Zolotodolinskaya Street

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Zolotodolinskaya Street
Native nameЗолотодолинская улица (Russian)
LocationNovosibirsk
Russia

Zolotodolinskaya Street (Russian: Золотодолинская улица) is a street in Akademgorodok of Novosibirsk, Russia. It starts from Morskoy Prospekt, runs south-west, crosses Uchyonykh Street, then forms a crossroad with Voyevodsky and Maltsev streets and ends near Kirovo Settlement.

Organizations[edit]

  • Exhibition Center of the Siberian Branch of the RAS
  • Viktoria Fencing Club is a sports club founded in 1968[1]
  • Museum of history and culture of the peoples of Siberia and the Far East[2]
  • Museum of the SB RAS[3]

Gallery[edit]

Notable residents[edit]

Lavrentyev's House
  • Andrey Bitsadze (1916–1994) was a Soviet mathematician and mechanic.
  • Anatoly Derevyanko (born 1943) is a Soviet/Russian historian and archaeologist.
  • Vasily Fomin (born 1940) is a Soviet and Russian mechanic.
  • Michail Ivanov (1945—2013) was a Soviet and Russian scientist in the field of applied mathematics.
  • Mikhail Lavrentyev (1900—1980) was a Soviet mathematician and hydrodynamicist, founder of the SB RAS
  • Mikhail Lavrentyev (1932–2010) was a Soviet and Russian scientist in the field of mathematical physics. The son of Mikhail Lavrentyev.
  • Gury Marchuk (1925–2013) was a Soviet and Russian scientist in the fields of computational mathematics, and physics of atmosphere.
  • Vyacheslav Molodin (born 1948) is a Soviet and Russian historian
  • Valentin Monakhov (1932—2006) was a Soviet and Russian mathematician and mechanic, a specialist in the field of hydrodynamics.
  • Lev Ovsyannikov (1919–2014) was a Soviet/Russian mathematician and mechanic.
  • Pelageya Polubarinova-Kochina was a Soviet applied mathematician.
  • Alexey Rebrov (born 1933) is a Soviet and Russian scientist in the field of physical gas dynamics, rarefied gas dynamics, thermal physics and vacuum technology.
  • Alexander Skrinsky (born 1936) is a Russian nuclear physicist.
  • Vladimir Vragov (1945—2002) was a Soviet and Russian mathematician.
  • Nikolai Yanenko (1921–1984) was a Soviet scientist in the field of computational mathematics and fluid mechanics.

Nature[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Ламин В. А. (2003). Энциклопедия. Новосибирск. Новосибирск: Новосибирское книжное издательство. pp. 148–149. ISBN 5-7620-0968-8.
  2. ^ Музей истории и культуры народов Сибири и Дальнего Востока. Институт археологии и этнографии СО РАН.
  3. ^ Музей СО РАН.
  4. ^ В Академгородке открылся пруд с утками. НГС.НОВОСТИ.