Viacheslav Belavkin

Viacheslav Belavkin
Born 20 May 1946
Lwów
Died 27 November 2012(2012-11-27) (aged 66)
Citizenship UK
Alma mater Moscow State University
Known for Belavkin equation
Choi's theorem on completely positive maps
Awards State Prize of the Russian Federation
Scientific career
Fields Mathematics
Institutions University of Nottingham
Doctoral advisor Ruslan Stratonovich

Viacheslav Pavlovich Belavkin (Russian: Вячеслав Павлович Белавкин; 20 May 1946 – 27 November 2012) was a Russian-born British professor in applied mathematics at the University of Nottingham. An active researcher, he was one of the pioneers of quantum probability. His research spanned areas such as quantum filtering, quantum information and quantum chaos.

Biography

He was born in Lwów, and graduated from Moscow State University in 1970 where his teachers include Evgeny Lifshitz, Victor Pavlovich Maslov, Andrey Kolmogorov and Ruslan L. Stratonovich. In the 1980s Belavkin held visiting professorship in the Dublin Institute of Advanced Studies, and the Volterra Centre in Rome before taking up an appointment at the University of Nottingham in 1992. He was promoted to a Chair in Mathematical Physics in 1996.[1] He and Ruslan L. Stratonovich were awarded the State Prize of the Russian Federation (formerly the Lenin Prize) for outstanding achievements in science and technology, in part due to his work on the measurement problem.[2][3] He is survived by his wife Nadezda Belavkin and son Roman Belavkin.[4]

References

  1. Guta, Madalin. "In Memory of Professor Viacheslav P Belavkin". the University of Nottingham.
  2. Премии и награды 1996, Moscow State University, retrieved 13 January 2017
  3. Aula, Dottorato. "Quantum Causality and Eventum Mechanics". qubit.it.
  4. "Newsletter" (PDF). Nottingham Orthodox. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 21 May 2013.

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