Vladimir Damgov

Vladimir Nikolov Damgow (also Vladimir Nikolov Damgov written Bulgarian Владимир Николов Дамгов ) ( born November 22, 1947 in Sofia, Bulgaria, † 20 June 2006) was a Bulgarian physicist, mathematician, union leaders and parliamentarians. He has particularly contributed to the application of chaos theory in mechanical and physical systems, and radio in Space Studies.

Life

Vladimir Damgow was born in Sofia, the son of a lawyer and a French teacher. He received his first training in Sofia and at the Georgi - Benkowski High School in Teteven, a small town in the Balkan Mountains, in the district of Lovech. He studied at the Technical University of Moscow and received in 1971 a diploma in computer science and engineering physics. He wanted to change and focus in particular on the study of the ideas of Bertrand Russell to study philosophy, but received by the Bulgarian authorities do not have permission to do so. He excelled in chess and went on to the prestigious Moscow State University, where he received in 1977 a diploma in radio physics, and in the same year his doctorate in physics and mathematics. He worked for several years on projects for Space Research at the Soviet Academy of Sciences.

1992 Vladimir Damgow was appointed doctor of sciences of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. He became a professor at the Institute for Space customer of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, where he headed the department for non- Aryan line space dynamics. He has filed 17 patents and wrote more than 250 publications.

Despite a distinguished career in the Soviet Union and Bulgaria, he has never joined the Communist Party. After the fall of communism, he joined the Bulgarian Socialist Party and became a leader of the Union of Bulgarian Scientists ( Sajuz na učenite v Bălgarija, Union of Scientists in Bulgaria) and its vice- president.

In 2005, Vladimir Damgow presented for election on the list of the Bulgarian Socialist Party in the municipality of Lovech and was a deputy to the 40th Bulgarian Parliament ( Narodno Sabranie ) selected. In his first few weeks as a new Member of Parliament, he led a bipartisan commission to investigate serious environmental pollution incidents in the town of Stara Zagora. He was a member of the Education and Research Committee, and the Defence Commission. He was chairman of the Bulgarian Delegation to the Western European Union ( Eurofor ). In December 2005, less than six months after his election, acute leukemia was diagnosed with Vladimir Damgow. He died in Hanover on 20 June 2006, before a Blutstammzelltransplantazion at the Hannover Medical School ( MHH) could be made. He was buried on 29 June in Teteven.

Publications

  • Nonlinear and Parametric Phenomena - Theory and Applications in Radio Physical and Mechanical Systems - World Scientific ( Series on Nonlinear Science ) - New Jersey, London, Singapore, Beijing - ( 2004).
  • Advances in Space Research, Elsevier Publishers, Amsterdam, ( 1991).
  • Earth, Moon and Planets, Springer Verlag, Berlin ( 1992) with DB Douboshinsky, (1993).

Patents

  • Methods and Devices for Implementation of Low - Noise Wide-Band Negative Resistances, Capacitances Negative and Negative Inductances ( patent of Republic of Bulgaria, No. 25959, No. 25960, No. 25961, No. 25971, No. 29260 and No. 30008 ).
  • Method and Device for Measuring Biological Membranes (Patent of Republic of Bulgaria, No. 29993 ).
  • Multielectrode Modulation Device for Measuring the Interplanetary Plasma (Patent of the Republic of Bulgaria No. 45821 ).
  • Short-Range Autodyne system (Patent of the Republic of Bulgaria No. 45520 ).
  • Short - Range Radar (Patent of the Republic of Bulgaria No. 47466 ).
  • One- band modulator (Patent of the Republic of Bulgaria No. 35731 ), with DV Stoyanov.
  • Linear Reciprocating Electric Motor (Patent of the Republic of Bulgaria No. 44194 ), with YB Douboshinsky and M. I. Kozakov.
  • Microwave emitters ( Patent of the Republic of Bulgaria No. 44197 ), with DB Douboshinsky and Y.B. Douboshinsky.
  • Inductive Sensor - Spectrum Analyser ( Patent of the Republic of Bulgaria No. 30009 ).
  • Physicist ( 20th century)
  • Politicians (Bulgaria)
  • Member of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
  • Bulgarian
  • Born in 1947
  • Died in 2006
  • Man
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