Yuri Oganessian postage stamp issued by Armenia

Yuri Oganessian postage stamp issued by ArmeniaYuri Oganessian postage stamp issued by Armenia

Yuri Oganessian postage  stamp issued on 28th December-2017,  depicts the world-renowned physics of the Armenian origin, Doctor of Physics and Mathematics, professor, Academician of the Academy of Sciences of Sciences Yuri Oganessian, and the right part of the postage stamp depicts the 118th new chemical element of Mendeleev’s periodic table, discovered by Y. Oganessian and named “oganesson” (Og) after the great Armenian scientist.

Early life
Yuri Tsolakovich Oganessian was born in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, on April 14, 1933 to Armenian parents. His father was from Rostov, while his mother was from Armavir. Oganessian spent his childhood in Yerevan, the capital of then-Soviet Armenia, where his family relocated in 1939. His father, Tsolak, a thermal engineer, was invited to work on the synthetic rubber plant in Yerevan. When fighting on the Eastern Front of World War II broke out, his family decided to not return to Rostov, which was occupied by the Nazis. Yuri attended and finished school in Yerevan.

Career
Oganessian is the scientific leader of the Flerov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions (FLNR). He invented cold fusion in one-atom-at-a-time nucleosynthesis (not related to the similarly-named pseudoscientific claims) around 1970 and pioneered hot fusion in the late 1990s. In 2009, scientists in the United States confirmed Oganessian’s team’s discovery of flerovium over a decade before. He is a researcher in islands of stability. He continues to search olivine in pallasites hoping to find superheavy elements (or their fission tracks) in nature.

Oganesson
The first decay of atoms of oganesson was observed in 2002 at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, by a joint team of Russian and American scientists. Headed by Oganessian, the team included American scientists of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Tennessee, and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, California. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) announced in November 2016 that element 118 would be named oganesson to honor Oganessian. Prior to this announcement, a dozen elements had been named after people, but of those, only seaborgium was likewise named while the person (Glenn T. Seaborg) was alive.

Honors and awards
In 1990 he was elected Corresponding Member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences and in 2003 a Full Member (Academician) of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Oganessian holds honorary degrees from Goethe University Frankfurt (2002), University of Messina (2009), Yerevan State University.

State orders and awards
USSR State Prize (1975)
Lise Meitner Prize of the European Physical Society (2000)
Order “For Merit to the Fatherland” 3rd class (2003)
Russian Federation National Award (2010)
Order of Honor of the Republic of Armenia (2016)

Technical details
Issue Date: 28.12.2017
Designer: Vahagn Mkrtchyan
Printer: Cartor, France
Process: Offset
Size: 50,0 x 40,0 mm