Vladimir Fock

Vladimir Fock
Born (1898-12-22)December 22, 1898
St. Petersburg, Russia
Died December 27, 1974(1974-12-27) (aged 76)
St. Petersburg (Leningrad), Russia
Residence Russian
Nationality Russian
Alma mater Petrograd University
Known for Klein–Gordon equation
Fock space
Fock representation
Fock state
Hartree–Fock method
Fock–Lorentz symmetry
Fock–Schwinger gauge
Scientific career
Fields Physicist and mathematician
Institutions Petrograd University
State Institute of Optics
Leningrad Institute of Physics and Technology
Lebedev Physical Institute
Notable students A. D. Aleksandrov
F. I. Fedorov
Yu. A. Yappa

Vladimir Aleksandrovich Fock (or Fok; Russian: Влади́мир Алекса́ндрович Фок) (December 22, 1898 December 27, 1974) was a Soviet physicist, who did foundational work on quantum mechanics and quantum electrodynamics.

Biography

He was born in St. Petersburg, Russia. In 1922 he graduated from Petrograd University, then continued postgraduate studies there. He became a professor there in 1932. In 19191923 and 19281941 he collaborated with the Vavilov State Optical Institute, in 19241936 with the Leningrad Institute of Physics and Technology, in 19341941 and 19441953 with the Lebedev Physical Institute.

Scientific Work

His primary scientific contribution lies in the development of quantum physics and the theory of gravitation, although he also contributed significantly to the fields of mechanics, theoretical optics, physics of continuous media. In 1926, he derived the Klein–Gordon equation. He gave his name to Fock space, the Fock representation and Fock state, and developed the HartreeFock method in 1930. He made many subsequent scientific contributions, during the rest of his life. Fock developed the electromagnetic methods for geophysical exploration in a book The theory of the study of the rocks resistance by the carottage method (1933); the methods are called the well logging in modern literature.

Fock made significant contributions to general relativity theory, specifically for the many body problems. Fock criticised on scientific grounds both Einstein's general principle of relativity as being devoid of physical substance and the Equivalence Principle as interpreted as the equivalence of gravitation and acceleration as having only a local validity.

In Leningrad, Fock created a scientific school in theoretical physics and raised the physics education in the USSR through his books. He wrote the first textbook on quantum mechanics Foundations of Quantum Mechanics (1931) and a very influential monograph The Theory of Space, Time and Gravitation (1955).

Historians of science, such as Loren Graham, see Fock as a representative and proponent of Einstein's theory of relativity within the Soviet world. At a time when most Marxist philosophers objected to relativity theory, Fock emphasized a materialistic understanding of relativity that coincided philosophically with Marxism.

He was a full member (academician) of the USSR Academy of Sciences (1939) and a member of the International Academy of Quantum Molecular Science.

A memorial coin with Fock being third from the left

See also

References

  • Graham, L. (1982). "The reception of Einstein's ideas: Two examples from contrasting political cultures." In Holton, G. and Elkana, Y. (Eds.) Albert Einstein: Historical and cultural perspectives. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, pp. 107136
  • Fock, V. A. (1964). "The Theory of Space, Time and Gravitation". Macmillan.
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