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E-grāmata: A. G. Stromberg - First Class Scientist, Second Class Citizen: Letters from the Gulag and a History of Electroanalysis in the USSR [World Scientific e-book]

(Univ Of East Anglia, Uk), (Univ Of Oxford, Uk), (Tomsk Polytechnic Univ, Russia), (Univ Of Oxford, Uk), (Tomsk Polytechnic Univ, Russia)
  • Formāts: 376 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Apr-2011
  • Izdevniecība: Imperial College Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781848166769
  • World Scientific e-book
  • Cena: 177,13 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Formāts: 376 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Apr-2011
  • Izdevniecība: Imperial College Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781848166769
Armin G Stromberg was arguably one of the founding fathers of the technique of stripping voltammetry frequently used in chemical analysis, yet he is virtually unheard of in Western Scientific circles. He was a brilliant scientist, but due to his German ancestry, he was interred in one of the NKVD GULAG camps at the outbreak of the second world war.This semi-biographical history presents the complete set of 74 surviving letters written by Stromberg to his wife during this period. The letters provide both historians and the interested public with a rare and unique glimpse into the every-day living conditions of inmates in one of the GULAG labour camps. The book also traces Stromberg's life following his release. More importantly, it relates how he founded the thriving Tomsk school to the wider historical context of electroanalysis in the USSR, drawing conclusions about the rate of scientific development as compared to the West and showing how 'wet analysis' remained of vital importance to industry long after equivalent measurements were made instrumentally elsewhere.Readers will also appreciate how Stromberg's invaluable contributions in the 'Tomsk school of electroanalysis' laid the foundations for the extensive metallurgical extraction and nuclear industries that dominated the entire Siberian region for many years. This book is must-read for anyone interested in the life and times of an important, yet often overlooked scientist of the second world war.
Foreword v
List of Tables and Figures
xi
1 The Deportation of the Ethnic Populations of Russia
1(14)
2 `A Willow in Siberia': The Family History and Early Life of Armin G. Stromberg Pre-1937
15(30)
Introduction
15(1)
Ancestry and Nationality
16(4)
Armin's Parents Heinrich and Magda
20(5)
Letter of Doctor Berezantsev to the Widow Magda R. Stromberg
25(1)
A Letter about Heinrich H. Stromberg's Death
26(6)
Vladimir Mamontov
A World Turned Upside Down
32(2)
Revolution and a Second Shock for Magda
34(4)
Educating Armin
38(4)
Walking on the Edge of a Precipice
42(2)
Scientific Isolation
44(1)
3 Letters from the GULAG (March 1942---September 1943)
45(208)
Letter 1
53(1)
Letter 2
54(1)
Letter 3
55(2)
Letter 4
57(2)
Letter 5
59(3)
Letter 5A
62(1)
Letter 6
63(3)
Letter 7
66(1)
Letter 8
67(1)
Letter 9
68(2)
Letter 10
70(9)
Letter 12
79(3)
Letter 13
82(5)
Letter 14
87(4)
Letter 15
91(3)
Letter 16
94(4)
Letter 16A
98(5)
Letter 16B
103(4)
Letter 17
107(2)
Letter 18
109(5)
Letter 19
114(2)
Letter 20
116(3)
Letter 21
119(2)
Letter 21A
121(1)
Letter 22
122(3)
Letter 23
125(3)
Letter 24
128(1)
Letter 25
129(6)
Letter 26
135(5)
Letter 27
140(6)
Letter 28
146(3)
Letter 29
149(1)
Letter 30
150(3)
Letter 31
153(2)
Letter 32
155(3)
Letter 33
158(4)
Letter 34
162(2)
Letter 35
164(89)
4 Release, Work in Sverdlovsk and the Start of Polarography in the USSR
253(50)
Introduction
253(1)
The 1959 Nobel Prize for Chemistry Goes to Electroanalysis
253(4)
The Origins of Polarography
257(10)
Polarography Revolutionizes Analytical Chemistry
267(3)
Polarography Changes: Pulse Voltammetry, Static Mercury Drops and Stripping Voltammetry
270(4)
Polarography Arrives in the USSR
274(5)
Stromberg's Research in Sverdlovsk: Wartime and After
279(8)
Chelyabinsk
287(6)
Stromberg is Sacked --- An Academic Life Begins
293(10)
5 The Tomsk School of Electroanalysis
303(44)
Early Years In Tomsk: 1956-1962
303(8)
The Special Research Laboratory: 1962-1985
311(8)
Life as a Graduate Student in the Special Research Laboratory
319(8)
Stromberg and Semchenko: Physical Chemistry
327(5)
Stromberg's Reflections on Running His Laboratory and on His Relationships with the Scientific Community
332(3)
The Special Research Laboratory: The Science
335(7)
Appendix
342(5)
6 Life in Tomsk After Retirement
347
Leaving the Department in 1985 to Retire
347(1)
Perestroika and Stromberg's Return to Nizhni Tagil
348(5)
Science in Retirement: Teaching an Old Dog New Tricks
353(6)
Hobbies
359(1)
Vita Brevis Est... Ut Volito Oportet!
359