Mikhail Fedorovich Poletika (Tsetlin [1] ) ( 1922 - 2003 ) - Soviet scientist , doctor of technical sciences , professor ; Honorary Professor of Tomsk Polytechnic University. [2]
| Poletika Mikhail Fedorovich | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date of Birth | July 22, 1922 | |||
| Place of Birth | Nizhny Novgorod , RSFSR | |||
| Date of death | May 26, 2003 (aged 80) | |||
| Place of death | Tomsk , Russia | |||
| A country | ||||
| Place of work | Tomsk Polytechnic Institute , Tyumen Industrial University | |||
| Alma mater | Tomsk Polytechnic Institute | |||
| Academic degree | Doctor of Technical Sciences | |||
| Academic rank | Professor | |||
| Awards and prizes | ||||
A scientist in the field of material processing by cutting and engineering technology. The author of 7 monographs and over 250 articles, he prepared 25 candidates and 2 doctors of technical sciences. [3]
Content
Biography
Born July 22, 1922 in Nizhny Novgorod.
In 1939 he graduated with honors from Tomsk High School No. 6 and entered the mechanical faculty of Tomsk Industrial Institute (TII, later Tomsk Polytechnic Institute, now Tomsk Polytechnic University ). In 1946 he graduated from the institute with a degree in Engineering Technology, having received the qualification of a mechanical engineer. [3]
Mikhail Poletika was left at the TII, where he initially worked as a laboratory assistant at the Department of Machine Tools and Metal Cutting. In October 1946 he was enrolled in graduate school, graduating from which, from 1949 he worked as an assistant, from May 1952 - a senior lecturer, since 1955 - an assistant professor of the Department of Machine Tools and Metal Cutting. In 1951, at the Council of TPI, he defended his thesis on the theme “Investigation of the cutting process of tools with a double front face”. On December 30, 1954 he was approved as a candidate of technical sciences, and on April 14, 1956 he was awarded the academic title of associate professor of the Department of Machine Tools and Metal Cutting. In December 1962, M.F. Poletika was transferred by a senior researcher to work on his doctoral dissertation, after which he left the institute of his own free will. [3]
He continued his activities in Tyumen , where he moved in 1964 with his students M. Kh. Uteshev and V.V. Melikhov. In July 1964 he was appointed head of the Department of Technical Mechanics, newly formed at the Tyumen Industrial Institute . [4] In 1965, Mikhail Fedorovich defended his doctoral dissertation at the Moscow Aviation Technological Institute on the theme “Investigation of contact processes in metal cutting”. In October 1966 he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Technical Sciences, and in December 1968 the academic title of professor.
In December 1966, the scientist returned to Tomsk , was appointed to the Tomsk Polytechnic Institute as a professor at the Department of Machine Tools and Metal Cutting, which was in charge from 1979 to 1986. Since 1986 he worked as a professor at the Department of Engineering Technologies, Cutting and Tools, TPI. At the same time from 1975 to 1980 he was director of the Scientific Research Institute of Mechanical Engineering.
Along with scientific and teaching, he was engaged in social activities - he was a deputy of the Kirovsky district council of the city of Tomsk; Chairman of the engineering section of the city branch of the All-Union Society “ Knowledge ” in Tyumen; for 10 years he was a member of the TPI Methodological Council, for several years he was a member of the editorial board of the institute newspaper “For Personnel”. [3]
He died on May 26, 2003 in Tomsk.
Rewards
- He was awarded medals, including "For Valiant Labor in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945." And "For Valiant Labor. In commemoration of the centenary of the birth of V.I. Lenin
- In 1994 he was awarded the title of Honored Worker of Science and Technology of the Russian Federation.
Sources
- Professors of Tomsk Polytechnic University: Biographical reference book. T. - III, part 2 / Authors and compilers: Gagarin A.V., Sergeev G.P. - Tomsk: TPU Publishing House, 2006. - 266 p.