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[[File:Vasilii Zakharov as a young man.png|thumb|Vasilii Zakharov as a young man.]]
[[File:Vasilii Zakharov as a young man.png|thumb|Vasilii Zakharov as a young man.]]
'''Vasilii Zakharov''' (legal name  after the 1980s, before that he was also known as Basil or Vasili(i) with the surname Zacharof(f), Zacharov, or Zakharov) (2 January 1931, London—29 September 2018, Ferney-Voltaire)<ref>https://avis-deces.linternaute.com/ferney-voltaire/ville-01160?q=Zakharov</ref><ref>https://www.hommages.ch/fr/avis-de-deces/vasilii-zakharov
'''Vasilii Zakharov''' (his legal name  after the 1980s, before this he was also known as Basil or Vasili(i) with the surname Zacharof(f), Zacharov, or Zakharov) (2 January 1931, London—29 September 2018, Ferney-Voltaire)<ref>https://avis-deces.linternaute.com/ferney-voltaire/ville-01160?q=Zakharov</ref><ref>https://www.hommages.ch/fr/avis-de-deces/vasilii-zakharov


</ref> was a British physicist and computer scientist.
</ref> was a British physicist and computer scientist.


He worked at CERN at various different times, starting in the early 60s, then again in the 70s, 80s and maybe (?as a retiree?) in the 2000s.
He joined CERN (under the name B. Zacharov) in the early 1960s and continued throughout his career to alternate between CERN and other institutes. His first CERN-paper was presented at the 11th International Conference on High-energy Physics, held at from 4 –11 Jul 1962, reporting on rom a short run at the [[Proton Synchrotron]] offering information about shortlived neutral particles which decay into a <math>\pi<sup>+</sup</math>—<math>\pi<sup>—</sup</math> possibly a K<sup>+</sup>—K<sup>—</sup> pair.


CERN, 1962 <https://cds.cern.ch/record/2008731?ln=en> (under the name B. Zacharov )
 
 
 
CERN, 1962 <https://cds.cern.ch/record/2008731?ln=en> (under the name B. Zacharov)


CERN, 1964 <https://cds.cern.ch/record/942653?ln=en>
CERN, 1964 <https://cds.cern.ch/record/942653?ln=en>

Revision as of 19:01, 11 February 2026

Vasilii Zakharov as a young man.

Vasilii Zakharov (his legal name after the 1980s, before this he was also known as Basil or Vasili(i) with the surname Zacharof(f), Zacharov, or Zakharov) (2 January 1931, London—29 September 2018, Ferney-Voltaire)[1][2] was a British physicist and computer scientist.

He joined CERN (under the name B. Zacharov) in the early 1960s and continued throughout his career to alternate between CERN and other institutes. His first CERN-paper was presented at the 11th International Conference on High-energy Physics, held at from 4 –11 Jul 1962, reporting on rom a short run at the Proton Synchrotron offering information about shortlived neutral particles which decay into a <math>\pi+</sup</math>—<math>\pi—</sup</math> possibly a K+—K pair.



CERN, 1962 <https://cds.cern.ch/record/2008731?ln=en> (under the name B. Zacharov)

CERN, 1964 <https://cds.cern.ch/record/942653?ln=en>

Daresbury Nuclear Physics Laboratory, 1971 <https://cds.cern.ch/record/871206/files/p223.pdf>.

CERN, 1971 <https://cds.cern.ch/record/868655/files/p187.pdf> at schol for which he was director.

Daresbury, March 1974, https://cds.cern.ch/record/415719?ln=en.

University of London Computer Centre, 1981 <https://doi.org/10.1016/0010-4655(81)90049-7>

January 1982 CERN, DD https://lib-extopc.kek.jp/preprints/PDF/1982/8209/8209239.pdf.

<rapport Zakharov>, mentioned in 1984 (CERN affil) https://www.unige.ch/archives/files/2815/4512/0999/Discours-recteur-1984.pdf

University of Geneva <https://dl.acm.org/profile/81474673930> and <https://doi.org/10.1109/TC.1984.5009314>

Vasilii Zakharov on his olden days.

CERN and U. Geneva, 1984 <https://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/TC.1984.5009314>.

References