Grigory Rafailovich Herzenberg (1910, Vinnitsa - 1996, Moscow) - Soviet scientist in the field of energy, Doctor of Technical Sciences, Lenin Prize laureate .
| Grigory Rafailovich Herzenberg | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Date of Birth | 1910 | |||
| Place of Birth | Vinnitsa , Russian Empire | |||
| Date of death | 1996 | |||
| Place of death | Moscow , USSR | |||
| Scientific field | power engineering | |||
| Alma mater | Kiev Polytechnic Institute | |||
| Academic degree | Doctor of Technical Sciences | |||
| Awards and prizes | ||||
Content
Biography
He graduated from the Kiev Polytechnic Institute (1933). From 1936 to the last days of his life, he worked in Moscow at the All-Union Electrotechnical Institute (VETI): engineer, senior researcher (1946), head. the laboratory.
Specialist in the field of automatic regulation of power systems. Some research and development developments:
- electronic voltage regulator, current regulator for mass spectroscopy,
- electronic regulator ensuring the stability of power systems
- the world's first electronic regulator of excitation of strong action (for the Volga hydroelectric station),
- power adapter for regulating the operation of a steam turbine.
Candidate of Technical Sciences (1946). Doctor of Technical Sciences (1965).
He was buried at the Don cemetery [1] .
Awards and Prizes
- 2 orders of the Badge of Honor (including 05.16.1947)
- medals
- Lenin Prize (1961) - for the development and implementation of automatic high-power excitation controllers for powerful hydrogenerators and synchronous compensators
Notes
Literature
- Moscow encyclopedia. Volume 1: Faces of Moscow. Book 6: AZ. Additions. - M.: Moscow Textbooks OJSC, 2014
