Mikhail Anisimov

Mikhail Alexeevich Anisimov (Russian: Михаил Алексе́евич Анисимов, born November 2, 1941, Baku, Azerbaijan, USSR) is a Russian and American interdisciplinary scientist.

Mikhail Anisimov
Born (1941-11-02) November 2, 1941
Alma materMoscow State University
Known forCritical Phenomena and Phase Transitions in Fluids
Scientific career
FieldsThermodynamics
InstitutionsUniversity of Maryland, College Park

Early life

Anisimov received a degree in petroleum engineering from Grozny Petroleum Institute in 1964, a doctorate in physical chemistry from Moscow State University in 1969, and a doctor of science degree in molecular and thermal physics from the Kurchatov Institute of Atomic Energy in Moscow in 1976.

Career

From 1969 through 1977, Anisimov worked at the U.S.S.R. State Committee for Standards and Product Quality Management (Russian: Госстандарт), where his postdoctoral mentor was Alexander V. Voronel.[1][2] From 1978 until 1993, Anisimov was a professor and the chairman of the Physics Department of Gubkin Russian State University of Oil and Gas. In 1994, Anisimov began working in the United States as a professor for both the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and for the Institute of Physical Science and Technology at the University of Maryland, College Park.[3]

Research

Anisimov’s field of research is thermodynamics of fluids and fluid mixtures, liquid crystals, polymers, and other soft-matter materials. His research group at the University of Maryland (jointly with Jan V. Sengers [2][4]) is one of the leading international authorities in the field of critical phenomena and phase transitions. Anisimov works in theory and experiments, fundamental problems and applications. He has been an author and a co-author of 2 books, 14 book chapters and review articles and more than 400 published journal and encyclopedia articles, conference proceedings and reports.

Personal life

Anisimov has four children. His eldest daughter, Tanya Anisimova, is a cellist and composer.

Honors and awards

Bibliography (partial)

  • M. A. Anisimov, “50 years of breakthrough discoveries in fluid criticality”, Int. J. Thermophys. 32, 2001–2009 (2011).
  • Anisimov, Michail A. Verfasser (1991). Critical phenomena in liquids and liquid crystals. Gordon and Breach. ISBN 2-88124-806-3. OCLC 1046262995.
  • M. A. Anisimov, V. A. Rabinovich, and V. V. Sychev, "Thermodynamics of the Critical State of Individual Substances", English Edition: CRC Press, Boca Raton, 1995, 171 pages
gollark: Thanks to metatable insanity.
gollark: `"abcdefg" / "d"` works.
gollark: Like how potatOS implements string division.
gollark: Yes. But CC does it differently so it *is* sandboxed that way so we can do fun and ill-advised things.
gollark: CC is also extremely well sandboxed now. So much so that they can safely expose `debug`.

References

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