Radiophysical Research Institute

The Radiophysical Research Institute (NIRFI), based in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, is a research institute that conducts basic and applied research in the field of radio, radio astronomy, cosmology and radio engineering. It is also known for its work in solar physics, sun-earth physics as well as the related geophysics. It also does outreach for the Russian education system. It was formed in 1956 as the Radiophysical Research Institute of the (Soviet) Ministry of Education and Science.[1][2][3]

Established1956
Address
Miusskaya pl., 4, 125047
, ,
AffiliationsRussian Academy of Sciences
Websitewww.keldysh.ru
Radio telescope RT-15-2 of radio-astronomical station «Zimenki»

Projects NIRFI

Radiotelescope RT-15-1 astronomical station «Zimenki» NIRFI (May, 2006). Now it is dismantled (it is most likely handed over on scrap metal)

References

  1. Snegirev, S. D.; Fridman, V. M.; Sheiner, O. A.; Pertzborn, R.; Limaye, S. & Crosby, N. (June 2005). "Role of the Radiophysical Research Institute (NIRFI) for promoting and teaching science in Russia" (PDF). Advances in Geosciences. European Geosciences Union. 3: 41–46. Bibcode:2005AdG.....3...41S. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  2. P. James; E. Peebles; et al. (April 2009). Finding the Big Bang. Cambridge University Press. pp. 296–300. ISBN 978-0-521-51982-3.
  3. Nechaeva, M. B.; Antipenko, A. A.; Dement’Ev, A. F.; Dugin, N. A.; Snegirev, S. D.; Tikhomirov, Yu. V. (2007). "VLBI studies at the Radiophysical Research Institute". Radiophysics and Quantum Electronics. 50 (7): 527. Bibcode:2007R&QE...50..527N. doi:10.1007/s11141-007-0047-3. Retrieved 26 May 2014.

Further reading

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