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Artem R. Oganov is a Russian and American theoretical crystallographer, chemist, physicist, and materials scientist.〔(Oganov's laboratory site )〕 He is known mostly for his works on computational materials discovery and crystal structure prediction. Artem R. Oganov was born on 3 March 1975 in Moscow, Russia. He graduated from Moscow State University in 1997 with summa cum laude and diploma in Crystallography and Crystal Chemistry. In 2002 obtained a PhD degree in Crystallography from University College London, and in 2007 got a Habilitation degree from ETH Zurich. From 2008 he is at Stony Brook University, as Professor and Director of the Center for Materials by Design. Oganov has published over 160 peer-reviewed articles (many in top journals, e.g. Nature, Science) and book chapters. He is an author of 5 patents. Total citations >8100, h-index 46 (Google scholar).〔(Google scholar citation )〕 He is a laureate of several prestigious awards, including an ETH Latsis Prize,〔( List of ETH Latsis Prize Laureates )〕 Research Excellence Model of the European Mineralogical Union,〔(2007 Research Excellence Medal )〕 three most-cited paper awards from Elsevier. In 2001, Forbes ranked Oganov among 10 most successful Russian scientists.〔(Forbes names 50 Russians who “conquered” the world )〕 In 2012, highly acclaimed cinema director, Laureate of State Prize Vladimir Gerchikov made a film "The color of a crystal" about Oganov.〔(В клубе ZaVtra пройдет показ фильма про ученого Артема Оганова )〕 In 2012, Oganov became a Professor Honoris Causa of Yanshan University (China), since 2013 he is a Fellow of the Mineralogical Association of USA.〔(List of MSA Fellows )〕 In 2013, magazines "Russian reporter" and "Expert" have listed Oganov among 100 most influential Russians today.〔(100 people of modern Russia )〕 His most significant works are in fields of computational materials discovery, in particular the effects of pressure on chemical bonding, and state of matter at extreme conditions (e.g. inside the Earth and other planets). He has developed novel methods of crystal structure prediction that became basis of the USPEX code,〔(USPEX code site )〕 used by >2900 researchers worldwide. Among the highlights are the discovery of the structure of a superhard phase of boron, gamma-B, transparent phase of sodium, new carbon allotrope, stability of MgSiO3 post-perovskite in the Earth's mantle, and prediction of "forbidden" compounds (e.g., Na3Cl) In 2013, it was reported that Oganov intends to open a laboratory at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology., and subsequently this laboratory was opened Oganov speaks 5 languages (Russian, English, French, German, and Italian). His father is Armenian, his mother is of Jewish ancestry. Artem also has a brother, Arthur. Artem is married, has three children and is parishioner of St. Louis Catholic Church in Moscow. ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Artem R. Oganov」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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