Preface
Introduction
1. Who was Mandelstam for science?
2. Literature about Mandelstam.
3. About the 'blank spots".
4. The sources.
5. The plan of the book. 6. Acknowledgements.
Chapter 1. Youth and Strasbourg years. 1. Youth.
2. At Strasbourg University.
3. Strasbourg University.
4. Ferdinand Braun
5. F. Braun's philosophy of science.
6. Richard von Mises.
Chapter 2. The Strasbourg years: radio engineering.
1. Radio engineering at Strasbourg University
2. Mandelstam's degree work.
3. Experiments with weak coupling
4. F. Braun's energy scheme.
5. "On the theory of the Braun transmitter". 6. The phase shift of oscillations.
7. Business in radio engineering.
8. L. Mandelstam - J. Fleming polemics.
9. The Mandelstam-Papalexy induction dynamometer.
Chapter 3. The Strasbourg period: optics.
1. Historiography: Mandelstam and optics.
2. On optically homogeneous and turbid medium. Mandelstam attacks Lord Rayleigh.
3. The Mandelstam criticism of the M. Planck theory of dispersion.
4. M. Planck's response. Polemics.
5. The years of democracy: I. Sobelman criticizes Mandelstam.
6. 'On the roughness of the fluid free surface".
7. "A radiation of the light source, located very close to boundary between two transparent media".
8. The radio-engineering genesis of L.I. Mandelstam's optics.
9. Mythology
Chapter 4. The years of Pilgrimage (1914-1925).
1. Petrograd. 2. Tiflis (Tbilisi).
3. Odessa
4. The central radio laboratory.
5. What do we learn about Mandelstam's life from his and his wife's letters to Richard von Mises?
6. Mandelstam and Tamm.
Chapter 5. Moscow State University (1925-1935).
1. Invitation.
2. At the university.
3. "About the main groups of professors".
4. Boris Hessen
5. Mandelstam as a teacher. 6. Teaching as an ethical position.
7. "Dear friend, dear Mis..." Mandelstam's letters to R. von Mises.
Chapter 6. Research in optics (Odessa - Moscow).
1. The Brillouin -Mandelstam effect.
2. The combinational scattering of light (Rahman effect).
3. The Indian version of the discovery of the combinational scattering. 4. The Nobel Prize.
Chapter 7. The Mandelstam school: the early steps and results.
1. What is a scientific schools 2. L.I. Mandelstam L.I., G.S. Landsberg G.S., M.A. Leontovich, M.A. Reserch in optics, 1925-1929.
3. The Mandelstam and Leontovich article on quantum mechanics, 1928.
3. Andronov-Leontovich and Mandelstam-Andronov-Leontovich.
4. Parametric Generators.
Chapter 8. The Mandelstam's school: the theory of non-linear oscillations.
1. Mandelstam and the theory of non-linear oscillations
2. The rise of the concept of self-oscillations.
3. The problem of multivibrator. Andronov- Vitt.
4. The "entrainment" and "retarded action". B. Van der Pol, A. Andronov, A. Vitt. 5. The method of a small parameter. A slowly variable amplitude.
6. The First All-Union conference.
Chapter 9. Continuation. The Mandelstam-Andronov school.
1. Terminology
2. Competition 3. In search for self-oscillations.
4. From concentrated systems to distributed ones.
5. The "self-oscillatory ideology" versus the "self-oscillatory paradigm.
Chapter 10. M.A. Leontovich and nuclear physics
1. The biography of Leontovich
2. &nbs
About the Author: Alexander Alexandrovich Pechenkin graduated from the Mendeleev Moscow Institute of Chemistry and Technology in 1963, and received his Ph.D. from the Institute of Philosophy at the USSR Academy of Sciences in 1968. In 1976 he graduated from the Mechanico-Mathematical Faculty (School) at Lomonosov Moscow State University.
In 1985 Pechenkin received his Doctor of Science degree from the Institute of Philosophy. In 1985 he was appointed Professor of History at the USSR Academy of Sciences Science Institute of History of Science and Technology.
He has received various grants and honors from the Russian Foundation of Scientific Research in Humanities and from the Russian Foundation of Fundamental Research and other international institutions, including:
- 1995 the German Museum (Munich) three-month fellowship
- 1998-2003 State Stipend of Russian Federation
- 1997-1998 Fulbright Program Grant
- 1998 American Institute of Physics. Grant in Aid
- 1997, 1998, 2002 the British Academy fellowships
- 2001 Central European University fellowship
- 2003 Rockefeller Archive Centre one-month residency fellowship - 2004 American Philosophical Society, John Slater fellowship
- 2004, 2005, 2006, 2017 Chemical Heritage Foundation Library fellowships
- 2011 Robert W. Allington Fellowship from Chemical Heritage Foundation - 2014 fellowship from Kone Foundation
- 1992-1993, 1993; 1995-1996; 2001 Central European University and Open Society Institute Grants
He has authored 8 Russian and 2 international books and is the editor of five contributed books. He has also contributed chapters to various books and written numerous scientific publications.