes in the Mathematical World series.[5][6] Yet another volume, published in 2002, included translation of selected articles on combinatorics. [7]

Other translations

There were two books with selected articles from Kvant published in France by Jean-Michel Kantor [8]

gollark: cpio does NOT seem very modern?
gollark: Stop being tired.
gollark: (This is not counting the twoish authleft people I know who are maybe communist depending on what definition you like)
gollark: (Kind of ironic that the threeish interweb communist people I have interacted with seem much more trusting of large corporate webservices than me)
gollark: I mean, I use duckduckgo, but same principle.

References

  1. "Внимание!". Kvant (in Russian). Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  2. "Quantum (Greek)". Retrieved September 5, 2016.
  3. 15th anniversary of Kvant
  4. Kvant archive website
  5. Tabachnikov, Serge (1999). Kvant Selecta: Algebra and Analysis, I. Mathematical World. 14. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-1002-6.
  6. Tabachnikov, Serge (1999). Kvant Selecta: Algebra and Analysis, II. Mathematical World. 15. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-1915-9.
  7. Tabachnikov, Serge (2002). Kvant Selecta: Combinatorics, I. Mathematical World. 17. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-2171-8.
  8. Mathématiques venues d'ailleurs, divertissements mathématiques en U.R.S.S., Chroniques extraites de la revue QUANT et adapté du russe par Jean-Michel Kantor, ISBN 2-7011-0442-4, ed. Bellin 1982
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