Aron Naumovich Amromin (05/08/1910 - 05/18/1992) - Soviet arms designer, winner of the Lenin Prize .
| Aron Naumovich Amromin | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | May 8, 1910 |
| Date of death | May 18, 1992 (82 years old) |
| Occupation | weapons designer |
| Awards and prizes |
|
Born in the city of Romny .
After graduating from the Leningrad Polytechnic Institute (1936) he worked in various engineering positions at the Kinap Leningrad Plant.
From September 1941 to September 1945 in the Red Army (8th Army), he rose to the rank of major engineer, ended the war near Königsberg. He was awarded the Order of the Patriotic War II degree (08/26/1943).
After demobilization, he returned to the Kinap plant, worked in positions from an electrical engineer to the head of an experimental design and technological bureau (OKTB) (1952-1957). Established mass production of control equipment for the first Soviet air-to-ground missile control system.
In 1957-1971 Head of the department at the Leningrad Scientific Research Institute of Radio Electronics (NII-131, NIIRE), which became part of the NPO Leninets (until 1959 - OKB-283, which in 1956 included the OKTB of the Kinap plant). Member of the development of aviation guided weapons. Under his leadership and with personal participation, research and development was carried out to create electronic systems for automatic control of missiles for Tu-16 aircraft. Chief designer of the Rubicon air-to-surface missile control system for missiles.
Lenin Prize (1963) - for the development of K-10, K-11, K-16 and K-20 missile systems capable of hitting point-moving naval and ground targets, as well as air defense and missile defense radars from long distances
Sources
- Engineers of St. Petersburg. Arkady Ivanovich Melua. Publ. International Foundation for the History of Science, 1996 - Total pages: 814